Summary: Six women suffering from WoH-Parkinson-White syndrome and who were previously asymptomatic or nearly asymptomatic, were followed prospectively during and after their subsequent pregnancies. Three women experienced several attacks of supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) for the first time and the rest experienced an increase in their attacks. It seems that there is an increased tendency for SVT in pregnancy. Increased adrenergic sensitivity by estrogens, increased plasma volume, stress, and anxiety during pregnancy may be some of'the causative factors.
Background: The primitive hypoglossal artery (PHA) is a rare vascular anomaly, which belongs to the group of carotid-basilar anastomosis that may occur in adults.
Two cases of allergic angina and allergic myocardial infarction (Kounis syndrome) following penicillin administration are described. The patients suffered from lung and mandible neoplasms and had previously received several courses of antineoplastic therapy without any sequelae. One patient had normal coronary arteries (type I variant of the syndrome) and the other had coronary artery disease with previous myocardial infarction (type II variant of the syndrome). The allergic reaction following penicillin administration seemed to have triggered the development of an acute coronary artery spasm in the first patient and an acute myocardial infarction in the second. This report shows that susceptible individuals expressing a magnified mast cell degranulation effect may be more vulnerable to coronary artery spasm and plaque erosion or rupture.
Transient myocardial ischemia and various cardiac arrhythmias are frequent in elderly patients undergoing ERCP. Appropriate noninvasive monitoring seems to be justified during this procedure.
Spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage is a clinical condition that may be attributed to various underlying causes, such as rupture of intracranial aneurysms and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). Suspected cerebrovascular abnormalities can be detected either with digital subtraction angiography (DSA) or with computed tomography angiography (CTA) combined with postprocessing tools, namely multiplanar reformation, maximum intensity projection, shaded surface display, virtual endoscopy and direct volume rendering. We prospectively studied a group of 205 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage. One-hundred-ninety-eight patients underwent both DSA and CTA, and formed our study group. Patients with intracranial aneurysms underwent surgical or endovascualar treatment. DSA was negative for 35 patients, detected 178/179 aneurysms and 15 AVMs. CTA correctly detected 176/179 aneurysms and all 15 cases of AVMs, whereas it was negative in 35 cases. After 3D reconstruction the size, location and the relationship to the parent vessel of the aneurysms, the extent of the AVMs with the main feeding vessel(s), nidus and draining veins were reliably shown by CTA, although DSA provided more anatomic details related to the anatomy of the adjacent vessels. The accuracy, sensitivity, positive predictive accuracy and negative predictive accuracy for CTA was 98, 97.9, 100 and 94.3% and for DSA was 99, 99.3, 100 and 98%, respectively. It is suggested that CTA is a reliable alternative to DSA in detecting intracranial aneurysms. The role of CTA in demonstrating AVMs can be considered complementary to that of DSA.
BMD measurements in Greek paraplegic patients reveal bone loss, which most dramatically occurs in the region of hip with a consequent increase of fracture risk. Forearm measurements depict a non-homogeneous response with limited proximal bone loss and slight distal increase of BMD, the latter being possibly attributed to daily activities.
SUMMARYHistamine, the main amine released during allergic reactions, can provoke coronary arterial spasm manifested as angina pectoris. This has been shown during clinical and laboratory studies. The effects of histamine on cardiac function are mediated via H1‐ and H2‐ receptors situated on the four cardiac chambers and coronary arteries. Coronary arteries of cardiac patients are hyperactive and contain stores of histamine which can initiate coronary artery spasm.Clinical observations indicate that angina pectoris or acute myocardial infarction can be provoked by acute allergic reaction. The coincidental occurrence of chest pain and allergic reaction accompanied by clinical and laboratory findings of classical angina pectoris seems to constitute the syndrome of allergic angina. The clinical symptoms of allergic angina include chest discomfort, dyspnoea, faintness, nausea, pruritus and urticaria. They are accompanied by signs such as hypotension, diaphoresis, pallor and bradycardia. There are also electrocardiographic findings indicating myocardial ischaemia, arrhythmias and conduction defects.Thus, in patients undergoing acute allergic reaction, the development of chest pain could be explained by the mechanism of coronary arterial spasm provoked by the release of histamine, which constitutes the syndrome of allergic angina.
Summary:A 66-year-old man suffering from atrial flutter developed cutaneous blue-gray pigmentation while receiving 600 mg of amiodarone daily for 15 months. With reduction of the dose to I00 mg, skin discoloration disappeared within 16 months, to reappear within 7 months after increasing the dose to 400 mg. Finally, the discoloration disappeared within 13 months with a dose reduction to 200 mg daily. It seems that a tissue threshold level for amiodarone exists in this patient, above which skin discoloration appears and below which it fades. Dose, duration, metabolism, macrophage transfer, and spillover saturation-excretion may be relevant in amiodaroneinduced skin pigmentation.
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