Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study examined the recuperative potential of cat hearts subjected to experimental right ventricular pressure overload (for a 10- to 14-day period) which provoked hypertrophy with and without congestive heart failure. Five groups of cats were studied: normal controls; one group with 70% pulmonary artery constriction which produced right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH); one group with an 87% constriction which also produced right ventricular hypertrophy but with congestive heart failure (CHF); and two groups which had been similarly subjected to pressure overload but which had been allowed a recovery period of 30 days after relief of the pressure overload. Both the 70% and 87% pulmonic constrictions were associated with extensive right ventricular hypertrophy, depression of myocardial contractile function, and severe redlction of cardiac norepinephrine stores (normal, 1.42 mug/g: RVH, 0.11 mug/g; CHF, 0.01 mug/g). After a 30-day period of relief from the pulmonic constriction normal hemodynamic function returned. In cats in which RVH had been relieved, right ventricular weight and contractile function were normal but catecholamine depletion persisted. Cats with relieved CHF showed depressed contractile function and depleted myocardial norepinephrine, and the right ventricular weight did not return to normal. Cardiac muscle of all pressure-overloaded nonrelieved hearts showed depressed velocity of shortening and depressed ability to sustain load. Cats with RVH alone regained normal muscle shortening velocity and load-bearing ability after relief. However, cardiac muscle from the CHF-relieved group recovered only unloaded shortening velocity while the ability to sustain load remained depressed. We conclude that the recuperative potential of myocardium damaged by pressure overload is adequate provided congestive heart failure has not occurred. Heart failure produces a persistent reduction in force-generating ability of the myocardium. Hypertrophy due to pressure overload, with or without CHF, leads to cardiac catecholamine depletion which is not readily reversed by relief of the overload.
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PMID:Recuperative potential of cardiac muscle following relief of pressure overload hypertrophy and right ventricular failure in the cat. 13 86

The Ca2+-activated myosin ATPase and the amino acid compositions of actin and myosin were determined for preparations from chronically failing dog hearts. Hypertrophy and congestive heart failure were produced by combined tricuspid valve insufficiency and pulmonary artery stenosis. Control, shamoperated, and noncardiac circulatory failure (inferior vena cava constriction) dogs also were studied. All hearts were divided into right ventricle, septum and left ventricle and each sample was individually analyzed. Calcium-activated ATPase decreased in the failing hearts and showed a distinct gradient of depression from right to left ventricles. There were no changes in ATPase activity among the other groups. The amino acid composition of actin was the same regardless of origin. The amino acid composition of myosin was unaltered except that cystine/2 residues were markedly decreased in failing heart myosin. The same gradient of depression was present as was found for Ca2+-activated myosin ATPase. This study suggests that protein metabolism is abnormal and that altered proteins are produced in hypertrophy and congestive heart failure. It appears that these changes do not affect all proteins, since actin was normal by the parameters studied. It is clear that the stressed ventricle is the most severely involved, but the entire heart is altered to some degree. Thus, we conclude that altered protein metabolism may be an important primary factor in the genesis of heart failure.
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PMID:The amino acid composition of actin and myosin and Ca2+-activated myosin adenosine triphosphatase in chronic canine congestive heart failure. 13 12

Two hundred consecutive catheterized patients with unstable angina pectoris were reviewed to find clinical and noninvasive indicators of left main coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 50% lesion). Thirty-five patients (17.5% of total) had left main coronary artery disease. There were no differences between patients with and without left main coronary artery disease in age, sex, results of resting electrocardiogram, congestive heart failure, dyspnea during pain, duration of longest pain, arrhythmias, response to medical therapy, or other risk factors. Crescendo angina pectoris (worsening of pre-existing angina), transient ST-segment depression with pain, simultaneous anterior and inferior ST changes during pain, and fluoroscopic calcification of the left main coronary artery were all significantly more common in patients with left main coronary artery disease. However, low sensitivity or low predictive value, or both, limit the usefulness of these clinical predictors. Left main coronary artery disease cannot be reliably predicted in patients with unstable angina pectoris before coronary arteriography.
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PMID:Clinical indicators of left main coronary artery disease in unstable angina. 15 94

Recordings were made from left atrial type B receptors in six mongrel dogs after recovery from the cardiac effects of a chronic AV fistula. All animals showed hemodynamic and clinical signs of congestive heart failure after 44.5 +/- 3.6 days with a patent Dacron shunt between the aorta and inferior vena cava below the level of the renal arteries. The stimulus-response curves of the left atrial stretch receptors (change in spikes/cardiac cycle or in spikes/minute vs. change in left atrial pressure) after 45.2 +/- 7.2 days of shunt closure were similar to those seen in sham-operated dogs from a previous study. However, the slope of the stimulus-response curve of the dogs in which the AV fistula was closed was significantly greater than the slope of the curve from the AV fistula dogs with heart failure. Radiographs indicated that after shunt closure, cardiac dilatation had regressed. This study incidates that a decrease in the sensitivity of left atrial receptors in dogs with congestive heart failure is a reversible phenomenon and that the initial depression is most likely related to the concomitant cardiac dilatation that accompanies the failure state.
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PMID:Changes in the sensitivity of left atrial receptors following reversal of heart failure. 15 85

Forty-six men under age 70, without clinical congestive heart failure or unstable angina pectoris, performed treadmill tests 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 weeks after myocardial infarction. Patients were more frequently able to perform moderate exertion (2 mph, 14% grade) at 7 and 11 weeks than at 3 weeks following infarction. Ischemic ST-segment depression, usually unaccompained by angina pectoris, occurred in 45% of patients and was associated with a significantly increased incidence of subsequent coronary events. The presence of exercise-induced ventricular ectopic activity provided little independent prognostic information. No serious complications occurred in 210 tests. Exercise testing soon after myocardial infarction provides objective information concerning the capacity to resume physical activity, including return to work. Two tests, at 3-5 weeks and at 7-11 weeks, appear to provide most of the information contined in five tests performed during this time.
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PMID:Exercise testing soon after myocardial infarction. 30 Oct 68

In a 66-year-old patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) complicated by arterial hypoxemia and repeated episodes of respiratory and right ventricular failure, a satisfactory level of oxygenation could not be maintained despite controlled oxygen therapy. To enable oxygen to be administered without depression ventilation, artificial respiration by means of phrenic nerve stimulation (diaphragm pacing) has been employed. Evidence of clinical improvement since pacing was begun 32 months ago include fewer episodes of respiratory failure and better control of congestive heart failure despite a gradual worsening of pulmonary function.
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PMID:Diaphragm pacing. Application to a patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 30 48

The effects of intravenously administered disopyramide phosphate were evaluated in seven patients with refractory ventricular tachycardia. All patients had organic heart disease, including acute infarction (three patients), chronic coronary artery disease (two patients) and cardiomyopathy (two patients). The severity of the heart disease was reflected in the advanced patient age (average 64 years) and the occurrence before disopyramide therapy of cardiac arrest in five patients and congestive heart failure in all seven patients. In five patients, disopyramide was given as a bolus injection, 2 mg/kg body weight, followed by an infusion of 20 to 40 mg/hour. The final two patients received 4 mg/kg divided as a bolus injection and an infusion over 1 hour followed by a 0.4 mg/kg infusion during the next hour. Intravenous administration of disopyramide resulted in more effective electrical stability in all patients and completely eliminated ventricular tachycardia in six. Recurrence of ventricular tachycardia was prevented in six patients with subsequent long-term oral administration of disopyramide. Possible dose-related cardiac pump depression occurred in two patients, but disopyramide was otherwise well tolerated. Therefore, these data document the therapeutic efficacy of disopyramide in the treatment of refractory life-threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmias.
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PMID:Efficacy of disopyramide phosphate in the treatment of refractory ventricular tachycardia. 32 16

To characterize the acute hemodynamic effects of tocainide hydrochloride, a new antiarrhythmic agent, 11 patients undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization were given intravenous infusions of the drug for 15 minutes at rates of 0.50 (six patients) or 0.75 (five patients) mg/kg/min. The hemodynamic status of these subjects was determined before, during, and for 15 minutes after treatment, and blood levels of tocainide were followed during and after treatment. Tocainide blood levels at the end of the infusions were 14.9 +/- 1.6 microgram/ml (S.E.) and 15 minutes later were 6.0 +/- 0.7 microgram/ml. In these subjects treatment was not associated with significant changes in Ao or PCW, but it was associated with a statistically significant but small decrease in LV dp/dt. At the same time, LVED was not significantly elevated. Treatment was also accompanied by small increases in PA diastolic and mean pressures, but RA and RV were unchanged. Significant changes were not seen in HR, CO, CI, SV, SVR, or PVR. Thus, the intravenous infusion of 0.50 and 0.75 mg/kg/min of tocainide for 15 minutes produced small but statistically significant depression of left ventricular function without producing changes in CO or clinical evidence of congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Acute hemodynamic effects of tocainide in patients undergoing cardiac catheterization. 37 Jan 55

Minoxidil, a new peripheral vasodilator, was used in the therapy of 26 hypertensives who were previously uncontrolled on conventional medications or who had dose-limiting side effects. Minoxidil provided (1) therapeutic advantages in all patients, regardless of the etiology of their hypertension, (2) no symptoms of orthostatic hypotension or sympathetic nervous system depression, (3) a simplification of medical regimens and perhaps costs, and (4) regression of impotence in four out of seven patients. The major limiting factors encountered were (1) fluid retention with the development of congestive heart failure in three patients, (2) pericardial effusion in three patients, and (3) hypertrichosis, which reduced its acceptability in female patients.
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PMID:Treatment of severe hypertension with minoxidil: advantages and limitations. 37 29

Hyperviscosity syndrome was associated with increased plasma content of monoclonal immunoglobulin (IgA or IgM) in 3 dogs with lymphocytic leukemia. The diagnosis of lymphocytic leukemia was based on the finding of a large number of mature lymphocytes in the blood and bone marrow. The clinical signs included weakness, lethargy, depression, and coughing due to congestive heart failure. Consistent physical findings were splenomegaly, with or without peripheral lymphadenopathy, and funduscopic abnormalities. Of the 2 dogs treated successfully with chlorambucil, 1 remains in remission after withdrawal of the drug for over 1 year.
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PMID:Hyperviscosity syndrome associated with lymphocytic leukemia in three dogs. 40 53


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