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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In anesthetized dogs, digoxin intoxication was performed after and before production of a definitive complete atrioventricular (A-V) block induced by formaldehyde injection in A-V node area, compared to intoxication in dogs in sinus or junctional rhythm. The results showed that digoxin toxicity was decreased in dogs with previous A-V block. This A-V block protective effect was abolished by resetting initial sinus-like frequency with ventricular pacing before digoxin administration. Ventricular arrhythmias were suppressed by production of complete A-V block. The A-V block protective effect can be explained by a lesser myocardial uptake of digoxin because of the low idioventricular frequency. However, ventricular arrhythmias in dogs with A-V block presented similarities both in occurrence and spreading with the development of oscillatory afterpotentials (OAPs) and rhythmical triggered activity demonstrated in isolated digitalis-poisoned Purkinje fibers and ventricular myocardium: the repetitive discharge of toxic foci masked normal idioventricular pacemakers and was interrupted by variable pauses followed by the resumption of either a very slow idioventricular rhythm or a toxic focus. It is suggested that because of the low idioventricular frequency, competition and/or superimposition of slow enhanced diastolic depolarization and OAPs can be electrocardiographically displayed. The terminal event was asystole in dogs with unpaced A-V block, and
ventricular fibrillation
in dogs with sinus, junctional and paced A-V block rhythms. The asystole (at least 30 seconds of electrical quiescence) may be explained partly as an intense
depression
of normal idioventricular pacemaker being overdriven by the discharge of toxic pacemakers, and partly as a consequence of the suppression of local autonomic influences in the A-V node area induced by the formaldehyde injection.
...
PMID:Digoxin-induced toxicity and experimental atrioventricular block in dogs. Relation between ventricular arrhythmias and oscillatory afterpotentials. 663 15
Calcium channel blockers suppress early ischemic arrhythmias, possibly by diminishing intracellular calcium overload and its effect on the ventricular action potential. To explore this, we compared the effects of diltiazem on ischemic "injury" potentials and
ventricular fibrillation
during serial coronary artery occlusions in dogs. Injury potentials and
ventricular fibrillation
were elicited every 15-25 minutes by simultaneous occlusion of the left anterior descending and circumflex arteries during rapid atrial pacing. DC epicardial electrograms were recorded differentially between the ischemic region and a small nonischemic region supplied by a proximal branch of the left anterior descending artery. Injury potentials developed with a uniform time course during five control occlusions, but were reduced by diltiazem infusion (0.5 mg/kg over 25 minutes) in each of eight dogs. The mean diastolic injury potential (T-Q
depression
) at 150 seconds of ischemia was 9.1 +/- 2.7 mV before diltiazem and 6.1 +/- 1.6 mV afterward (P less than 0.001). Diltiazem increased the mean time between coronary occlusion and
ventricular fibrillation
from 186 to 366 seconds (P less than 10(-5), but did not change the magnitude of the diastolic injury potential at onset of
ventricular fibrillation
. Diltiazem also delayed ischemia-induced conduction impairment to the same extent that it delayed injury potential development. In five dogs, the effect of diltiazem on regional blood flow near the epicardial electrodes was measured by infusion of radionuclide-labeled microspheres. Coronary occlusion reduced flow to the ischemic zone from 0.86 to 0.05 ml/min per g (P = 0.001). Diltiazem increased preocclusion flow by 11% (P = 0.03), but did not significantly alter flow during occlusion. Hemodynamic measurements show that diltiazem did not diminish cardiac work. Diltiazem therefore produced a flow-independent reduction of cellular depolarization during ischemia, which may be due to relief of calcium overload, and which may explain the antifibrillatory effect.
...
PMID:Reduction of ischemic depolarization by the calcium channel blocker diltiazem. Correlation with improvement of ventricular conduction and early arrhythmias in the dog. 669 97
The antiarrhythmic activity of the calcium entry blockers, verapamil, nifedipine and prenylamine, was assessed against arrhythmias occurring during 20 min of acute occlusion, or upon rapid reperfusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) in anesthetized pigs. Propranolol, which may indirectly reduce calcium entry by blocking the facilitory action of catecholamines on slow channel conductance, was also evaluated for antiarrhythmic activity in this acute arrhythmia model. Only verapamil (0.2 mg/kg i.v.) reduced both the number of arrhythmias occurring during LAD occlusion and the incidence of
ventricular fibrillation
(VF) occurring after occlusion and reperfusion. Although both nifedipine (0.04-0.2 mg/kg i.v.) and propranolol (1-2 mg/kg i.v.) produced a slight but significant (P less than 0.05) dose-dependent decrease in the incidence of VF during the occlusion period only, this protection was accompanied by a significant increase in ectopic activity. The increase in ectopic activity produced by propranolol (1.0 mg/kg i.v.) persisted even in combination with verapamil (0.2 mg/kg i.v.) which given alone decreased the ectopic frequency. Prenylamine up to 5 mg/kg was without significant antiarrhythmic or antifibrillatory activity. However, unlike verapamil and nifedipine, this drug produced only slight changes in heart rate or blood pressure which suggested the presence of only minimal calcium entry blocking action on myocardial and vascular tissue at the doses we employed. Because the relative antifibrillatory efficacies of verapamil and nifedipine paralleled the relative efficacies reported for
depression
of atrioventricular conduction, this may implicate the slow inward current channel in the etiology of VF occurring during acute myocardial ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acute coronary artery occlusion-reperfusion arrhythmias in pigs: antiarrhythmic and antifibrillatory evaluation of verapamil, nifedipine, prenylamine and propranolol. 669 12
Changes in epicardial and endocardial direct current (DC) electrograms and ventricular arrhythmias observed during 60 min of left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) occlusion in nine anesthetized pigs were compared with those observed in eight other pigs after embolization of the LAD with latex, a procedure able to block collateral blood flow to the ischemic area. After LAD occlusion 1) T-Q segment
depression
and S-T segment elevation showed a faster rate of development, and monophasic potentials occurred earlier in the endocardium than in the epicardium; 2) T-Q segment
depression
was greater at the center than at the periphery of the ischemic area during the first 20-30 min, and later it become greater at the periphery than at the center; and 3) a period of transient recovery in the local activation beginning after 8-15 min and lasting for 10-20 min occurred in all cases, commonly associated with T-wave alternans. LAD embolization with latex induced greater T-Q and S-T segment changes in the epicardium than in the endocardium, increased the incidence of
ventricular fibrillation
, and failed to impede the appearance of the period of transient electrical recovery. Thus, within an acutely ischemic area in the in situ pig heart, there are inhomogeneities in the magnitude and time course of the electrical changes, which are not prevented by procedures able to block collateral blood flow to the ischemic area.
Ventricular fibrillation
was also not prevented by such a procedure.
...
PMID:Transmural DC electrograms after coronary artery occlusion and latex embolization in pigs. 672 Sep 6
While maximal exercise testing is useful for detection of arrhythmias and assessment of antiarrhythmic drug efficacy, few reports have documented the safety of this procedure in patients with malignant ventricular arrhythmias. We reviewed the complications of symptom-limited exercise in 263 patients with such arrhythmias who underwent a total of 1377 maximal treadmill tests. Seventy-four percent of the population studied had a history of
ventricular fibrillation
or hemodynamically compromising ventricular tachycardia and the remainder had experienced ventricular tachycardia in the setting of either recent myocardial infarction or poor left ventricular function. A complication was defined as the occurrence of arrhythmia during exercise testing--
ventricular fibrillation
, ventricular tachycardia, or bradycardia--that mandated immediate medical treatment (cardioversion, use of intravenous drugs, or closed-chest compression). Complications were noted in 24 patients (9.1%) during 32 tests (2.3%), whereas 239 patients (90.9%) were free of complication during 1345 tests (97.7%). There were no deaths, myocardial infarctions, or lasting morbid events. Clinical descriptors associated with complications included male sex, presence of coronary artery disease, and a history of exertional arrhythmia (p less than .05). Clinical variables previously considered to confer increased risk during exercise, such as poor left ventricular function, high-grade ventricular arrhythmias (Lown grade 4A or 4B) before or during exercise, exertional hypotension, and ST
depression
, were not predictive of complications (p greater than .05). Occurrence of a complication was also unaffected by the use of antiarrhythmic drugs at the time of exercise (chi square = 0.19, p greater than .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Safety of maximal exercise testing in patients at high risk for ventricular arrhythmia. 673 74
This paper attempts to review our studies on the early haemodynamic, metabolic and electrophysiological consequences of acute coronary artery ligation in an experimental model which allows the simultaneous assessment of blood flow and sampling of blood from both normal and acutely ischaemic zones of myocardium. 1. Using local coronary venous sampling, it has been observed that the major metabolic changes which occur in the ischaemic zone during the first 30 min after coronary artery ligation are increases in PCO2, decreases in pH and oxygen content, a shift in lactate handling from extraction to production and an efflux of K+. These changes were not observed in coronary sinus blood draining essentially nonischaemic zones of myocardium. 2. The major haemodynamic change produced by coronary artery ligation was cardiac
depression
(decreased stroke volume and cardiac work), unchanged LV dP/dt with an elevated filling pressure. 3. Acute ligation of the anterior descending branch of the left coronary artery, l.a.d., resulted in bursts of ventricular ectopic activity which was especially marked 10-20 min after ligation and which frequently resulted in
ventricular fibrillation
. The incidence of arrhythmias could be modified by the species of dog used, the anaesthetic employed, the arterial oxygen tension and the administration of several antiarrhythmic drugs. The possible relevance observed in the ischaemic myocardium, to the genesis of these arrhythmias is discussed. 4. The changes in the ST-segment of epicardial leads produced by short (3 min) occlusions of the l.a.d. were studied in mongrel dogs. Evidence is presented which suggests that the evolution of ST-segment elevation is linked to the efflux of K+ from ischaemic myocardial cells.
...
PMID:The early consequences of myocardial ischaemia and their modification. 678 44
Homoiothermic organisms react to hypothermia by shivering and thermogenesis to retain their euthermic state. This reactive homeostatic mechanism recruits a strong sympathetic response, which must be suppressed by anesthesia and adjuvants during induced hypothermia. Below 30 degrees C there is significant neural and organ
depression
associated with cold narcosis. Cardiac arrhythmias and
ventricular fibrillation
are grave developments when the core temperature is below 28 degrees C. Proper cardiopulmonary support must be instituted in a patient who has induced or accidental hypothermia at these severely hypothermic levels.Although clinical hypothermia is used to protect the brain and the heart from ischemic insults during an operation, it induces a complex array of physiologic changes in the body that must be appreciated so that optimal care may be provided to a patient.
...
PMID:Physiology and pharmacology of hypothermia. 683 26
Three generations of a family with the Romano-Ward syndrome are described. Of all the affected members, only 1 was symptomatic, experiencing episodes of syncope proven to be due to polymorphous ventricular tachycardia (PMVT) induced by chlorimipramine treatment for
depression
. During treatment of an episode of PMVT with lidocaine, the patient developed the 'torsade de pointes' variant of ventricular tachycardia, which progressed to
ventricular fibrillation
and was successfully treated with electroversion. The hazards of treating these patients with commonly used drugs, the possible etiologies for the Romano-Ward syndrome and its mode of inheritance are discussed.
...
PMID:Congenital prolongation of Q-T interval: a family study of three generations. 712 50
Thirty patients with variant angina pectoris (VAP) were analyzed for electrocardiographic features during episodes of VAP. Twenty-nine of these patients had cardiac catheterization, and an autopsy study was performed in one. The patients showed predominantly concave upright T-waves during pain. An increase of R wave amplitude (expressed as delta R) of more than 10% was seen in 17/30 patients (57%). The primary ST-T changes produced by the VAP episodes were conspicuous in two patients with pre-existent complete left and right bundle branch block. Serious dysrhythmias, including
ventricular fibrillation
(VF), ventricular tachycardia (VT), ventricular premature beats (VPBs) (more than five/min, multifocal and R on T phenomenon), and 2 degrees atrioventricular block were found in thirteen patients (43%). The development of dysrhythmias was related to the duration of VAP episodes. The average time to onset of dysrhythmias was 3.54 min. The dysrhythmias were not contingent upon pre-existing coronary artery anatomy (defined by Friesinger's coronary score), left ventricular ejection fraction or left ventricular segmental abnormalities. The location of the ST-segment elevation and the presence of dysrhythmias during the episodes of VAP (A-V blocks, ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation) were not predictive factors of the coronary anatomy. Eight patients (27%) developed myocardial infarction (MI). Five of them had nontransmural MIs and three developed transmural MIs. The development of MI was not related to the severity of the VAP attacks (appreciated by the magnitude of ST-segment elevation and R wave changes) but showed a relation to the development of an unstable pattern which preceded the infarction. Sixteen patients underwent exercise testing. In eight of them, the coronary arteriograms were normal (Group I); in the remaining eight, significant proximal coronary artery obstructive disease was found (Group II). Group I patients displayed a normal ST-segment response and functional aerobic capacity (FAI = 4.4 +/- 14) as well as normal heart rate (HR) and double product (SBP X HR) responses (HR = 154 +/- 21; SBP X 21; SBP X HR = 290 +/- 71). During exercise, a normal delta R was observed. With one exception, Group II patients showed an abnormal ST-segment response with an overall low exercise capacity (FAI = 57 +/- 17) and decreased hemodynamic response (HR = 27; SBP X HR = 130 +/- 40). FAI, HR, SBP X HR Group I vs. Group II = P less than .005/less than .02/less than .005. The abnormal ST-segment response included elevation in four patients and
depression
in three. During exercise, Group I with ST-elevation displayed a normal (negative) delta R response; while Group II with ST-
depression
displayed an abnormal delta R response (positive or no change). There was no difference in the coronary score between Group II patients with ST-segment elevation or
depression
.
...
PMID:Prinzmetal's variant angina: electrocardiographic and angiographic correlations. 714 73
Functional ablation of the cerebral cortex by cortical spreading
depression
(CSD) significantly increased the dose of desacetyl lanatoside C required to induce A-V block and
ventricular fibrillation
. To examine the role of the posterior hypothalamus in the increased resistance of decorticated rats to arrhythmia induced by toxic doses of desacetyl lanatoside C, four groups of animals were injected with this drug: group 1 rats had a craniotomy; group 2 rats had a craniotomy and functional decortication; group 3 rats had a craniotomy and a hypothalamic lesion; and group 4 rats had a craniotomy, hypothalamic lesion and functional decortication. The dose of drug required to induce A-V block and
ventricular fibrillation
was significantly less in group 1, than in groups 2,3 and 4, and there was no statistically significant difference between these last three groups. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the increased resistance to arrhythmia induced by desacetyl lanatoside C in decorticated rats is mediated by the posterior hypothalamus.
...
PMID:Cortical control of neurally-mediated arrhythmogenic properties of desacetyl lanatoside C: the role of the posterior hypothalamus. 717 46
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