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

Right ventricular (RV) systolic time intervals and hemodynamic parameters were determined by micromanometric techniques in 13 subjects with normal right ventricles (NRV). These data were compared to those of 16 patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH) or predominant pressure overloading and 13 individuals with uncomplicated secundum atrial septal defects (ASD) or predominant volume overloading. In PH, the QP2 interval tends to remain within the normal range due to reciprocal changes in isovolumic contraction (ICT) and ejection (RVET) times. Elevations of pulmonary artery diastolic pressure are associated with increases in the mean rate of isovolumic pressure rise (MRIPR) (r = 0.84), but the latter change does not fully compensate for the widened ventriculoarterial diastolic pressure difference and ICT becomes prolonged (P less than 0.001). Factors other than stroke index depression which may contribute to the decreased duration of RVET (P less than 0.001) include tricuspid regurgitation and elevation of pulmonary vascular impedance. In ASD, QP2 is significantly prolonged (P less than 0.025) due to a significant increase in RVET (P less than 0.005). In contrast to NRV, a linear correlation of RVET and stroke index was not present, which suggested an alteration of ejection dynamics in this group. Despite a high incidence of complete or incomplete right bundle branch block the interval from QRS onset to rapid RV pressure upstroke was not prolonged. This is most probably the result of peripheral bundle branch block of genesis of the QRS pattern by right ventricular hypertrophy.
...
PMID:Alterations of right ventricular systolic time intervals by chronic pressure and volume overloading. 126 38

The past decade has seen a shift in the strategy for hypertension treatment from stepped therapy--a highly structured monolithic series of steps--to recommendations for a more individualized selection of treatment. Severe hypertension is a clear indicator to bypass traditional steps. Demographic factors, such as age, gender, and race, are often cited, but have proved to be less helpful. Concomitant medical conditions and problems are very common and are more often the crucial determinants in the selection of antihypertensive therapy. Coronary artery disease, diabetes mellitus, heart failure, azotemia, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary artery disease, anxiety, and depression are all common, and each has implications for the selection of antihypertensive therapy. Blood pressure reduction is a surrogate for reduction of cardiovascular risk, and therefore, consideration of concomitant medical problems has extended to left ventricular hypertrophy, obesity, mild hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance, as additional risk factors in hypertension. Consideration of all these factors makes it possible to individualize antihypertensive therapy in most patients today.
...
PMID:Treatment of hypertension: the place of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in the nineties. 128 28

This study tested the hypothesis that discriminant function analysis of clinical and exercise-test variables including computerized ST measurements could improve the prediction of severe coronary artery disease. Secondary objectives were to demonstrate the effect of digoxin and/or resting electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities, and to evaluate the relative importance of ST measurements made during the recovery phase and in the three lead group areas. The design was a retrospective analysis of data collected during exercise testing and coronary angiography. The ECG data were gathered and stored in digital format on optical discs and all ST measurements were made off-line using the authors' own software. Univariate and multivariate analytic methods were used to analyze all pretest characteristics as well as hemodynamic and computerized ECG responses to exercise. A 1,000-bed Veterans Affairs Medical Center served as the setting. The study included 446 male veterans who underwent a sign or symptom limited treadmill exercise test and coronary angiography. Analysis was also performed on a subset of this population formed by excluding patients receiving digoxin or with resting ECGs exhibiting left ventricular hypertrophy or ST depression (n = 328). In the total study population, the authors derived a treadmill score using discriminant function analysis. This score included: (1) the time-slope area in lead V5 during recovery; (2) delta heart rate; (3) angina pectoris during the exercise test; and (4) presence of diagnostic Q waves on the resting ECG. This score was effective in predicting triple vessel/left main disease and outperformed exercise-induced ST depression for predicting severe coronary artery disease. After exclusion of patients with ECGs exhibiting left ventricular hypertrophy or resting ST depression and patients receiving digoxin, discriminant function analysis chose: (1) the time-slope area in lead V5 during recovery and (2) delta heart rate. Exclusion of these patients resulted in a nonsignificant decrease in specificity of all ST criteria. ST-segment amplitude or slope in lead V5 at 3.5 minutes in recovery clearly outperformed the maximal exercise measurements in both groups. Summing the depressions or selecting the most depression in the three areas (ie, lateral-V5, inferior-II, anterior-V2) did not improve test performance. Leads other than V5 did not contain significant diagnostic information. A quantitative approach to exercise testing using discriminant function analysis enhanced the tests' performance for predicting severe coronary disease. The inclusion of patients taking digoxin or with resting ECG abnormalities nonsignificantly decreases the specificity of all ST criteria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prediction of severe coronary artery disease using computerized ECG measurements and discriminant function analysis. 129 8

Six patients (2 males and 4 females, mean age of 46 years) with X syndrome were reported in this paper. All patients presented with typical exertional angina pectoris. In 4 patients the angina had a variable threshold of onset, it often occurred at rest and occasionally nocturnally. The electrocardiogram during chest pain showed ST segment depression of more than 0.05-0.1 mV in all 6 patients. The treadmill or bicycle ergometer exercise test was positive in 4 cases (ST segment depression > 0.1 mV), equivocal in 1 (ST segment < 0.1 mV) in whom the 201Tl exercise myocardial perfusion scan showed sign of ischemia, and negative in 1 in whom atrial pacing at heart rate of 135 beats/min induced angina and ST segment depression of 0.1-0.15 mV. Echocardiograms and X ray chest films revealed no sign of ventricular hypertrophy or enlargement. The 201Tl exercise myocardial perfusion scan was performed in 5 patients, which showed signs of ischemia in 4 patients and suspected to have ischemia in 1. Left ventriculograms and coronary angiograms were normal in all 6 patients. Ergonovine provoking test (total dose of 0.4 mg) was negative in 5 patients, it was not performed in 1 in whom there was no evidence of coronary artery spasm by angiogram during appearance of electrocardiographic ischemic changes and chest pain. Left ventricular endomyocardial biopsy was performed in 1 patient, which showed significant smooth muscle cell proliferation in the medial layer of a small artery with diameter of 62.5 mu which produced narrowing of the lumen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[X syndrome--report of six cases]. 130 21

Inhalational anesthetics and ventricular hypertrophy have adverse effects on cardiac muscle contraction. The effects of 1, 2, and 3% halothane on the contractile protein and sarcoplasmic reticulum, but not the sarcolemma, were examined in normal left ventricular tissue from rabbits that underwent a sham surgical procedure (n = 5) and in left ventricular hypertrophied tissue from surgically induced aortic coarctation (n = 7). Muscle samples were mechanically "skinned" to disrupt the sarcolemma. Fiber bundles were mounted in photodiode transducers and bathed in a series of solutions designed to examine the contractile protein [Ca2+]-tension responses or to examine Ca2+ storage by and release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Hill equation analysis of the [Ca2+]-tension relationship of the contractile protein was performed. Compared to normal muscle, hypertrophied muscle was associated with an 8.2% decrease in the [Ca2+] necessary for 50% maximum tension (more sensitive to Ca2+) (P less than 0.001) and an increase in the slope constant of 23% (P less than 0.001). In normal and hypertrophied tissue, each 1% of halothane incrementally decreased the contractile protein response to maximal [Ca2+] by 5% (P less than 0.01), increased the [Ca2+] at 50% maximum tension by 5% (P less than 0.01), and had no effect on the slope of the Hill equation. Halothane also inhibited Ca2+ storage by the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In normal muscle, 1, 2, and 3% halothane decreased the stored Ca2+ to 42, 22, and 9%, respectively, of Ca2+ storage without halothane (P less than 0.001). However, hypertrophied muscle demonstrated slightly less depression (P less than 0.05 by analysis of variance).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy in rabbits does not exaggerate the effects of halothane on the intracellular components of cardiac contraction. 138 68

Hypertensive patients often complain of angina pectoris in spite of a normal coronary angiogram. The aim of this study was to establish whether electrographical signs of transient myocardial ischaemia during 24-h ST Holter monitoring are associated with an increased left ventricular muscle mass. Thirty-five hypertensive patients were studied by 24-h Holter monitoring and M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography. For control purposes nine normotensives were studied by the same protocol. Hypertensives with and without ST-segment depression did not differ in respect of blood pressure or left ventricular muscle mass (162.9 +/- 80 vs. 162.3 +/- 53 g m-2). Since both groups only showed a borderline left ventricular hypertrophy, the myocardial factor does not seem to be important for the occurrence of ST segment depression. Primary functional and structural alterations at the microcirculation level seem to be responsible for the occurrence of transient episodes of ST segment depression in the Holter electrocardiogram, indicating transient myocardial ischaemia.
...
PMID:Transient myocardial ischaemia in hypertensives: missing link with left ventricular hypertrophy. 139 62

Unknown is the significance of the abnormalities of repolarization observed at rest in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) demonstrated by coronary angiography, except for ischemic episodes, myocardial infarction, left ventricular hypertrophy, electrolyte changes or pharmacological interactions. The chronic T wave inversion and ST segment depression are usually considered as an alteration due to ischemia ("chronic myocardial ischemia"); this definition is, in our opinion, erroneous, because myocardial ischemia is an acute episode caused by a sudden lack of balance between demand and availability of myocardial oxygen, corresponding to transient electrocardiographic alterations. Thus, the definition of "chronic myocardial ischemia" referred to stable abnormalities of repolarization is incorrect, because a "chronic" lack of balance between MVO2 and O2 availability would produce necessarily irreversible myocardial damage (necrosis). To contribute to the comprehension of the stable ECG changes at rest, we have selected a group of patients with CAD demonstrated by coronary angiography, presenting stable T wave alterations and ST depression at rest. We have studied the main and regional left ventricular function through radionuclide angiocardiography (ACS). Comparing the abnormalities of repolarization (ECG) on the one hand with angio, EFR and VER on the other, we have obtained different positive correlations, according to the functional parameters considered (EFR and VER). In our study, the lowest positive correlation has been noticed comparing ECG versus angio, VER and EFR (37.5%), while the highest correlation was obtained when ECG was considered versus angio and VER (56.25%). Evaluating ECG versus angio and EFR we have obtained a positive correlation equal to 43.75%. So we have deduced that VER is the functional parameter that better relates to angio and ECG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A critical review of the stable changes in ventricular repolarization in ischemic cardiopathy. A correlation with the angiographic findings]. 148 33

Over the past decade we have seen a shift in the strategy for the treatment of hypertension, from stepped therapy--involving a highly structured, unvarying series of steps--to recommendations for more individualized treatment. How shall we accomplish that goal? Severe hypertension provides a clear indication to bypass earlier recommendations. Demographic data such as age, gender, and race, often cited, have proved less helpful. Concomitant medical problems, which are found in greater than 50% of hypertensive patients, are most often the crucial determinants in the selection of antihypertensive therapy. Concurrent coronary artery disease, diabetes mellitus, heart failure, azotemia, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, borderline cognitive dysfunction, anxiety, and depression are all common. Each has implications for antihypertensive therapy. Moreover, blood pressure reduction is a surrogate for our real goal, which is reduction of cardiovascular risk. Thus, consideration of concomitant medical problems has extended to left ventricular hypertrophy, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance as additional risk factors in hypertension. Consideration of all of these factors makes it possible to individualize antihypertensive therapy in most patients.
...
PMID:Evolution of the treatment of hypertension: what really matters in the 1990s? 151 35

Coronary artery narrowing, ranging from 19% to 61%, was induced in rats and ventricular performance, myocardial damage, and myocyte hypertrophy were examined 1 mo later. Animals were separated into two groups, exhibiting ventricular dysfunction and failure, respectively. Dysfunction consisted of a 2.4-fold increase in left ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP), 15% decrease in left ventricular peak systolic pressure (LVPSP), 24% reduction in developed pressure (DP), and a 16% depression in-dP/dt. Failure was defined on the basis of a 4.7-fold elevation in LVEDP, and a 26%, 47%, 45%, and 41% decrease in LVPSP, DP, +dP/dt, and -dP/dt. Moreover, in this group, right ventricular end diastolic and systolic pressures increased 5.5- and 1.2-fold. Left and right ventricular weights expanded 23% and 51% with dysfunction and 30% and 56% with failure. Left ventricular hypertrophy was characterized by ventricular dilation and wall thinning which were more severe in the failing animals. Foci of damage were found in both groups but tissue injury was more prominent in the endomyocardium and in failing rats. Finally, myocyte loss in the ventricle was 10% and 20% with dysfunction and failure whereas the corresponding enlargements of the unaffected myocytes were 34% and 53%. Thus, coronary narrowing led to abnormalities in cardiac dynamics with an increase in diastolic wall stress and extensive ventricular remodeling in spite of a moderate loss of myocytes and compensatory reactive hypertrophy of the viable cells.
...
PMID:Chronic coronary artery constriction leads to moderate myocyte loss and left ventricular dysfunction and failure in rats. 153 47

Two cases of coronary artery-left ventricular fistula (AVF) associated with left ventricular hypertrophy were reported. The first patient was a 53-year-old man with chest pain. Selective coronary angiography (CAG) revealed bilateral coronary arteries draining into the left ventricle (LV). The second patient was a 46-year old man with electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities. CAG showed bilateral coronary artery which communicated via a maze of fine vessels into LV. In both cases, ECG showed ST depression and inverted T wave, and two-dimensional echocardiography revealed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Coexistence of coronary artery-left ventricular fistula and HCM seems to be a casual association.
...
PMID:[Two cases of coronary artery-left ventricular fistula associated with left ventricular hypertrophy]. 153 80


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>