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)

We assessed the effect of alcohol, before and after autonomic blockade, on left ventricular (LV) performance in conscious dogs. 10 animals were instrumented to determine LV volume from ultrasonic LV internal dimensions and measure LV pressure with a micromanometer. The animals were studied in the conscious state after full recovery from the operation. Blood alcohol was undetectable before and 67 +/- 14 mg/dl (mean +/- SD) at 20 min after alcohol administration. In response to alcohol, the LV systolic pressure was reduced slightly, the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure increased slightly. The maximum time derivative of LV pressure (dP/dtmax) and stroke volume were decreased. The end-systolic volume (VES), as well as effective arterial elastance, were significantly increased. There was no significant change in heart rate. Variably loaded pressure-volume loops were generated by acute caval occlusion before, immediately, and 20 min after the intravenous infusion of alcohol (0.2 g/kg). Three measures of LV performance were derived from these variably loaded pressure-volume loops: the end-systolic pressure-volume relation; the stroke work-end-diastolic volume relation; and maximum dP/dt-VED relation. The slopes of all three relations were significantly decreased in response to alcohol, and all three relations were shifted toward the right, indicating a depression of LV contractile performance. Similar, but greater depressions of LV performance with alcohol were observed following autonomic blockade. LV performance was restored by infusing dobutamine. We conclude that mildly intoxicating levels of alcohol (blood concentration less than 100 mg/dl) are capable of producing LV contractile depression in conscious animals, which is more marked after autonomic blockade. This suggests that patients with impaired LV function should avoid even small amounts of alcohol.
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PMID:Acute effects of mildly intoxicating levels of alcohol on left ventricular function in conscious dogs. 234 16

We assessed the effect of arginine vasopressin (AVP) on left ventricular (LV) performance in eight conscious dogs. Five minutes after AVP infusion (6 microns.kg-1 x min-1 for 2 min) the plasma AVP was elevated from 3.9 +/- 0.9 to 14.7 +/- 4.6 pg/ml (P < 0.05). With all reflexes intact, AVP caused significant increases in LV end-systolic pressure (P) (112 +/- 8 vs. 122 +/- 7 mmHg, P < 0.05) end-systolic volume (V) (30 +/- 5.8 vs. 38 +/- 7.7 ml, P < 0.05), total systemic resistance (6.2 +/- 1.8 vs. 10.6 +/- 4.0 mmHg.dl-1 x min, P < 0.01) and arterial elastance (Ea) (6.8 +/- 3.0 vs. 8.6 +/- 3.9 mmHg/ml, P < 0.05), while the heart rate (110 +/- 6 vs. 82 +/- 10 beats/min, P < 0.05) and stroke volume (16.5 +/- 4.3 vs. 14.2 +/- 3.9 ml, P < 0.05) were decreased. There was no significant change in the coronary sinus blood flow (82 +/- 19 vs. 78 +/- 22 ml/min, P = not significant). AVP decreased the slopes of LV end-systolic P-V relation (10.7 +/- 1.1 vs. 8.1 +/- 1.9 mmHg/ml, P < 0.05), the maximal first derivative of LV pressure (dP/dtmax)-end-diastolic volume (VED) relation (135.2 +/- 18.7 vs. 63.1 +/- 7.7 mmHg.s-1 x ml-1, P < 0.05), and the stroke work-VED relation (81.1 +/- 4.1 vs. 66.7 +/- 2.8 mmHg, P < 0.05) and shifted the relations to the right, indicating a depression of LV performance. A similar increase in Ea produced by methoxamine did not depress LV performance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of vasopressin on left ventricular performance. 843 Aug 61

Left ventricular (LV) short- and long-axis contractile function and LV structural changes were serially measured in eight instrumented dogs during the development of congestive heart failure (CHF) induced by rapid right ventricular (RV) pacing. After 10 days of pacing, LV end-diastolic volume (VED) had not increased; however, the slope of LV end-systolic pressure-volume relation had decreased from 7.4 +/- 2.6 to 4.9 +/- 1.1 mmHg/ml (P < 0.05), and the slope of LV stroke work-VED relation had fallen from 78.4 +/- 9.1 to 64.2 +/- 7.2 mmHg (P < 0.05). The slopes of end-systolic pressure-dimension relation and the stroke work area-end-diastolic dimension relation in the short axes (i.e., anteroposterior and septal-lateral) had decreased by 30% (P < 0.05), whereas the slopes of the long-axis (i.e., apical-basal) relations were unchanged (not significant). After 20 days of pacing, VED had significantly increased by 14% due to selective dilation of the short axes by 7%, and LV global contractility had further declined with a 40% contractile depression in the short axes and a 25% contractile depression in the long axis. After 30 days, the long-axis dimension at end diastole was also significantly increased with a further increase in the short-axis dimensions. In contrast to the spherical dilation occurring during CHF, acute volume loading of normal animals produced symmetrical LV dilation. These observations suggest that heterogeneous contractile depression initiates the spherical end-diastolic chamber dilation in pacing-induced CHF.
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PMID:Left ventricular spherical dilation and regional contractile dysfunction in dogs with heart failure. 932 89

Vascular tone is regulated by vasodilators and vasoconstrictors. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is the predominant vasoconstrictor peptide that constricts vascular smooth muscle, whereas nitric oxide (NO) is the primary vasodilator peptide that relaxes vascular smooth muscle. In this study, the authors examined whether NO/ET-1 ratio is a useful marker for detecting coronary artery disease (CAD), by comparison with evaluation based on vascular endothelial (VE) function. They measured plasma NOX and ET-1 by using ENO-200 and radioimmunoassay, in 38 subjects with normal (NL) coronary arteries (NL group; mean age, 60 +/-12 years) and 25 subjects with CAD (CAD group; mean age, 69 +/- 6 years). VE function (randomized endothelium-dependent [D] and endothelium-independent [I] VE function) was assessed by measuring brachial artery (BA) diameter by using high-resolution ultrasound (7.5 MHz). Soon after these procedures, symptom-limited exercise testing was performed. There were no statistically significant differences in serum lipid concentrations or VED function between the groups. However, the CAD group had a significantly lower NO/ET-1 ratio (1.2 +/- 1.1 vs 2.7 +/- 2.2, p < 0.01) and BA diameter after sublingual nitroglycerin (VEID function: 6 +/- 7% vs 10 +/- 4%, p < 0.05). As expected, the ST segment and treadmill exercise duration were significantly lower in the CAD group. Sensitivity and specificity for detecting CAD by plasma NO/ET-1 ratio (> or =2 .0) were 90% and 85%, respectively; sensitivity and specificity for detecting CAD by ST depression (> or =1 mm) were 80% and 78%, respectively. The present results suggest that plasma NO/ET-1 ratio is a useful biological marker for predicting CAD.
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PMID:Significance of plasma nitric oxide/endothelial-1 ratio for prediction of coronary artery disease. 1588 92