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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The antihypertensive and haemodynamic effects of labetalol were compared with those of prazosin both at rest and during bicycle exercise in 38 moderate to moderately severe hypertensive patients (supine DBP 95 to 119 mmHg when untreated). Following a two week open placebo phase to establish baseline BP and baseline exercise performance, patients were randomly and double-blindedly assigned to receive labetalol or prazosin. Drug dose was titrated from 100 to 400 mg labetalol twice daily, or from one to 10 mg prazosin twice daily at weekly intervals until BP was controlled (supine DBP less than or equal to 90 mmHg with at least a 10 mmHg decrease from baseline). Eighteen labetalol and twenty prazosin patients achieved BP control and were subsequently reexercised to
fatigue
on a bicycle ergometer. The mean changes from baseline for heart rate and rate pressure product (heart rate x SBP) were reduced only in the labetalol group; the difference between the labetalol and prazosin groups was significant (P less than 0.01) both at rest and during exercise. This haemodynamic profile of labetalol may be important in selecting a vasodilating antihypertensive for patients with concomitant
ischaemic heart disease
.
...
PMID:The effects of labetalol and prazosin on exercise haemodynamics in hypertensive patients. 204 Oct 34
Since it is very rare that cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture caused by infective endocarditis, occurs we are reporting this case. A 62 year old man, who had underlying diseases of pneumoconiosis and hypertensive heart disease, visited Chikuho Rosai Hospital complaining of chest oppression and general
fatigue
on Feb. 7, 1987. He was diagnosed as having
ischemic heart disease
by electrocardiogram. Two days later, he suddenly had chills and a fever, and the laboratory data showed leukocytosis and a positive C-reactive protein (CRP). The echo cardiogram showed mitral regurgitation (MR) and aortic regurgitation (AR), but neither vegetation nor pericardial effusion was observed. On Feb. 16, he was admitted with shock, and he died the next day. The blood cultures grew gram-positive cocci, respectively. From the clinical symptoms, chest roentgenogram and electrocardiogram, we suspected a cardiac tamponade. On autopsy findings, though coronary arteries were intact, the aortic valves had severe valvular adhesions, calcifications and hypertrophies. The rupture hole was observed in the left ventricles, which was just under the aortic valve through the pericardiac space. It seemed that he died of a cardiac tamponade due to the outflow of blood from this hole. On histopathologic findings of the cardiac wall, gram-positive cocci and many of neutrophils were observed.
...
PMID:[An autopsied case of infective endocarditis with cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture]. 207 73
Cardiovascular rehabilitation is defined as the process of development and maintenance of a desirable level of physical, social, and psychologic functioning after the onset of a cardiovascular illness. Patient education, counseling, nutritional guidance, and exercise training play prominent roles in the process of rehabilitation. Benefits from cardiac rehabilitation include improved exercise capacity and decreased symptoms of angina pectoris, dyspnea, claudication, and
fatigue
. Recent pooled data regarding exercise training after myocardial infarction demonstrated a 20 to 25% reduction in mortality and major cardiac events. Exercise training may result in an improvement in systemic oxygen transport, a reduction in the myocardial oxygen requirement for a given amount of external work, and a decrease in the extent of
myocardial ischemia
during physical activity. The efficacy of modification of risk factors in reducing the progression of coronary artery disease and future morbidity and mortality has been established. Herein we review the history, current practice and results, and future challenges of cardiovascular rehabilitation.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular rehabilitation: status, 1990. 219 53
Various non-invasive methods exist for evaluating the cardiac status of patients presenting for peripheral vascular surgery. Methods involving exercise on a treadmill are frequently used, but adequate testing may be limited in amputees and patients with severe claudication or rest pain. An alternative means of exercise is the arm ergometer. A study of 130 patients subjected to arm ergometer exercise testing before peripheral vascular surgery was undertaken. A control group of 29 consecutive patients had coronary angiography. ECG exercise testing using the arm ergometer showed a sensitivity for detecting coronary artery disease of 46% and a specificity of 100%. In total, 42 tests were positive, 21 on patients with no symptoms of
ischaemic heart disease
and no resting ECG changes indicative of ischaemia, and 4 in patients with atypical angina. Muscle
fatigue
proved a problem, especially in women; while the accuracy of the test did not decline in patients over the age of 60 years when compared with those under this age.
...
PMID:The arm ergometer exercise test for evaluating coronary artery status in patients presenting for peripheral vascular surgery. 228 76
Recent work has now clearly established that coronary arterial thrombosis is the direct cause of acute myocardial infarction. This thrombotic event occurs when a pre-existing atherosclerotic plaque ruptures or fissures, thereby exposing underlying thrombogenic material to the circulation. Platelets are thus activated and the clotting cascade is initiated. It is as yet unclear why a previously stable atherosclerotic plaque should fissure or rupture. However, suggested mechanisms include release of vasoactive substances from activated platelets, coronary arterial vasomotion, mechanical stress
fatigue
of the atherosclerotic plaque, and rupture of vasa vasorum within the atherosclerotic plaque. The resultant cessation of myocardial blood flow produces specific biochemical and physiological alterations secondary to
myocardial ischemia
. Intracellular acidosis, loss of high-energy phosphates, reduced sensitivity of contractile proteins to calcium, and accumulation of inorganic phosphate and lipid, all occur within the ischemic myocyte. Diastolic compliance is markedly reduced by ischemia followed by cessation of systolic contractile activity. Most of these alterations are reversible if ischemia is relieved promptly. Prolonged ischemia leads to delayed biochemical and physiological recovery and/or cell necrosis.
...
PMID:The pathophysiology of acute myocardial infarction. 266 57
This paper presents a review of Soviet and foreign publications (1955-1985) containing biochemical data obtained during real and simulated aircraft flights. The paper discusses the results accumulated before and after flights of varying duration, when performing tasks of different complexity and by pilots with different professional skills. Special attention is given to the studies in which biochemical parameters have been used as a measure of recovery and professional adequacy. Biochemical results are also presented which may help detect young people susceptible to hypertensive disease and
ischemic heart disease
as well as prevent and modify these pathologies and
fatigue
.
...
PMID:[Various aspects of applied biochemical studies in aviation medicine]. 266 35
There is increasing evidence that platelets play an important role in the pathogenesis of acute
ischemic heart disease
. Therefore an understanding of factors that influence platelet performance is important. This study was undertaken (1) to characterize during evolving myocardial infarction platelet activity in the peripheral circulation and across the ischemic/infarcting myocardial compartment, the locus of presumed platelet hyperactivity, and (2) to evaluate the effects of prostacyclin (PGI2), a most potent antiplatelet agent and vasodilator. A total of 59 patients with evolving myocardial infarction were studied. Twenty-two patients were instrumented with arterial and coronary sinus catheters and received intravenous infusion of PGI2, 13 +/- 4.5 ng/kg/min (mean +/- SD), for 90 min. In 15 patients with anterior myocardial infarction, transcardiac platelet function and response to PGI2 were studied. Plasma levels of beta-thromboglobulin (beta-TG) and of thromboxane B2 (TxB2), in vivo measures of platelet activity, were elevated three- and 10-fold. 6-Keto-prostaglandin F 1 alpha, the stable end product of PGI2, was less than 10 pg/ml, reflecting a leftward shift of the TxB2/PGI2 ratio. Platelets circulating during evolving myocardial infarction ("ischemic platelets") were hyperaggregable in response to ADP and relatively resistant to PGI2, both in vivo and in vitro. Concentrations of platelet cyclic AMP and the cyclic AMP response to PGI2 were diminished. The platelet hyperreactivity, expressed by plasma beta-TG, platelet aggregation, and PGI2-induced inhibition of aggregation, was most intense early during infarct evolution and decreased with time. The increased platelet performance resulted in "platelet
fatigue
," indicated by decreased contents of beta-TG of the ischemic platelet and decreased TxA2 production in response to collagen. However, the ischemic platelet produced twice normal TxA2 in response to arachidonic acid (stimulus and substrate), demonstrating a heightened metabolic capacity. TxA2 was produced across the ischemic/infarcting compartment in 10 of 15 patients with anterior myocardial infarction. The antiplatelet effect of PGI2 was greatly diminished. In summary, the data define an abnormal pattern of platelet behavior during evolving myocardial infarction, characterized by a proaggregatory environment, heightened platelet reactivity in both the peripheral and coronary circulation, and relative resistance to PGI2. The clinical consequences of the data are that the patient in the acute phase of myocardial infarction may benefit from suppression of platelet function and requires significantly greater doses of PGI2 than normal subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Systemic and transcardiac platelet activity in acute myocardial infarction in man: resistance to prostacyclin. 293 81
A plasma exchange program for familial hypercholesterolaemia was started in 1982. Ten patients aged from 7 to 58 years were progressively included: 3 had an heterozygous form of the disease with
ischaemic heart disease
; 3 had an homozygous form with defective low density lipoprotein receptor activity, 4 had a receptor-negative homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia and had previously undergone portacaval shunt. During total plasma exchange against human albumin (470 sessions in 9 patients) low density lipoprotein cholesterol values, but also high density lipoprotein cholesterol values, decreased by 40 per cent. More recently, 5 patients had selective low density lipoprotein absorption on dextran sulfate column (Liposorber); 90 exchanges were performed. High density lipoprotein cholesterol values decreased by 55 per cent and high density lipoprotein cholesterol values by only 27 per cent. The patients' attitude to treatment was excellent, with less
fatigue
and better compliance.
...
PMID:[Comparison between treatments of severe forms of familial hypercholesterolemia by total plasma exchange and selective removal of low density lipoproteins (LDLapheresis)]. 297 30
Ambulatory ECG monitoring for detection of transient
myocardial ischemia
is useful because most ischemic episodes that occur outside the exercise laboratory are not accompanied by symptoms. Special considerations, not required for AEM when used for arrhythmia analysis, must be employed. Although many commercially available recorders provide excellent ST-segment reproduction, some playback systems may have a nonlinear phase response resulting in signal distortion, making ST-segment analysis difficult. Conventional Holter-type AEM devices do not allow for patient or physician intervention during acute
myocardial ischemia
. Considerable cost and time are required to analyze ST-segment data of prolonged monitoring periods from these tape-recorded signals, and human error and
fatigue
play an important role in diminishing accuracy of ST-segment interpretation. Automated analysis is done with computer and technician interaction but the accuracy and validation of the various systems for ST-segment analysis from tape recordings requires further detailed study. Newer, real-time ambulatory ECG analyzers are designed for prolonged monitoring periods and directed toward ST-segment analysis. Some devices also alert the patient to an acute ischemic or arrhythmic event allowing for intervention immediately. Some real-time systems have undergone some very encouraging validation studies. These recent studies suggest excellent sensitivity and specificity for detection of ischemic-type ST-segment depression. However, more work is needed before the accuracy of other such devices is known with certainty. As the central goal of therapy for patients with coronary artery disease evolves from simply controlling angina to reduction or elimination of ischemic episodes and their consequences, use of AEM devices will play an increasingly important role in management of these patients.
...
PMID:Ambulatory ECG (Holter) monitoring in management of acute myocardial ischemia. 328 67
Thiazide diuretics are the preferred initial therapy in the majority of elderly hypertensive patients--based upon efficacy and long-term safety data. Alternative therapies may be used in subjects with persistent gout, impotence,
fatigue
, or electrolyte disturbances. In patients with
ischemic heart disease
and/or angina, beta adrenergic inhibitors or calcium entry blockers are acceptable initial therapy. Converting enzyme inhibitors may be especially useful in hypertensives with congestive heart failure. The combination of small dose diuretic therapy and one of the above alternative drugs has an important place in the treatment of the elderly hypertensive.
...
PMID:Diuretics and alternative drugs in geriatric hypertension. 354 24
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