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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The heart, lungs and hemoglobin form the body's gas transport system, which links the atmosphere and its supply of O2 with tissue, while simultaneously providing for the elimination of the metabolic end-product, CO2, into the atmosphere. The transport of these respiratory gases must be in accordance with metabolic need. This is particularly evident during the physiologic stress of isotonic exercise, when the O2 requirements and CO2 production of skeletal muscle are increased. The monitoring of these respiratory gases during exercise, referred to as cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CAR-PET), can be used to assess heart and lung function in patients with cardiovascular or lung disease or both. Chronic
cardiac failure
(
CCF
) may be defined in physiologic terms as that circumstance in which the heart fails to provide tissue with O2 at a rate commensurate with aerobic requirements. In patients with
CCF
,
CAR
-PET represents a noninvasive means to determine aerobic capacity (that is, maximal O2 uptake) and anaerobic threshold during incremental treadmill exercise. It can also provide an objective measure of the severity of failure, the functional status of the patient and the heart's pump reserve. By using additional measurements of ventilation, arterial O2 saturation and, in selected cases, hemodynamic monitoring, the nature and severity of cardiovascular and pulmonary disease may be evaluated.
...
PMID:Cardiopulmonary exercise testing for evaluation of chronic cardiac failure. 396 7
Chronic heart failure (CHF) impairs endothelium-dependent vasodilatation of large conductance arteries. We investigated whether a similar reduction also occurs in small arteries, and whether such a reduction can be prevented by the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor perindopril (P) in a rat model of CHF (left coronary artery ligation). After 1 month treatment with placebo or P (2 mg/kg/day), rats were anesthetized and arterial pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, and central venous pressure were measured with a micromanometer. Segments of aorta and mesenteric artery (mean diameter, 281 +/- 8 microns) were then isolated, cannulated, and perfused at constant pressure using an arteriograph. Responses to increasing concentrations of acetylcholine (Ach), nitroprusside, and to 10(-4) mol/L NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) were studied after preconstriction by phenylephrine.
Heart failure
resulted in a decrease in systolic and diastolic pressures, an increase in left ventricular end-diastolic and central venous pressures, and a significant depression of Ach-induced dilatation of the mesenteric artery (maximal dilatation, from 90 +/- 4% to 63 +/- 4%, P < .05) but not of the aorta (from 56 +/- 8% to 45 +/- 5%, NS) without any modification in the endothelium-independent vasodilatation induced by nitroprusside. In the group treated by the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor perindopril, systolic and diastolic pressures were slightly decreased, whereas left ventricular end diastolic, central venous pressures, and the endothelium-dependent vasodilating response to Ach were normalized. Responses to L-
NAME
were not affected by CHF or perindopril. Perindopril also decreased hypertrophy, as evidenced by a significantly lower heart weight in treated rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prevention of endothelial dysfunction in small and large arteries in a model of chronic heart failure. Effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition. 764 44
Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) promotes natriuresis and diuresis, increases vascular permeability and may induce peripheral vasodilatation. Endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), which is nitric oxide (NO), promotes local vasodilatation. ANF and EDRF-NO both cause vascular relaxation by generating cGMP via the activation of the particulate and soluble guanylate cyclases, respectively. This study examines the in vivo effect of exogenous ANF administration in normal Wistar rats, and of increased endogenous ANF in an experimental model of
heart failure
, on plasma and tissue cGMP concentrations. Low-dose ANF increased plasma and pulmonary cGMP concentrations, whereas 10-fold higher doses were necessary to increase aorta cGMP concentrations. Rats with a myocardial infarction had increased plasma ANF and cGMP and pulmonary cGMP concentrations, but aorta cGMP concentration remained similar to that of sham-operated rats. NG nitro L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
) was administered chronically to sham-operated and myocardial infarction rats to block NO-synthase: soluble guanylate cyclase activity. L-
NAME
did not lower the increase in plasma ANF concentration or in urinary, plasma or pulmonary cGMP concentration. In contrast, L-
NAME
reduced the aorta cGMP concentration 6-fold, despite an increased level of circulating ANF. In summary, the pathophysiological range of plasma ANF concentrations greatly increases plasma and pulmonary cGMP concentrations (by activating particulate guanylate cyclase), but has little influence on the aorta cGMP concentration (which remains mainly dependent on NO-synthase: soluble guanylate cyclase activity).
...
PMID:Atrial natriuretic factor influences in vivo plasma, lung and aortic wall cGMP concentrations differently. 839 39
Because controversies surround the increased negative inotropic effects of calcium antagonists in
heart failure
, other mechanisms may explain their lack of efficacy in this condition. We hypothesized that altered coronary sensitivity through endothelial dysfunctions may be involved. Our goal was to evaluate the effects of
heart failure
on coronary and cardiac sensitivity to the calcium antagonist diltiazem. Left ventricular developed pressure (LVP) and coronary flow (CF) were assessed in isovolumetrically beating, perfused, failing hearts from cardiomyopathic hamsters (UM-X7.1) and hearts from normal hamsters. Diltiazem concentration-response curves for both coronary dilation and its negative inotropic effects were charted under control conditions and in the presence of the specific nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor, NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
, 30 microM), and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin (10 microM). Diltiazem concentration-response curves for its negative inotropic action were similar in normal and failing hearts (IC50 1.2 and 2.3 microM, respectively). In contrast, the coronary dilator effects of diltiazem were impaired in failing hearts (EC50 for diltiazem-induced coronary dilation increased from 90 nM in normal hearts to 1.1 microM in failing hearts, p < 0.01). The involvement of endothelial dysfunctions in the observed coronary "desensitization" to diltiazem in
heart failure
was evaluated through the NO-synthase and cyclooxygenase pathways. Diltiazem concentration-response curves from failing hearts were not modified in the presence of L-
NAME
, whereas indomethacin normalized the coronary response to diltiazem in
heart failure
. These findings suggest that coronary "desensitization" to diltiazem occurs through parallel production and/or release of a vasoconstricting factor or factors originating from the cyclooxygenase pathway.
Heart failure
was not associated with increased cardiac sensitivity to diltiazem but rather with altered coronary sensitivity. These findings suggest that coronary desensitization may play a role in the lack of efficacy of diltiazem in
heart failure
and provide a better understanding of factors modulating the effects of calcium antagonists in
heart failure
.
...
PMID:Impaired coronary sensitivity to diltiazem in experimental heart failure: involvement of the cyclooxygenase but not the nitric oxide-synthase pathway. 885 78
To elucidate pathophysiological alterations in vascular relaxation in rats with chronic
heart failure
(CHF), guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP)- and adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP)-mediated vasorelaxations in pulmonary artery (PA) and thoracic aorta (TA) of rats were examined 12 wk after coronary artery ligation. Acetylcholine (ACh)-induced relaxation was attenuated in endothelium-intact segments of both arteries, whereas sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation was attenuated only in endothelium-intact TA segments of rats with CHF. Vasorelaxations elicited by isoproterenol and NKH-477, a water-soluble forskolin analogue, were diminished mainly in PA segments of the CHF rat. NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
)-induced decrease in cGMP level was less in endothelium-intact TA segments of the rat with CHF (0.20 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.99 +/- 0.26 pmol/mg protein in control), suggesting that basal nitric oxide (NO) production is reduced in CHF. Treatment with L-
NAME
attenuated the isoproterenol-induced relaxation only in endothelium-intact TA segments in control rats but not in CHF rats. The results suggest that both cGMP- and cAMP-mediated relaxations are impaired in CHF, and a reduction of NO synthesis, presumably in endothelial cells, plays a significant role in pathophysiological alterations in vessels of rats with CHF.
...
PMID:Impairment of cGMP- and cAMP-mediated vasorelaxations in rats with chronic heart failure. 899 78
Recent evidence suggests that newer vasoselective dihydropyridine calcium antagonists are not cardiodepressant and may be useful in the treatment of
heart failure
. No data are available on the efficacy of clentiazem, a vasoselective benzothiazepine-like calcium antagonist, in this pathological condition. Therefore, our objective was to assess coronary and cardiac sensitivity to clentiazem in an experimental model of chronic
heart failure
(cardiomyopathic hamster, UM-X7.1, > 200 day old). Left ventricular developed pressure (LVP) and coronary flow changes were assessed in isolated, perfused failing hearts and in normal Syrian hamster hearts. Clentiazem dose-response curves for both coronary dilation and negative inotropic effects were determined under control conditions and in the presence of the nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor, NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-
NAME
, 30 microM), and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin (10 microM). Baseline hemodynamics indicate a significant reduction in both LVP and coronary perfusion in failing hearts. Cardiac sensitivity to the negative inotropic effects of clentiazem were similar in normal and failing hearts (IC50 = 677 nM and 734 nM, respectively). However, the clentiazem-induced increase in coronary flow was significantly attenuated in failing hearts (EC50 = 56 +/- 9 nM vs. 15 +/- 3 nM in normal hearts, p < 0.01). To better characterize the reduced coronary sensitivity to clentiazem in the presence of
heart failure
, the contributions of the NO synthase and the cyclooxygenase pathways were evaluated. Although coronary sensitivity to clentiazem was significantly reduced in the presence of L-
NAME
, this attenuation was of the same magnitude in normal and failing hearts, suggesting that coronary "desensitization" to clentiazem in failing hearts does not involve the NO synthase pathway. Experiments carried in the presence of indomethacin indicate that the reduced coronary sensitivity to clentiazem observed in failing hearts does not involve the cyclooxygenase pathway. In conclusion, reduced coronary sensitivity to the vasoselective calcium antagonist clentiazem was observed in the failing hamster heart, while no exacerbation of clentiazem's cardiodepressant actions was present. Although the mechanisms involved in the vascular desensitization to clentiazem are still unknown, our findings may provide an additional explanation for the variable efficacy of calcium antagonists in the treatment of
heart failure
.
...
PMID:Coronary and cardiac sensitivity to the vasoselective benzothiazepine-like calcium antagonist, clentiazem, in experimental heart failure. 914 Jun 81
We have previously shown that nitric oxide (NO) release by the coronary circulation in the failing and nonfailing human heart is, in part, regulated by local kinin production in coronary microvessels. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) also known as kininase II, inactivates kinins. ACE inhibitors prevent kinin breakdown by ACE, thereby increasing the concentration of bradykinin (BK) and related kinins. The goal of this study was to determine if kinins contribute to the therapeutic action of ACE inhibitors. Six hearts from end-stage
heart failure
patients were harvested at the time of orthotopic cardiac transplantation. Microvessels were prepared as previously described, and nitrite production, a metabolic product of NO in vitro, was determined by the Griess reaction. Microvessels were incubated in the presence of kininogen and bradykinin, and with the ACE inhibitors ramiprilat, enalaprilat, or captopril. All caused dose-dependent increases in nitrite. For instance, ramiprilat increased nitrite from 76 +/- 5.6 to 155 +/- 15 pmol/min per mg wet weight. Nitrite production in response to ACE inhibition was blocked by N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
), a NO synthase inhibitor, and icatibant (HOE 140), a B2-kinin receptor-specific antagonist. Furthermore, NO production was prevented by 3 different serine protease inhibitors, which block kallikrein, the enzyme responsible for conversion of kininogen to kinins. Our results indicate that ACE/kininase inhibitors increase NO production by the coronary microvasculature in the failing human heart, through increased available active kinins. The therapeutic action of ACE inhibition in the failing human heart may result in part from increased NO production by coronary microvessels.
...
PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors promote nitric oxide production in coronary microvessels from failing explanted human hearts. 929 67
Recent reports demonstrated the expression of inducible-type NO synthase in the heart of viral myocarditis. Since NO has multiple biological actions, a substantial amount of NO produced in the diseased heart may act either as a cytotoxic or as a cytoprotective molecule in the process of myocarditis. In the present study, we examined the effect of inhibition of NO synthesis on the mortality and the extent of myocardial injury in a murine model of coxsackievirus B3-induced myocarditis. We fed the infected mice drinking water containing a relatively low concentration (0.37 mmol/L) of N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
) for 14 days after virus inoculation. This dose of L-
NAME
did not change virus titers in the heart. However, L-
NAME
-fed mice showed a significant reduction in mortality compared with those fed normal drinking water (nontreated mice). On the contrary, mice given a higher concentration of L-
NAME
(3.7 mmol/L) exhibited increased mortality. In addition, mice fed a low concentration of L-
NAME
showed reductions in the severity of
heart failure
and in the area of myocardial necrosis. Although systemic blood pressure was reduced in nontreated mice, in mice fed a low concentration of L-
NAME
, it was maintained at a level similar to that in uninfected control mice, L-
NAME
-treated mice also exhibited a reduction in the degree of inflammatory cell infiltration associated with decreased production of tissue prostaglandin E2 levels in the heart compared with nontreated mice. Therefore, NO is likely to be involved in the pathogenic mechanisms of myocardial injury and resultant cardiac dysfunction in a murine model of coxsackievirus B3-induced viral myocarditis.
...
PMID:Low-dose N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester treatment improves survival rate and decreases myocardial injury in a murine model of viral myocarditis induced by coxsackievirus B3. 931 31
The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus is known to be involved in the control of sympathetic outflow. The goal of the present study was to examine the role of nitric oxide within the PVN in the regulation of renal sympathetic nerve activity. Renal sympathetic nerve discharge (RSND), arterial blood pressure, and heart rate in response to the microinjection of nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA; 50, 100, and 200 pmol) into the PVN were measured in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Microinjection of L-NMMA elicited an increase in RSND, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate. Administration of NG-monomethyl-D-arginine (D-NMMA, 50-200 pmol) into the PVN did not change RSND, arterial pressure, or heart rate. Similarly, microinjection of another nitric oxide inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
; 100 nmol) also elicited an increase in RSND, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate. L-Arginine (100 nmol) reversed the effects of L-
NAME
in the PVN. Furthermore, microinjection of sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 50, 100, and 200 nmol) into the PVN elicited a significant decrease in RSND, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate. These effects of L-NMMA, L-
NAME
, and SNP on RSND and arterial blood pressure were not mediated by their vasoactive action because microinjection of phenylephrine and hydralazine did not elicit similar respective changes. In conclusion, our data indicate that endogenous nitric oxide within the PVN regulates sympathetic outflow via some inhibitory mechanisms. Altered nitric oxide mechanisms within the PVN may contribute to elevated sympathetic nerve activity observed during various diseases states such as
heart failure
and hypertension.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide within the paraventricular nucleus mediates changes in renal sympathetic nerve activity. 932 61
1 Characteristics of cyclic GMP- and cyclic AMP-mediated relaxation in aortic segments of rats with chronic
heart failure
(CHF) and the effects of chronic treatment with an angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, trandolapril, were examined 8 weeks after coronary artery ligation. 2 Cardiac output indices of coronary artery-ligated and sham-operated rats were 125+/-8 and 189+/-10 ml min(-1) kg(-1), respectively (P<0.05), indicating the development of CHF at this period. 3 The maximal relaxant response of aortic segments to 10 microM acetylcholine in rats with CHF and sham-operated rats was 64.0+/-5.7 and 86.9+/-1.9%, respectively (P<0.05), whereas the relaxant response to sodium nitroprusside (SNP) remained unchanged. Tissue cyclic GMP content in rats with CHF was lower than that of sham-operated rats. 4 In endothelium-intact segments of rats with CHF, the maximal relaxant response to 10 microM isoprenaline (44.5+/-6.7%) was lower that sham-operated rats (81.3+/-2.5%, P<0.05) and the concentration-response curve for NKH477, a water-soluble forskolin, was shifted to the right without a reduction in the maximal response. Isoprenaline-induced relaxation of aortic segments was attenuated by NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-
NAME
) in sham-operated rats, but not in rats with CHF. Relaxation to 30 microM dibutyryl cyclic AMP in rats with CHF (26.8+/-2.7%) was lower than that in sham-operated rats (63.4+/-11.8%, P<0.05). 5 Trandolapril (3 mg kg(-1) day(-1)) was orally administered from the 2nd to 8th week after the operation. Aortic blood flow of rats with CHF (38.5+/-3.6 ml min(-1)) was lower than that of sham-operated rats (55.0+/-3.0 ml min(-1)), and this reduction was reversed (54.1+/-3.4 ml min(-1)) by treatment with trandolapril. The diminished responsiveness described above was normalized in the trandolapril-treated rat with CHF (i.e., the maximal relaxation to acetylcholine, 94.7+/-1.0%; that to isoprenaline, 80.5+/-2.8%; that to dibutyryl cyclic AMP, 54.7+/-6.2%). However, aortic segments of trandolapril-treated rats with CHF, L-
NAME
did not attenuate isoprenaline-induced relaxation and the tissue cyclic GMP level was not fully restored, suggesting that the ability of the endothelium to produce NO was still partially damaged. 6 The results suggest that vasorelaxation in CHF, diminished mainly due to dysfunction in endothelial nitric oxide (NO) production and cyclic AMP-mediated signal transduction, was partially restored by long-term treatment with trandolapril. The mechanism underlying the restoration may be attributed in part to prevention of CHF-induced endothelial dysfunction.
...
PMID:The effect of chronic treatment with trandolapril on cyclic AMP-and cyclic GMP-dependent relaxations in aortic segments of rats with chronic heart failure. 948 24
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