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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of the study was to estimate the relative importance of the Bohr effect and redistribution of blood from the non-exercising tissues on the arterial-venous oxygen content differences across the exercising extremities and the central circulation in patients with chronic heart failure; the relationship among femoral vein, systemic and pulmonary artery oxygen partial pressure and hemoglobin saturation was determined. It has been reported that the maximal reduction in femoral vein pO2 precedes peak oxygen consumption and lactic acidosis threshold in patients with chronic heart failure and normal subjects during exercise. The increase in oxygen consumption at work rates above lactic acidosis threshold, therefore, must be accounted for by increase in blood flow in the exercising muscles and right-ward shift on the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve. Since the total cardiac output increase is blunted in patients with chronic heart failure, diversion of blood flow from non-exercising to exercising tissues may account for some of the increase in muscle blood flow. Ten patients with chronic heart failure performed a progressively increasing leg cycle ergometer exercise test up to maximal effort while measuring ventilation and gas concentration for computation of oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide production, breath-by-breath. Blood samples were obtained, simultaneously, from systemic and pulmonary arteries and femoral vein at rest and every minute during exercise to peak oxygen consumption. At comparable levels of exercise, femoral vein pO2, hemoglobin saturation and oxygen content were lower than in the pulmonary artery. PCO2 and lactate concentration increased steeply in femoral vein and pulmonary artery blood above lactic acidosis threshold (due to lactic acid build-up and buffering), but more steeply in femoral vein blood. These increases allowed femoral vein oxyhemoglobin to dissociate without a further decrease in femoral vein pO2 (Bohr effect). The lowest femoral vein pO2 (16.6 +/- 3.9 mmHg) was measured at 66 +/- 22% of peak VO2 and before the lowest oxyhemoglobin saturation was reached. Artero-venous oxygen content difference was higher in the femoral vein than in the pulmonary artery; this difference became progressively smaller as oxygen consumption increased. "Ideal" oxygen consumption for a given cardiac output (oxygen consumption expected if all body tissues had maximized oxygen extraction) was always higher than the measured oxygen consumption; however the difference between the two was lost at peak exercise. This difference positively correlated with peak oxygen consumption and cardiac output increments at submaximal but not at maximal exercise. In conclusion, femoral vein pO2 reached its lowest value at a level of exercise at or below the lactic acidosis threshold. Further extraction of oxygen above the lactic acidosis threshold was accounted for by a right shift of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve. The positive correlation between increments of cardiac output vs "ideal" and measured oxygen consumption suggests a redistribution of blood flow from non-exercising to exercising regions of the body. Furthermore the positive correlation between exercise capacity and the difference between "ideal" and measured oxygen consumption suggests that patients with the poorer function have the greater capability to optimize blood flow redistribution during exercise.
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PMID:[Mechanisms facilitating oxygen delivery during exercise in patients with chronic heart failure]. 927 Jan 80

Development of the Jarvik 2000 intraventricular assist system for long-term support is ongoing. The system integrates the Jarvik 2000 axial flow blood pump with a microprocessor based automatic motor controller to provide response to physiologic demands. Nine devices have been evaluated in vivo (six completed, three ongoing) with durations in excess of 26 weeks. Instrumented experiments include implanted transit-time ultrasonic flow probes and dual micromanometer LV/AoP catheters. Treadmill exercise and heart pacing studies are performed to evaluate control system response to increased heart rates. Pharmacologically induced cardiac dysfunction studies are performed in awake and anesthetized calves to demonstrate control response to simulated heart failure conditions. No deleterious effects or events were encountered during any physiologic studies. No hematologic, renal, hepatic, or pulmonary complications have been encountered in any study. Plasma free hemoglobin levels of 7.0 +/- 5.1 mg/dl demonstrate no device related hemolysis throughout the duration of all studies. Pathologic analysis at explant showed no evidence of thromboembolic events. All pump surfaces were free of thrombus except for a minimal ring of fibrin, (approximately 1 mm) on the inflow bearing. Future developments for permanent implantation will include implanted physiologic control systems, implanted batteries, and transcutaneous energy and data transmission systems.
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PMID:Progress in the development of a transcutaneously powered axial flow blood pump ventricular assist system. 936 Jan 10

The number of women who become ill and die from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) increases steadily with age. It is not yet clearly defined whether and why women suffer from a higher in-hospital mortality rate after AMI. In this study we evaluated the importance of the female sex as a risk factor for in-hospital mortality in elderly patients suffering from AMI. A retrospective study was performed in 724 patients (429 males, 295 females) aged > or = 65 years (mean age 74.9 +/- 6.3 years) consecutively admitted to San Giovanni Battista Hospital in Turin during the period 1988-1991 with validated primary discharge diagnosis of AMI. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in females (34.6%) compared to males (25.6%, p > 0.01). After multivariate analysis female sex was not independent predictive for in-hospital death. Multivariate analysis was therefore repeated in the various sections of the history of AMI (anamnestic variables, including age and sex: physical signs on admission, ECG findings, laboratory tests, clinical progress, including complications and treatment) in order to identify the factors responsible for the higher mortality rate in women. These were found to be low hemoglobin values (< 12 g/dl) on admission, development of cardiac failure disorders and rhythm disturbances during hospitalization, and differences in therapeutic procedures. In spite of the absence of an independent unfavourable effect of female sex, elderly women with AMI have a higher in-hospital mortality rate. A more precarious state of health on admission, a peculiar susceptibility to severe complications during hospital-stay and differences in therapeutic procedures appear to be the factors responsible for this increased mortality rate in women.
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PMID:[In-hospital mortality of elderly patients with myocardial infarct. Difference between the sexes]. 943 70

Jehovah's Witness who require operation represent a challenge to the physician because of the patients' refusal to accept blood transfusion. We report an 8-year-old male of Jehovah's Witness who underwent a surgical treatment of infective endocarditis. He was transferred to our hospital because of high fever and heart murmur. Echocardiogram revealed a developing vegetation of aortic cusps and an aneurysmal change of the non-coronary sinus Valsalva. On admission he was complicated by anemia, purulent meningitis and suppurative arthritis of left knee. There were no signs of cardiac failure. Erythropoietin (6000 U thrice weekly) and iron (60 mg daily) were given for 11 weeks prior to surgery, raising the hemoglobin level from 9.2 g/dl to 18.4 g/dl. Aortic valve replacement and plasty of the sinus Valsalva were then performed. Intraoperatively hemoglobin concentration dropped to 10.3 g/dl and it raised to 15 g/dl postoperatively. We also used Cell-Saver to reduce blood loss. The patient made an uncomplicated recovery. Erythropoietin therapy contributed substantially to the successful outcome of this case.
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PMID:[Open heart surgery in a Jehovah's Witness boy--a case report of successful management of aortic regurgatation and aneurysm of sinus Valsalva due to infective endocarditis]. 945 16

The analysis of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) variability is currently used to investigate the mechanisms responsible for cardiovascular control; therefore, we assessed whether an impairment of 24-h BP and HR profiles and sympathovagal interaction modulating cardiovascular function was present in patients with thalassemia major (TM) in preclinical phase of heart disease. Nine beta-thalassemic patients 18 years old without clinical signs of cardiac failure and 9 age- and sex-matched controls were studied. Twenty-four-hour-ambulatory BP and HR were measured using the SpaceLabs 90207 device. A truncated Fourier series with four harmonics was used to describe the diurnal blood pressure profile. Mean 24-h ambulatory systolic BP, diastolic BP, and mean arterial pressure were significantly lower in TM patients than in normal subjects (P < .05). A significantly higher nighttime HR value was found in TM patients (P < .05). More than 40% of the TM patients did not show a significant diurnal BP and HR rhythm. In TM patients, the overall amplitude of systolic BP, diastolic BP, and HR was significantly lower than in controls (P < .01). The night/day differences of systolic BP, diastolic BP, and HR were significantly lower in TM patients than in normals (P < .01). Furthermore, we performed power spectral analysis on short-term continuous finger BP and HR data in supine position and during passive head-up tilt. Total spectral power of systolic BP was significantly lower in patients than controls (P < .05). Low-frequency (LF) power of systolic BP and diastolic BP and LF/high-frequency (HF) ratio of HR were significantly lower during tilt in TM patients compared to controls (P < .05). High-frequency power of HR was significantly higher in patients than controls (P < .05). The baroreflex gain assessed by alpha-index was the same in supine position but was higher in TM patients during passive tilt (P < .05). An inverse relationship between LF/HF ratio of HR and hemoglobin levels in TM patients was found. Finally, plasma norepinephrine levels were significantly lower in thalassemics (P < .005). In young TM patients in a preclinical stage of heart disease, these findings demonstrated abnormal 24-h BP and HR rhythms and a decreased short-term variability of BP and HR, in particular in the LF range, showing a diminished sympathetic activity.
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PMID:Blood pressure and heart rate in young thalassemia major patients. 963 89

End-stage heart disease is a major health care issue and it represents one of the most costly diseases. Several experimental heart failure models have been developed; however, a single model is not widely accepted as representative of clinical heart failure. The doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy model was used in the current study to address two issues: 1) to define a standardized dose regimen of intracoronary doxorubicin infusion; and 2) to establish a method of determining the onset and time course of heart failure. Twenty dogs underwent placement of an intracoronary catheter. A total dose of 1 mg/kg of intracoronary doxorubicin was infused. Hemodynamics were obtained at weeks 0, 7, and 12. Echocardiography was performed weekly. Right and left ventricular biopsy specimens were examined at weeks 0 and 12. Survival after doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy was 60% at week 12. The development of heart failure was demonstrated by a significant decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction and cardiac index and a significant increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and volume. The leukocyte count, hemoglobin, and hematocrit decreased significantly. Histologic changes of both the right and left ventricular myocardial biopsy specimens included myocellular hypertrophy, loss of myofibrillar material, and vacuolization. Intracoronary doxorubicin reliably produced an experimental model of accelerated heart failure that developed over the course of 12 weeks. Echocardiographic monitoring allowed a close surveillance of heart failure development. This model may be useful to evaluate the efficacy of cardiomyoplasty, mechanical assist devices, transplantation, and reduction ventriculoplasty.
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PMID:Experimental cardiomyopathy as a model of chronic heart failure. 965 96

The present study was performed to determine the relation between oxygenated hemoglobin (oxy-Hb) changes in working muscles and ventilatory parameters. Six active normal subjects, 21 sedentary normal subjects and 16 patients with heart failure performed an incremental exercise with expired gas analysis. Deoxygenation of the vastus lateralis muscle was monitored for oxy-Hb changes using near-infrared spectroscopy. Near the anaerobic threshold (AT), oxy-Hb started to decrease, forming the first inflection point (P1). Near the respiratory compensation point (RCP), the second inflection point (P2) was observed. Oxygen uptake at the AT, RCP, P1 and P2 decreased in magnitude first in the active normal subjects, then in sedentary normal subjects and finally in the heart failure patients. High correlation was demonstrated between AT and P1 (r=0.8, p<0.0005) and between RCP and P2 (r=0.9, p<0.0005). In 12 sedentary normal subjects who underwent repeat exercise, reproducibility was confirmed for both P1 and P2. Constant work rate exercises were performed in 5 sedentary normal subjects, and in all of them the oxy-Hb remained unchanged below the AT work rate, whereas oxy-Hb decreased above the AT work rate. Exercise capacity, with respect to both working muscle deoxygenation and ventilation, could be evaluated in detail by the concomitant use of near-infrared spectroscopy and expired gas analysis.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle deoxygenation during exercise assessed by near-infrared spectroscopy and its relation to expired gas analysis parameters. 976 2

The impact of forearm blood flow limitation on muscle reflex (metaboreflex) activation during exercise was examined in 10 heart failure (HF) (NYHA class III and IV) and 9 control (Ctl) subjects. Rhythmic handgrip contractions (25% maximal voluntary contraction, 30 contractions/min) were performed over 5 min under conditions of ambient pressure or with +50 mmHg positive pressure about the exercising forearm. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and venous effluent hemoglobin (Hb) O2 saturation, lactate and H+ concentrations ([La] and [H+], respectively) were measured at baseline and during exercise. For ambient contractions, the increase (Delta) in MAP by end exercise (DeltaMAP; i.e., the exercise pressor response) was the same in both groups (10.1 +/- 1.2 vs. 7.33 +/- 1.3 mmHg, HF vs. Ctl, respectively) despite larger Delta[La] and Delta[H+] for the HF group (P < 0.05). With ischemic exercise, the DeltaMAP for HF (21.7 +/- 2.7 mmHg) exceeded that of Ctl subjects (12.2 +/- 2.8 mmHg) (P < 0.0001). Also, for HF, Delta[La] (2.94 +/- 0.4 mmol) and Delta[H+] (24.8 +/- 2.7 nmol) in the ischemic trial were greater than in Ctl (1.63 +/- 0.4 mmol and 15.3 +/- 2.8 nmol; [La] and [H+], respectively) (P < 0.02). Hb O2 saturation was reduced in Ctl from approximately 43% in the ambient trial to approximately 27% with ischemia (P < 0.0001). O2 extraction was maximized under ambient exercise conditions for HF but not for Ctl. Despite progressive increases in blood perfusion pressure over the course of ischemic exercise, no improvement in Hb O2 saturation or muscle metabolism was observed in either group. These data suggest that muscle reflex activation of the pressor response is intact in HF subjects but the resulting improvement in perfusion pressure does not appear to enhance muscle oxidative metabolism or muscle blood flow, possibly because of associated increases in sympathetic vasoconstriction of active skeletal muscle.
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PMID:Maintained exercise pressor response in heart failure. 980 83

To determine the risk factors for sudden deaths in hospitalized patients, 209 patients (103 men and 106 women, age 76.7 +/- 12.6 years old, mean +/- S.D.) who died in 1996 were divided into two groups and their records were analyzed. One group, the sudden death group (SD), consisted of 16 patients who had stayed in the hospital for 2 weeks or more before the onset of symptoms that led to death within 24 hours. Those who died more than 24 hours after symptoms began were placed into the non-sudden death group (NSD). Fourteen patients who died within 2 weeks of admission were not analyzed in this study. Comparing the data of the two groups led to the following findings. First, the major causes of death in the SD group were exacerbation of chronic cardiac failure (5 cases), acute cardiac failure (2 cases), exacerbation of chronic respiratory failure (2 cases) and acute respiratory failure (2 cases). Second, patients in the SD group were significantly older than those in the NSD group, and had significantly more prescriptions for digitalis. Third, patients in the SD group had higher levels of hemoglobin and hematocrit, lower levels of BUN and a higher cardiothoracic ratio. Fourth, patients in the SD group had a higher incidence of ST abnormalities and T wave abnormalities in their electrocardiograms. Brugada syndrome or long QT syndrome were not seen in either group. Taken together, these findings suggest that aged patients with cardiac failure and myocardial ischemia may be at higher risk of sudden death.
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PMID:[Risk factors for sudden death during hospitalization]. 1006 69

Exercise-induced hemoconcentration is a useful mechanism, particularly in heart failure, because it increases oxygen content of blood, perfusing the working muscles; in 50 normal subjects and 50 patients with congestive heart failure, hemoglobin at peak exercise increased by 7 +/- 3% and 5 +/- 3%, respectively. Hemoconcentration was due to fluid flux out of the vascular bed, likely through oncotic forces related to intracellular lactate accumulation and not to red blood cell recruitment from other organs (spleen), because hemoglobin increase, as a percentage, was similar to plasma protein increase.
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PMID:Exercise-induced hemoconcentration in heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy. 1007 38


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