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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The haemodynamic effects of the infusion of dobutamine in dosages of 2-5, 5-0 and 10-0 mug/kg/min were studied in twelve patients with
coronary artery disease
. At the lowest dose, infusion of dobutamine caused a significant increase in cardiac output; greater increases occurred with doses of 5-0 and 10-0 mug/kg/min. The means by which the myocardium produced the increase in cardiac output differed according to the dose of the drug; 2-5 and 5-0 mug/kg/min produced an increase in
stroke
volume without any significant variation in the heart rate. At the highest dose rate, an increase in heart rate made a distinct contribution to the overall increase in output. The ventricular dp/dt max. increased at all three dosages. Blood pressure, pulmonary arterial and capillary pressure, and left ventricular and diastolic pressure did not show any significant change. The separation of the inotropic and the chronotropic effects of dobutamine according to the infused dose appears to have extremely interesting clinical implications.
...
PMID:Haemodynamic effects of dobutamine in patients with coronary artery disease. 83 9
Ten male anginal patients with angiographically documented
coronary artery disease
, in a randomized double-blind crossover study, smoked one marijuana cigarette (containing 18 mg of delta-9-THC) on one morning and one placebo marijuana cigarette (containing 0.05 mg of delta-9-THC) on a successive morning. Significant increases occurred in average cognitive and intellectual impairment scores, derived from the objective content analysis of 5 min of speech, 30 mins after smoking the marijuana cigarette as compared to the placebo marijuana cigarette, and these scores decreased to near presmoking levels 60 min after smoking. No significant average changes occurred in anxiety or three hostility scale scores following smoking marijuana. Sizable individual differences were noted in the psychological responses to marijuana smoking due, presumably, to personality differences and/or differences in THC pharmacokinetics. Significant psychocardiovascular hemodynamic correlations, as measured by echocardiography, were observed during placebo-marijuana smoking between hostility inward scores and systolic blood pressure and ejection fraction, overt hostility outward scores and diastolic blood pressure, as well as between anxiety scores and
stroke
volume and left ventricular end-diastolic dimension and left ventricular diastolic volume. These significant psychophysiologic correlations were all eliminated during marijuana smoking. In view of associated findings that marijuana smoking decreased myocardial oxygen delivery, decreased exercise time until the onset of anginal pain, and increased myocardial oxygen demand in anginal patients, the use of marijuana by such patients is clearly inadvisable.
...
PMID:Effect of marijuana and placebo-marijuana smoking on psychological state and on psychophysiological cardiovascular functioning in anginal patients. 87 96
To access left ventricular function and compare pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure in the supine and sitting positions, 20 men with angina pectoris secondary to
coronary artery disease
underwent hemodynamic studies at rest and during exercise in the two positions. At rest the values for cardiac index,
stroke
index, systolic ejection rate index and left ventricular
stroke
work index were lower in the sitting position; heart rate, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure were similar in the two positions. All patients experienced angina during both exercise periods. At angina during supine exercise,
stroke
index, systolic ejection rate index and left ventricular
stroke
work index did not increase significantly from the resting values. In contrast, during sitting exercise, significant increases in these variables were observed. Comparison of data during exercise revealed higher values for heart rate, mean systemic pressure, cardiac index, systolic ejection rate index, left ventricular
stroke
work index and rate-pressure product and lower values for mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (20 +/- 3 versus 27 +/- 3 [mean +/- standard error of the mean] mm Hg, P is less than 0.001), and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (24+/- 3 versus 31 +/- 3 mm Hg, P is less than 0.02) in the sitting position;
stroke
index and S-T segment depression were similar during the two exercise periods. Four patients had insignificant increases in left ventricular filling pressure during both exercise periods. Of the 16 patients with abnormal left ventricular filling pressure during supine exercise, only 10 had a similar response during exercise in the sitting position. There was a good correlation between left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure at rest and during exercise in the two postures.
...
PMID:Hemodynamics at rest and during supine and sitting bicycle exercise in patients with coronary artery disease. 87 Nov 6
The hemodynamic, coronary sinus blood flow and myocardial metabolic effects of 0.15 mg/kg body weight of intravenously administered propranolol were studied in 19 patients with
coronary artery disease
and 6 normal patients. Atrial pacing was performed in all patients and produced angina in 15 of the 19 patients with
coronary artery disease
. In these patients propranolol reduced heart rate from 78 to 69 beats/min, cardiac index from 3.0 to 2.6 liters/min per m2 and left ventricular
stroke
work index from 47 to 43 g-m/m2; it increased total peripheral resistance from 24 to 28 units and lactate extraction from 16.3 to 22.5%. There was no significant change in mean arterial pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, coronary sinus blood flow or myocardial oxygen consumption. During a second pacing stress propranolol produced clinical improvement in 9 of the 15 patients who experienced angina initially. The improvement was associated with less severe abnormalities in S-T depression and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, increased lactate extraction and no significant change in coronary sinus blood flow or myocardial oxygen consumption. Thus, propranolol appears to be capable of modifying the anginal threshold as determined with atrial pacing, and the clinical response appears to be independent of global changes in coronary sinus blood flow and myocardial oxygen consumption.
...
PMID:Effects of propranolol on the hemodynamic, coronary sinus blood flow and myocardial metabolic response to atrial pacing. 87 19
A retrospective analysis of 248 patients with
stroke
(average age 67, range 17-98) admitted to a
stroke
rehabilitation unit over a sixteen month period showed that 80% of these patients were able to return home after an average length of stay (LOS) of 43 days. At discharge 85% of the group were ambulatory and 56% required no help in daily living activities. Severity of weakness on admission, long onset-admission intervals, the presence of severe perceptual or cognitive dysfunction or a homonymous hemianopsia in addition to a motor deficit were related to unfavorable outcome and increased LOS. The age of the patient, dysphasia or a hemisensory deficit in addition to weakness, or diabetes, hypertension, or
ASHD
were unrelated to the patients' functional status on discharge, discharge disposition, or LOS. Many patients with "unfavorable prognostic signs" made significant improvement after admission and were subsequently discharges. Thus, while the above findings may predict which patients can make maximal gains in a short term treatment facility, they also show that most patients, even those with "poor prognostic signs," can make enough functional improvement to be managed at home after a relatively short hospitalization.
Stroke
PMID:Factors influencing outcome and length of stay in a stroke rehabilitation unit. Part 1. Analysis of 248 unscreened patients--medical and functional prognostic indicators. 92 50
The acute electrophysiological and hemodynamic effects of intravenous disopyramide (1.5 mg/kg body weight) were studied in 12 patients with suspected
coronary artery disease
. Plasma levels of disopyramide were monitored. Disopyramide delayed conduction within the His-Purkinje system and increased the effective refractory period of the atrium. Conduction within the AV node and its refractory period, however, was not significantly altered by the drug. The corrected Q-T interval was significantly increased. Disopyramide increased systemic arterial pressure and slightly raised the left ventricular end diastolic pressure. Heart rate, cardiac and
stroke
index were unaltered. Peak mean levels of disopyramide were reached 5 minutes after the injection of the drug.
...
PMID:A study of the acute electrophysiological and cardiovascular action of disopyramide in man. 96 79
The hemodynamic response to vasodilator therapy with sodium nitroprusside has been assessed in 33 patients with severe
coronary artery disease
(
CAD
) during coronary artery operation. The patients were divided into three groups; Group 1 included seven patients with
CAD
and normal left ventricular filling pressure (LVFP less than 12 mm Hg); Group 2 included 18 patients with
CAD
and chronic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (LVFP greater than 12 mm Hg) and Group 3 included eight patients with
CAD
and acute LV dysfunction (LVFP greater than 12 mm Hg) associated with an intraoperative hypertensive episode. Nitroprusside was administered intraoperatively at an initial infusion rate of 10-15 mcg/min and the rate was gradually increased thereafter until the criteria for effective therapy were satisfied. The effective dose ranged from 10-120 mcg/min with an average of 52 +/- 4 (SEM) mcg/min. In all three groups, pulmonary and systemic arterial pressure, right and left ventricular filling pressure, and pulmonary and systemic vascular resistance decreased significantly with nitroprusside infusion. Heart rate increased significantly in Group 1 and remained unchanged in Group 2 and 3. Heart rate X systolic arterial pressure decreased significantly in Group 1 and 3 and did not change in Group 2.
Stroke
index increased significantly in both groups of patients with elevated control LVFP (Group 2 and 3) and remained unchanged in patients with normal left ventricular function (Group 1). Left ventricular
stroke
work index decreased in Group 1, increased in Group 2, and remained unchanged in Group 3. Right ventricular
stroke
work index decreased significantly in all groups. These findings suggest that judicious intraoperative administration of sodium nitroprusside improves left ventricular function in patients with acute or chronic elevation of LVFP and LV dysfunction associated with severe
CAD
. Furthermore, nitroprusside is an effective drug for control of intraoperative hypertensive episodes in such patients.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic effects of nitroprusside infusion during coronary artery operation in man. 99 24
The status of left ventricular function in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease remains controversial. With a radionuclide technique left ventricular ejection fraction, left ventricular end-diastolic volume, cardiac output, and
stroke
volume were measured at rest and following infusion of dextran in 23 men with severe COPD. Resting, mean LVEF was normal in 19 subjects with COPD alone; four with COPD and
coronary artery disease
had a depressed mean LVEF. Left ventricular end-diastolic volume index and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure were both normal at rest indicating that the left ventricle was not volume underloaded. There was a normal response to dextran infusion (750 ml.) with no deterioration in LVEF and a significant increase in cardiac index,
stroke
volume index, LVEDVI, and PCW. These data suggest that at rest and following volume loading with dextran left ventricular function is normal in patients with COPD.
...
PMID:Effect of dextran loading on left ventricular performance in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 99 79
To determine the effects of myocardial revascularization on decreased left ventricular diastolic compliance consequent to chronic stable
coronary artery disease
, 15 patients with patent coronary artery bypass grafts (Group I) were compared with 8 patients with occluded grafts (Group II) studied before and after operation. In addition, eight normal patients served as controls. Left ventricular diastolic compliance was assessed by: (1) total observed diastolic compliance:
stroke
volume (V) related to left ventricular diastolic pressure (P) change (deltaV/deltaP) normalized for end-systolic volume; (2) left ventricular stiffness index of passive elastic modulus (a equals slope of deltaP/deltaV related to mean left ventricular diastolic pressure); and (3) fractional pattern of left ventricular filling. All patients had normal sinus rhythm and none had preoperative or postoperative mitral regurgitation. The two groups with coronary disease were well matched preoperatively for ventricular function, volumes, mass, segmental contraction and compliance. Ejection fraction increased in Group I (0.56 preoperatively to 0.65 postoperatively, P less than 0.05) but was unchanged in Group II (0.63 To 0.61, P greater 0.05). Postoperative indexes of left ventricular compliance improved in Group I: (1) 0.110 to 0.150 (P less 0.05); (2) 0.030 TO 0.019 (P less 0.05); and (3) 37 to 30 percent filling during last one third of diastole (P less 0.05). These indexes were unchanged postoperatively in Group II: (1) 0.109 to 0.102 (P greater 0.05); (2) 0.033 to 0.039 (P greater than 0.05); and (3) 36 to 41 percent (P greater 0.05). Compliance indexes were not altered (P greater 0.05) in a subset of seven patients in Group I with preoperative or intercurrent myocardial infarction. Thus, this investigation demonstrates the relatively reversible nature of abnormal left ventricular compliance after successful coronary artery bypass surgery in certain patients with ischemic heart disease.
...
PMID:Improvement of reduced left ventricular diastolic compliance in ischemic heart disease after successful coronary artery bypass surgery. 107 48
An analysis of ventricular performance comparing pump function and muscle function indices was performed in 13 patients with acute myocardial infarction, ten patients with normal coronary arteries, and 15 patients with
coronary artery disease
. Pump function was described by plotting left ventricular
stroke
work index as a function of left ventricular end diastolic pressure. This description provided a clear separation between normal patients, and surviving and nonsurviving patients with acute myocardial infarction. Values of contractile element velocity (VCE5 as an estimate of Vmax) did not separate between normals and surviving or nonsurviving patients with acute myocardial infarction. In 15 patients with acute
coronary artery disease
there was no correlation between values of VCE5 and the ventricular function curve. Changes in performance following the stress of ventriculography, angiotensin infusion, or isometric hand grip exercise also did not show any correlation between pump function and muscle function indices. It is concluded that pump function indices are a better indicator of ventricular performance in patients with acute myocardial infarction and
coronary artery disease
.
...
PMID:Dissociation between indices of pump performance and contractility in patients with coronary artery disease and acute myocardial infarction. 109 Apr 19
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