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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight patients with chronic
congestive cardiac failure
secondary to ischaemic heart disease performed submaximal supine exercise before and after 5 mg sublingual isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN) at the time of cardiac catheterisation. Exercise before ISDN produced a poor response in left ventricular performance. After ISDN this response was significantly improved. Compared with the control exercise period cardiac index (CI) increased from mean 2.9 to 3.5 l/mn/m2 (p = less than 0.0025),
stroke
volume index (SVI) from mean 24 to 29 ml/m2 (p = less than 0.0005) and left ventricular
stroke
work index (LVSWI) from mean 22 to 28 g-m/m2 (p = less than 0.0025). Although ISDN reduced LVEDP significantly at rest, there were associated small but significant falls in CI, SVI and LVSWI. The improvement in exercise cardiac index was related to the ejection fraction, or the ejection fraction of the contractile section where a left ventricular aneurysm was present. ISDN may be effective in improving exercise tolerance in ambulant patients with chronic
congestive cardiac failure
.
...
PMID:Haemodynamic effects of isosorbide dinitrate in patients with congestive cardiac failure at rest and during submaximal supine exercise. 41 97
To define the relationship between infarct size and ventricular performance, we performed hemodynamic studies in rats 21 days after left coronary artery occlusion. Ventricular performance was assessed under ether anesthesia by measurements of baseline hemodynamics and stressed performance as determined by the peak cardiac output and
stroke
volume obtained during intravenous volume loading and by the peak left ventricular developed pressure obtained during occlusion of the ascending aorta. Infarct size was determined by planimetry of the endocardial circumference of each of four histological slices of the left ventricle. Rats with small (4-30%) myocardial infarctions had no discernible impairment in either baseline hemodynamics or peak indices of pumping and pressure-generating ability when compared to the sham-operated, noninfarcted rats. Rats with moderate (31-46%) infarctions had normal baseline hemodynamics but reduced peak flow indices and developed pressure. Rats with infarctions greater than 46% had
congestive heart failure
, with elevated filling pressures, reduced cardiac output, and a minimal capacity to respond to pre- and after load stresses. The entire spectrum of postinfarction ventricular function was observed, from no detectable impairment to congestive failure. In this model of histologically healed myocardial infarction, the impairment of left ventricular function was directly related to the loss of myocardium.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarct size and ventricular function in rats. 42 47
Based on 20 years of surveillance of the Framingham cohort relating subsequent cardiovascular events to prior evidence of diabetes, a twofold to threefold increased risk of clinical atherosclerotic disease was reported. The relative impact was greatest for intermittent claudication (IC) and
congestive heart failure
(
CHF
) and least for coronary heart disease (CHD), which was, nevertheless, on an absolute scale the chief sequela. The relative impact was substantially greater for women than for men. For each of the cardiovascular diseases (CVD), morbidity and mortality were higher for diabetic women than for nondiabetic men. After adjustment for other associated risk factors, the relative impact of diabetes on CHD, IC, or
stroke
incidence was the same for women as for men; for CVD death and
CHF
, it was greater for women. Cardiovascular mortality was actually about as great for diabetic women as for diabetic men.
...
PMID:Diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The Framingham study. 43 Jul 98
Cardiac disease is common in patients with cerebrovascular disease (CVD) and cerebral lesions as such may influence cardiac activity and rhythm. To study the indication for continuous ECG surveillance of patients with CVD, 100 consecutive patients admitted to a medical
stroke
unit were investigated with 24-hour Holter recordings. The patients' mean age was 73 years and 70% of them had a history of heart disease. Twenty-three patients had chronic atrial fibrillation and 55% of the remainder showed ventricular ectopic activity. Serious ventricular arrhythmias were comparatively rare and mainly seen in association with signs of
congestive heart failure
and acute myocardial infarction. A prolonged Q-T interval was registered in two-thirds of the patients but there was no significant association between this finding and ventricular ectopic activity. Close observation for cardiac complications is important in patients with CVD and continuous ECG surveillance is indicated in selected high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Arrhythmias in patients with acute cerebrovascular disease. 44 83
Nifedipine induces vascular smooth muscle relaxation through a calcium antagonistic action. The possibility of clinical use of the drug as a ventricular unloading agent has been explored in this study. In patients with hypertensive (seven cases), primary (seven cases) or rheumatic (aortic insufficiency five cases, mitral regurgitation five cases) cardiac disease, nifedipine, administered in a single sublingual dose (10 mg), relieved acute pulmonary edema. Circulatory variations from control were the following: decrease of systemic and pulmonary arterial pressures, and of vascular resistances, of pulmonary wedge pressure, of left ventricular diastolic and systolic dimensions (echocardiography); increase of cardiac and
stroke
index, of left ventricular mean rate of circumferential fiber shortening, of left and right mean pre-ejection delta P/delta t and mean rate of ejection; improvement of forward output in primary and rheumatic disease. Nifedipine benefits acute
congestive heart failure
by sustained fall of both preload and afterload and, possibly, by an enhanced contractility. It seems to have an appropriate indication in cases in which left ventricular afterload reduction is desirable.
...
PMID:Clinical use of a calcium antagonistic agent (nifedipine) in acute pulmonary edema. 44 58
To compare the hemodynamic effect of vasodilator therapy on different regurgitant lesions, we infused sodium nitroprusside intraooperatively in 12 patients with mitral regurgitation and 15 with aortic regurgitation. During the critical period preceding establishment of cardiopulmonary bypass, both groups had developed intense vasoconstriction and
cardiac decompensation
. All demonstrated improved cardiac function with vasodilator therapy; however, the degree of improvement with nitroprusside differed in the two groups.
Stroke
volume increased 10 ml. per beat per meter squared in those patients with aortic regurgitation and only 6 ml. per beat per meter squared in those with mitral regurgitation (p less than 0.05). The percent increase in stoke volume induced by nitroprusside was inversely correlated to the preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.44, p less than 0.02). Patients with aortic regurgitation had lower preoperative left ventricular ejection fractions than those with mitral regurgitation (0.53 versus 0.63, p less than 0.02). Therefore, we conclude that patients with aortic regurgitation derived greater intraoperative hemodynamic benefit from unloading with nitroprusside, because they came to surgery with greater impairment of left ventricular contractility. Although nitroprusside improved cardiac function in both groups, only the patients with aortic regurgitation achieved normal pulmonary artery pressure (17 torr) and pulmonary vascular resistance (2.1 units) as a result of unloading. Those with mitral regurgitation continued to have pulmonary hypertension (28 torr) and increased pulmonary vascular resistance (3.9 units) despite vasodilator therapy. Thus the data suggest that patients with mitral regurgitation derived less hemodynamic benefit from intraoperative nitroprusside therapy because they were also limited by right ventricular dysfunction and a less responsive pulmonary vasculature.
...
PMID:Comparison of intraoperative nitroprusside unloading in mitral and aortic regurgitation. 44 73
To compare the hemodynamic effects of prazosin and nitroprusside in patients with severe
congestive heart failure
, nine patients with heart failure refractory to conventional therapy received oral prazosin and intravenous nitroprusside administered so as to produce a similar decrease in left ventricular filling pressure in each patient. By this comparison, both drugs produced similar decreases in mean right atrial pressure, mean pulmonary arterial pressure and systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance. However, with nitroprusside, cardiac index increased more (+0.97 versus +0.73 liters/min per m2, P less than 0.01) and mean arterial pressure decreased less (-13.7 versus -18.3 mm Hg, P less than 0.05) than with prazosin. Both drugs produced similar changes in
stroke
volume index (+11.7 cc/beat per m2 with nitroprusside and +12.5 with prazosin) and
stroke
work index (+8.1 g-m/m2 with nitroprusside and +6.6 with prazosin). Therefore, the differences in the hemodynamic responses observed with the two agents were due to the significantly greater decrease in heart rate with prazosin (-8 beats/min) than with nitroprusside (-2 beats/min, P less than 0.05). These clinical data support experimental evidence suggesting that there is a significant negative chronotropic action of prazosin independent of its peripheral vascular effects.
...
PMID:Differences in hemodynamic effects of nitroprusside and prazosin in severe chronic congestive heart failure: evidence for a direct negative chronotropic effect of prazosin. 46 69
The persistence of the hemodynamic effects of prazosin was studied in 12 patients with chronic
congestive heart failure
. Multidose evaluation involving five 5-mg doses showed the initial decrease in systemic vascular resistance and increase in cardiac index,
stroke
work index, and
stroke
volume index to be transient. Doubling the dose did not restore effect. Modest decreases in pulmonary capillary-wedge and mean arterial pressures persisted throughout the study. In six patients, plasma prazosin concentration measured at times of hemodynamic observations showed the initial hemodynamic effect of prazosin to attenuate upon further administration despite mean plasma concentrations that exceeded those measured after the first dose. In patients with chronic heart failure, resting hemodynamic studies suggest a rapid attenuation of prazosin-mediated hemodynamic effect in the presence of adequate plasma concentration. Recognizing this phenomenon, if long-term prazosin therapy for
congestive heart failure
is contemplated, we suggest the hemodynamic response in individual patients be monitored.
...
PMID:Attenuation of prazosin effect on cardiac output in chronic heart failure. 47 64
Hemodynamic changes during exercise were evaluated in 20 patients with severe, chronic
congestive heart failure
. Two groups were identified by their
stroke
work response to maximal exercise. Group I (eight patients) showed an increase in
stroke
work index. This occurred because the
stroke
volume increased and the difference between mean systolic pressure and left ventricular filling pressure increased. Group II (12 patients) showed a decrease in
stroke
work index. This occurred because
stroke
volume decreased while the difference between mean systolic pressure and left ventricular filling pressure did not change. Despite hemodynamic differences, the groups could not be distinguished by the usual clinical criteria for heart failure including etiology, New York Heart Association functional class, heart size on chest X-ray film or duration of heart failure. Clinical criteria are relatively insensitive in predicting the exercise hemodynamics of any given patient with chronic severe heart failure. Determining the exercise hemodynamics may be helpful as a means of assessing left ventricular functional reserve in heart failure. Prognostic implications, drug therapy and prescription of activities may require adjustment based on this spectrum of hemodynamic response to exercise in patients with chronic heart failure.
...
PMID:Detection of left ventricular functional reserve by supine exercise hemodynamics in patients with severe, chronic heart failure. 49 99
In order to determine and compare the pharmacodynamic responses to single and multiple dose prazosin therapy in cardiac failure, 14 patients with severe low-output heart failure underwent central and regional hemodynamic measurements after random placement in one of two prazosin dosing schedules. A single 5 mg oral dose of prazosin (Group A, no. = 7) significantly increased the cardiac index and
stroke
volume index while significantly decreasing systemic, pulmonary and pulmonary capillary wedge pressures and vascular resistances. Hepatic plasma flow and limb blood flow increased after the single dose. Striking attenuation of these hemodynamic effects occurred when the same dose was administered after 24 hours of pretreatment with oral prazosin, 2 mg every 8 hours (Group B, no. = 7). The plasma prazosin levels of the two groups, drawn 2 hours after administration, were 24.5 and 30.5 ng/ml, respectively. Repeated administration of prazosin in patients with
congestive heart failure
results in rapid attenuation of its beneficial central and regional hemodynamic effects. The usefulness of this vasodilator as a preload- and afterload-reducing agent in the clinical setting of chronic
congestive heart failure
may be limited by the development of pharmacodynamic tolerance.
...
PMID:Development of pharmacodynamic tolerance to prozosin in congestive heart failure. 49 12
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