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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calcium chloride (7 mg/kg) was administered intravenously to six healthy volunteers anesthetized with halothane. Cardiovascular changes were measured during constant ventilation and anesthetic depth under three conditions: 1) respiratory alkalosis, 2) normocarbia, and 3) respiratory acidosis. At each Paco2, calcium infusion significantly increased cardiac index, left ventricular minute work index, and stroke index. Heart rate, total peripheral resistance, and cardiac pre-ejection period decreased. No significant change in mean arterial blood pressure or central venous pressure followed calcium administration, and no arrhythmias occurred. It is concluded that calcium administration increases myocardial performance, presumably by increasing the availability of intracellular calcium ion for actomyosin interaction.
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PMID:Cardiovascular responses to calcium administered intravenously to man during halothane anesthesia. 111 7

1. Methyl methacrylate monomer (MMA) given by i.v. infusion to anesthetized dogs caused a sustained hypotension, bradycardia, reduction of cardiac output and stroke volume, and increased peripheral resistance. 2. Epinephrine i.v. could reverse the hypotension but not the bradycardia; isoproterenol i.v. could reverse the bradycardia but not the hypotension. 3. Bilateral cervical vagotomy prevented bradycardia but not other cardiovascular effects of MMA, and prevented all respiratory effects except hypoxemia. 4. Calcium chloride i.v. reversed all circulatory changes except bradycardia; a combination of atropine and calcium reversed all cardiovascular changes from MMA.
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PMID:Acute cardiovascular effects of methyl methacrylate monomer: characterization and modification by cholinergic blockade, adrenergic stimulation and calcium chloride infusion. 151 58

The effects of calcium chloride administered at low infusion rates on the cardiovascular depression and the blood calcium balance were studied during a constant halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies. A pronounced cardiopulmonary depression characterized by decreases of all cardiac parameters and lowering of the mean arterial blood pressure was observed after the initial anaesthetic stabilization period of 30 minutes in the ponies. A significant decrease in the total calcium plasma concentration together with a constant ionized and complexed calcium fraction was present after the stabilization period. Calcium chloride administration at different infusion rates (0.1, 0.2 and 0.3 mg/kg/min) induced a dose-dependent increase in mean systemic blood pressure, probably due to the observed increase in total peripheral resistance. A dose-dependent gradual decrease in heart rate, probably mediated by the increased vagal activity, was observed after the calcium infusions. The stroke volume increased also in a dose-dependent way. Cardiac output, arterial blood gases or packed cell volume were not influenced by the exogenous calcium infusions. The observed increases in mean pulmonary artery pressure and total pulmonary resistance were probably time-related responses. Overall, only the effects of the exogenous calcium on the peripheral vasculature, namely a vasoconstriction leading to an increase in blood pressure, were present in this study. Although LV dP/dt max was not measured in this study, minor positive inotropic effects of the exogenous calcium infusions might nevertheless be possible since the observed increase in stroke volume could be an indication of an increase in the ventricular contractility function. The different fractions of the calcium in the plasma (total and ionized & complexed calcium) increased during the exogenous calcium infusions but the proportion of the fractions remained always constant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiovascular effects of low dose calcium chloride infusions during halothane anaesthesia in dorsally recumbent ventilated ponies. 179 75

Afterload independent, inotropic state sensitive indices of regional function were sought in 31 canine hearts instrumented with piezoelectric crystals to depict trapezoidal areas in the left anterior descending and circumflex arterial beds. Control and postinterventional end-systolic pressure versus regional length and area relationships and regional stroke work versus end-diastolic length and area relationships were inscribed during incremental volume loading on right heart bypass. Hearts were randomized to undergo afterload variation with phenylephrine infusion, contractility augmentation by calcium chloride, or 20 minutes of ischemia in the region of the left anterior descending artery with 30 minutes of reperfusion. All relationships were linear before and after each intervention (mean r = 0.726 to 0.974). The slopes of each correlation were interpreted to quantify intrinsic regional contractility, and all were afterload insensitive (unaffected by phenylephrine). Regional stroke work versus end-diastolic area and length relationships were depressed 55% and 62%, respectively, after ischemia (p less than 0.001 each), whereas neither end-systolic pressure versus regional area nor regional length was significantly altered. Calcium chloride increased regional stroke work versus area 45% in both arterial beds, but significantly increased the other indices only in the left anterior descending and not the left circumflex region. Unlike previous studies of global contractility, correlation of end-systolic events alone did not reliably discriminate perturbations in regional function. The superiority of regional stroke work versus end-diastolic area may be due to incorporating pressure-area changes during the entire cardiac cycle and obviating variability owing to crystal orientation inexactly parallel to fiber shortening.
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PMID:Assessment of the intrinsic contractile state within an area of myocardium. 281 15