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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In patients with dangerously elevated diastolic blood pressures, the titrated intravenous administration of
sodium
nitroprusside usually reduces blood pressure to near-normal levels in less than an hour. This rapid reduction of pressure is well tolerated by hypertensive patients and probably diminishes the morbidity from renal and cardiac failure and
stroke
. The side effects of
sodium
nitroprusside treatment are minimal.
...
PMID:Treating acute hypertensive crisis with sodium nitroprusside. 83 90
In normothermic anesthetized cats cerebral blood flow was interrupted completely for one hour by arterial clamping and induced hypotension. The effect of ischemia on the ionic gradients of the cerebral cortex was assayed by determining total cortical electrolytes and by recording the activities of extracellular potassium ([K+i1e) and subarachnoid
sodium
ions ([
Na+
])s) with ion-sensitive electrodes. During ischemia [K+]e increased from 3.3+/-0.3 to 56+/-5.4 mEq per liter (means+/-SE) and [
Na+
]s decreased from 133+/-3.8 to 53+/-5.8 mEq per liter. When the brains were recirculated with blood after one hour's ischemia, [K+]e and [
Na+
]a gradually returned to normal within 45 minutes. The calculated intracellular uptake of
sodium
during ischemia amounted to 139 mEq per kilogram dry weight, whereas the intracellular release of potassium was only 64 mEq per kilogram. The increase in intracellular cation was accompanied by a movement of water from the extracellular into the intracellular compartment, causing a reversible shrinkage of the extracellular space from 18.9 to 8.5 vol %. The changes in ionic gradients were related to the development and resolution of ischemic brain swelling, and to the elctrophysiological events during and after ischemia.
Stroke
PMID:Cation activities in reversible ischemia of the cat brain. 83 60
Hemodynamics and plasma renin activity were measured in 20 ambulatory hospital inpatients with untreated mild to moderate essential hypertension. The control measurements were made after a period of four to seven days just on a diet containing 10 mEq
sodium
per day. The measurements were repeated following a week of oral propranolol hydrochloride therapy plus the low salt diet. Heart rate (P less than .001), mean arterial pressure (P less than .001), cardiac output (P less than .05), and plasma renin activity (P less than .05) were reduced in the majority of these patients following propranolol therapy but
stroke
volume increased (P less than .05). Corrected ejection time and total peripheral resistance did not show significant change. The antihypertensive effect of propranolol could not be related to its hyporeninemic effect or to the fall in cardiac output. Under the experimental conditions of this study, no single parameter, either hemodynamic or plasma renin activity, was predictive of a definite antihypertensive response to propranolol therapy.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic and plasma renin effects of propranolol in essential hypertension. 84 47
Twelve male mongrel dogs were used for this study; six were untreated (control) and six were given intravenous furosemide (1 mg/kg) daily for seven consecutive days before each study. Each animal received intravenous KCl 0.8, 1.6 or 3.2 mMol/kg/hr for one hour, but only one dose for each study and at least seven days were allowed between studies. The animals were given thiopentone for tracheal intubation and mechanically ventilated, maintaining a PaCO2 of 4.0 to 4.5 kPa (30-35 torr) and anaesthetized with nitrous oxide-oxygen and halothane. Daily administration of furosemide reduced serum potassium from 4.48 to 4.09 mMol/1 with no significant change in serum
sodium
. A greater number of furosemide-pretreated animals (6 vs 3) developed cardiac dysrhythmias during non-lethal intravenous KCl at 0.8, 1.6 mMol/kg/hr. The furosemide-pretreated group tended to succumb at a lower serum potassium concentration (12.2 vs 13.8 mMol/I, P less than 0.05) and developed earlier onset (44 vs 54 min, P less than 0.05) of cardiac standstill or ventricular fibrillation following intravenous KCl at 3.2 mMol/kg/hr. Cardiac output, heart rate and mean arterial pressure were significantly elevated during serum concentrations of 6.9-9.1 mMol/1, while no statistically significant changes were observed for
stroke
volume and peripheral resistance. There were no significant differences of urinary potassium excretion between the untreated and treated groups when like doses of KCl were infused. These data suggest that acute infusion of KCl in furosemide-pretreated dogs may not be an effective means of treating hypokalaemia and could be hazardous.
...
PMID:Acute intravenous administration of potassium chloride to furosemide pretreated dogs. 84 74
The author determined the phasic structure of the systole of the left ventricle by the method of polycardiography and hemodynamics in 20 patients suffering from hypothyrodism. Blood plasma and erythrocyte electrolytes were examined at the same time. Patients with hypothyroidism displayed a phasic syndrome of hypodynamia and a marked correlation between the phase of the synchronous contraction, the period of ejection, the strength of contraction of the left ventricle and the electrolyte content.
Sodium
and magnesium produced the greatest influence on the phasic structure of the systole; potassium and calcium had a lesser effect. The heart
stroke
volume diminished; as to the cardiac index, expenditure of the energy of cardiac contractions directed to the maintenance of movement of 1 litre of the minute blood volume; the external work, and the peripheral vascular resistance displayed no significant change.
...
PMID:[Myocardial contractility and hemodynamics in hypothyroidism]. 84 74
27 patients (8 women, 19 men) aged 39-79 (mean 61) years with acute transmural mycoardial infarction and limitation of left ventricular function were treated in the acute stage for 24-72 (mean 55) hours with intravenous infusions of
sodium
nitroprusside in concentrations of 10-200 microng/min. Haemodynamic measurements before and 12 hours after onset of treatment showed a significant reduction in mean arterial pressure by 19%, in end-diastolic pressure in the pulmonary artery by 33% and in the total peripheral resistance by 32%, whereas
stroke
volume and cardiac index rose by 12% and 17%, respectively. The percentage improvement was most marked in those patients most severely affected. The mortality rate of cardiogenic shock was reduced to 25%. In a control group with haemodynamically similar left ventricular failure the mortality rate was 55%. However, the total mortality was nearly unchanged as the number of sudden unexpected deaths after the fourth day rose from 23 to 50%. Further investigations will show how these sudden deaths, mainly due to arrhythmias, can be prevented.
...
PMID:[Sodium nitroprusside in the treatment of left-sided heart failure in acute myocardial infarction (author's transl)]. 84 8
To examine the influence of preexistent diabetes mellitus on left ventricular performance and coronary blood flow responses to acute ischemia, mild normoglycemic diabetes was induced in nine mongrel dogs after three doses of alloxan, (20 mg/kg, iv), at monthly intervals. Hemodynamic measurements and coronary blood flow (85Kr clearance) were obtained before and after the onset of ischemia. This was produced by occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery via a balloon-type catheter in nine intact anesthetized diabetic dogs and 10 nondiabetic dogs. During the 1st hour of ischemia in the diabetic group, the end-diastolic pressure rose from 7 +/- 1.1 (mean +/- SE) mm Hg to 23.8 +/- 2.3 without a significant increase of end-diastolic volume. In controls end-diastolic pressure rose from 8.6 +/- 1.1 mm Hg to 15.3 +/- 1.4, and end-diastolic volume was significantly increased, so that the ratio of end-diastolic pressure and volume was significantly higher in the diabetic group (P less than 0.005). Although indices of contractility did not differ,
stroke
volume and work reductions were significantly greater in diabetics, despite the fact that coronary blood flow was reduced to a similar extent. Size of the ischemic areas appeared comparable as judged by distribution of dye injected distal to the occlusion. Since potassium loss and
sodium
gain in the inner and outer layers of ischemic tissue did not differ between the two groups, the intensity of ischemia seemed similar. Glycogenolysis was unimpaired in the diabetic ischemic muscle but triglyceride levels remained elevated. Morphologically the diabetic myocardium was characterized by a diffuse accumulation of periodic acid-Schiff-positive glycoprotein in the interstitium, which was thought to limit diastolic filling of the ischemic ventricle and to contribute to the substantial reduction of ventricular performance.
...
PMID:Myocardial function and coronary blood flow response to acute ischemia in chronic canine diabetes. 87 Feb 38
Vasodilative treatment of severe heart failure with infusions of phentolamine leads to ventricular unloading and in many cases brings about a dramatic improvement of the patient's condition. Phentolamine is the only one of the vasodilators so far used in the treatment of heart failure that has a positively inotropic effect. In contrast to
sodium
nitroprusside and nitroglycerin, it also increases
stroke
volume at normal filling pressures. Although vasodilative therapy has resulted in a notable decline in the mortality from severe heart failure among hospitalized patients, the long-term prognosis after discharge remains poor. One of the chief reasons is that there has hitherto been no effective orally administrable drug suitable for protracted therapy. Initial clinical studies with a newly developed slow-release formulation of phentolamine have shown that the preparation produces remarkably good effects in patients with chronic heart failure: systolic pressure rises, the amplitude of the blood pressure is augmented and there is an increase in urinary excretion accompanied with a corresponding reduction in weight. In practically all cases, there is a distinct decrease in the size of the heart and in pulmonary congestion.
...
PMID:[Treatment of heart failure with phentolamine (Regitin)]. 89 48
Haemodynamics and renal function have been investigated in 12 patients with valvular heart disease before and after injection of 2 mg bumetanide in the right heart catheter. There were no significant changes in oxygen consumption, arteriovenous oxygen difference, cardiac index, heart beats per minute,
stroke
volume or right and left ventricular
stroke
work 35 min after the injection, whereas pulmonary and systemic arteriolar resistance showed a slight but insignificant reduction. Mean pulmonary capillary venous pressure, left ventricular end-diatolic pressure, mean pulmonary arterial pressure and mean pressure in the right atrium were highly significantly reduced after injection, systolic left ventricular pressure showing a significant but slight decrease. The creatinine and urea clearances increased considerably during the first 50 min after injection of bumetanide, but diminished during the second period to levels somewhat lower than the initial values. There was also a marked increase in the clearance of
sodium
potassium, calcium, magnisium and phosphate. It is concluded that bumetanide is a very potent diuretic which changes haemodynamic parameters towards normal values.
...
PMID:Haemodynamics and renal function following injection of bumetanide. 89 69
The effect of spironolactone on BP, cardiac output, plasma renin activity and urinary excretion of electrolytes has been studied in 12 hypertensive patients. After 1 month of spironolactone therapy there was a significant decrease in arterial BP. Urinary
sodium
excretion was significantly decreased and plasma renin activity increased. After four months of spironolactone therapy there was no further decrease in arterial BP. Cardiac output, heart rate and
stroke
volume were unchanged in the supine position, but the calculated total peripheral vascular resistance (TPVR) was reduced, indicating that the lower BP was mainly a result of dilatation of the resistance vessels. During exercise there was still a significant decrease in arterial BP but this was related to a decrease in both cardiac output and TPVR.
...
PMID:The effects of four months' treatment with spironolactone on systemic blood pressure, cardiac output and plasma renin activity in hypertensive patients. 92 Feb 61
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