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

Pharmacologic support of the failing neonatal heart to maintain cardiac output, which is vital for sufficient end organ perfusion, is a challenging task for the pediatric intensivist, especially since strategies which have been proven to be effective in adults cannot necessarily be extrapolated to neonates. The unique biochemical properties and structure of the neonatal heart, including the increased non-contractile tissue mass, a lower responsiveness to beta adrenergic agents and the heart rate dependent cardiac output with a limited ability to increase stroke volume, favor some of the new inotropes of the Ca+ sensitizer family. Focusing on the after load reduction, inodilators as phosphodiesterase inhibitors and human brain natriuretic peptide offer treatment options for the neonatal myocardium. Additionally, thyroxine and steroids have been investigated in neonates with low cardiac output after surgery for congenital heart disease. Gene therapy, in particular cardiac-selective gene transfer, might offer perspectives for future support for the neonatal heart. This text reviews some of the most recent pharmacologic strategies targeting the failing myocardium in the critically ill newborn and infant.
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PMID:New inotropic pharmacologic strategies targeting the failing myocardium in the newborn and infant. 1684 28

We report changes in cardiac troponin-T (TnT) and a new plasma stroke biomarker panel (D-dimer, B-natriuretic peptide [BNP], matrix metalloproteinase-9 [MMP-9], S-100 b, Biosite Diagnostics, San Diego, CA) in 30 nonprofessional marathon runners before and immediately after the 2005 Boston Marathon. Following competition, there was a statistically significant increase in MMP-9 (P < .001) and D dimer (P < .001). Nonsignificant changes in S-100 b and BNP were observed. Premarathon and postmarathon values for a multimarker stroke index increased from 0.97 (normal) to 3.5 (low risk or more; P < .001). Two subjects had index values more than the high-risk cutoff value. Mean TnT premarathon and postmarathon levels increased (from <0.01 to 0.03 ng/mL; P < .0001). After the marathon, with a cutoff value of 0.05 ng/mL, 7 runners (23%) had values above the manufacturer's recommended cutoff for myocardial damage. Although biochemical evidence of myocardial damage following strenuous exercise may reflect myocardial stunning or subclinical ischemia, the changes in the stroke index and values for individual stroke markers may reflect a systemic inflammatory response to exertional rhabdomyolysis which is common, but the possibility of subclinical central nervous system damage cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Measurement of a plasma stroke biomarker panel and cardiac troponin T in marathon runners before and after the 2005 Boston marathon. 1689 Nov 91

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is associated with cognitive deficits long before the onset of stroke or dementia. Recent work has extended these findings and shown that patients with congestive heart failure also exhibit reduced cognitive performance. Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) is used to help diagnose heart failure, but no study has examined whether BNP predicts cognitive dysfunction in older patients with CVD. BNP values and performance on the Dementia Rating Scale were assessed in 56 older adults with documented CVD. Forty-eight percent of the participants were women, and their average age was 70 +/- 8 years. All participants had Mini-Mental State Examination scores greater than the cutoff for dementia and no histories of neurologic or severe psychiatric disorders. The average BNP level was 122 +/- 202 pg/ml. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that log-transformed BNP levels predicted Dementia Rating Scale total score after adjusting for possible demographic and medical confounders (DeltaR2 = 0.09, F[1, 44] = 6.14, p = 0.017). Partial correlation analysis adjusting for these possible confounders showed a particularly strong relation to the conceptualization subtest (r = -0.44, p = 0.002), a measure of verbal and nonverbal abstraction abilities. In conclusion, the results of the present study provide the first evidence for an independent relation between BNP and cognitive dysfunction in older adults with CVD.
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PMID:Relation of brain natriuretic peptide levels to cognitive dysfunction in adults > 55 years of age with cardiovascular disease. 1689 13

Ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) is used to induce experimental myocardial infarction (MI). Most previous studies have focused on the early postoperative period, while data on mid-term follow-up are scanty. This study examined the mid-term effects of LAD ligation in 95 MI rats and 28 controls. The following parameters were evaluated: systemic blood pressure (SBP), heart rate (HR), and plasma brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) level. In addition, M-mode and B-mode echocardiography, histologic examinations, and cardiac hydroxyproline assays were performed. Forty-seven perioperative and 5 late deaths were recorded. Left ventricular dilation, observed 1 mo after MI, did not progress with time. Septal thickening was similar in the 2 groups, while wall thickening was lower in the MI rats at 1 mo only. Stroke volume was diminished in MI rats, while cardiac output was depressed only at 1 and 2 mo, due to increased heart rate. SBP was unchanged and plasma BNP level was similar in the 2 groups. The infarcted area (mean +/- SD) was 35 +/- 10%. The ventricles in MI rats were heavier and had increased hydroxyproline content. In conclusion, these data show that LAD ligation is not only a model of acute MI, but at mid-term it provides a model of chronic ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Experimental ischemic cardiomyopathy: insights into remodeling, physiological adaptation, and humoral response. 1695 Dec 76

cardiac injury occurs frequently after stroke; and the most widely investigated form of neurocardiogenic injury is aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Echocardiography and screening for elevated troponin and B-type natriuretic peptide levels may help prognosticate and guide treatment of stroke. Cardiac catheterization is not routinely recommended in subarachnoid hemorrhage patients with left ventricular dysfunction and elevated troponin. The priority should be treatment of the underlying neurologic condition, even in patients with left ventricular dysfunction. Cardiac injury that occurs after subarachnoid hemorrhage appears to be reversible. In contrast to subarachnoid hemorrhage patients, patients with ischemic stroke are more likely to have concomitant significant heart disease. For patients who develop brain death, cardiac evaluation under optimal conditions may help increase the organ donor pool.
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PMID:Neurocardiogenic injury in neurovascular disorders. 1723 52

Anaemia is a negative prognostic factor for patients with heart failure and impaired renal function, but its role in stroke patients is unknown. Furthermore, anaemia has been shown to influence the level of N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), but this is only investigated in patients with heart failure, not in stroke patients. Two-hundred-and-fifty consecutive, well-defined ischemic stroke patients were investigated. Mortality was recorded at 6 months follow-up. Anaemia was diagnosed in 37 patients (15%) in whom stroke severity was worse than in the non-anaemic group, whilst the prevalence of renal affection, smoking and heart failure was lower. At 6 months follow-up, 23 patients were dead, and anaemia had an odds ratio of 4.7 when adjusted for age, Scandinavian Stroke Scale and a combined variable of heart and/or renal failure and/or elevation of troponin T using logistic regression. The median NT-proBNP level in the anaemic group was significantly higher than in the non-anaemic group, and in a multivariate linear regression model, anaemia remained an independent predictor of NT-proBNP. Conclusively, anaemia was found to be a negative prognostic factor for ischemic stroke patients. Furthermore, anaemia influenced the NT-proBNP level in ischemic stroke patients, an important aspect when interpreting NT-proBNP in these patients.
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PMID:The influence of anaemia on stroke prognosis and its relation to N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide. 1743 4

Antihypertensive therapy has been associated with 35 to 40% reduction in stroke incidence and 20 to 25% reduction in myocardial infarction. Antihypertensive drugs have various metabolic and endocrine activities. Their effect on electrolytes and hormones which modify the serum levels of electrolytes (such as aldosterone, angiotensine II and brain natriuretic peptide) is reviewed. Antihypertensive drugs may also modify risk factors for cardiovascular disease such as cholesterol, CRP hs, as well as urate acid and insulin resistance. Diuretics and betablockers increase this resistance whereas, it is decreased by certain enzyme conversion inhibitors and certain angiotensine II receptor blockers, partially through adiponectin release. Endocrine side effects of antihypertensive drugs such as weight gain, diabetes, gout, osteoporosis, impotence are discussed. They may decrease adherence to medication. Therefore we recommend if possible a low dose combination of antihypertensive drugs.
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PMID:[Metabolic and endocrine effects of antihypertensive drugs]. 1744 3

Most patients with acute heart failure present with increased left ventricular filling pressure and high or normal blood pressure; only a minority present with cardiogenic shock. In this context, therapy with vasodilators in the acute setting can improve both hemodynamics and symptoms. Vasodilators are usually given in conjunction with diuretics, although much of the acute effect of loop diuretics may be due to venodilation. Currently available agents include nitroglycerin, nitroprusside, and nesiritide. Nitroglycerin relieves pulmonary congestion primarily through direct venodilation, but may dilate coronary arteries and increase collateral blood flow at higher doses, an effect desirable in patients with ischemia. Tachyphylaxis may develop, necessitating incremental dosing. The major adverse effects of nitrates are hypotension and headache. Nitroprusside is a balanced arterial and venous vasodilator with a very short half-life, facilitating rapid titration. Afterload reduction lowers blood pressure and can increase stroke volume. The major complications of nitroprusside therapy are hypotension, and toxicity from accumulation of cyanide or thiocyanate, usually in patients with renal insufficiency treated for more than 24 h. Nesiritide, a recombinant form of human B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), is a venous and arterial vasodilator that may also potentiate the effect of concomitant diuretics. Hypotension is the most common side effect. In addition, meta-analyses have suggested that nesiritide may worsen renal function and decrease survival at 30 days compared to conventional therapies. Resolution of these concerns awaits completion of appropriately powered prospective clinical trials. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have vasodilatory effects, but intravenous infusion of enalapril within 24 h of ischemic chest pain is not recommended. Oral ACE inhibition may be used to reduce afterload in other settings if blood pressure permits. Use of calcium antagonists in acute heart failure is not recommended.
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PMID:Vasodilators in acute heart failure. 1744 37

The experimental design of clinical studies, on the pharmacological treatment of essential hypertension, has ignored a fundamental issue: Hypertensive patients are not a homogenous population. The adaptation of the cardiovascular system to hypertension is structurally and functionally heterogeneous. Recent clinical investigations suggest that this heterogeneity can be minimized by echocardiography. Thus, when the hemodynamic and neurohormonal profiles of untreated hypertensive patients are considered, in the particular context of the cardiac morphologic adaptation to high blood pressure, distinct common denominators emerge. Concentric and eccentric hypertrophy, the two most common patterns of ventricular hypertrophy, are at the extremes of the geometric spectrum. Concentric hypertrophy is characterized by an elliptic left ventricle, normal stroke volume and high peripheral vascular resistance. Its predominant neurohormonal profile includes elevated plasma renin and natriuretic peptide levels. Conversely, most patients with eccentric hypertrophy have a spheric left ventricle, increased stroke volume and low peripheral vascular resistance. Its corresponding neurohormonal profile shows low serum renin and enhanced sympathetic nervous activity. The therapeutic response, to angiotensin II antagonists and to beta-adrenergic blockers, of these two geometric patterns is also different. Concentric hypertrophy is substantially reversed by losartan, whereas, eccentric hypertrophy is refractory to both, losartan and atenolol. These facts raise a relevant question: Should ventricular geometry be considered when deciding which antihypertensive drug is to be prescribed?
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PMID:Patterns of left ventricular hypertrophy in essential hypertension: should echocardiography guide the pharmacological treatment? 1746 83

Plasma levels of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) are frequently elevated after an acute stroke and have been shown to be an independent predictor of mortality. However, the relationships between stroke and BNP concentrations have not yet been systematically investigated. Plasma BNP assay and echocardiography were performed in 48 patients with ischemic stroke or TIA with a mean delay of 12.7 h after onset. Median BNP concentration was 88.6 pg/mL (range 5-1270). Older age, chronic heart failure, atrial fibrillation, stroke severity, lower hemoglobin levels, lower left ventricular ejection fraction, and abnormalities of left atrium or appendage (LA/LAA) were univariately associated with increased BNP levels. At multivariable analysis, the presence of at least one LA/LAA abnormality (atrial dilatation, low flow velocity, spontaneous echocontrast or thrombus) had the strongest association with BNP, explaining 38.9% of the variance in the whole sample and 28.5% in patients without atrial fibrillation. In acute ischemic stroke patients, elevated plasma BNP levels have multiple determinants, among which left atrial disease appears to be the stronger, even in patients without atrial fibrillation. These results encourage further investigation of plasma BNP concentration as a potential marker of the presence of left atrial sources of emboli.
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PMID:Determinants of plasma levels of brain natriuretic peptide after acute ischemic stroke or TIA. 1751 51


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