Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Myocardial cell pH was measured with 5, 5 dimethyl-2, 4-oxazolidinedione (DMO) in intact anesthetized dogs by a transient indicator dilution technique. Bolus injections of labeled DMO, vascular, extracellular and
water
indicators were made into the left anterior descending coronary artery, and blood samples were collected from the great cardiac vein. The steady state distribution of DMO between cells and plasma was calculated from the mean transit times of the indicator. Normal myocardial cell pH averaged 6.94 and changed by 58% of the concomitant alterations in plasma pH after infusions of acid or alkali.
Myocardial ischemia
induced by inflation of a balloon tip catheter in the left anterior descending coronary artery resulted in progressive decreases in cell pH to 6.59 by 1 hour. Infusions of sodium carbonate diminished intracellular acidosis. Hemodynamic studies during 4 hours of ischemia with blood pH at 7.55 to 7.60 indicated a significantly reduced left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and increased stroke volume by comparison with findings in animals given infusions of saline solution. Ventriculograms revealed improved wall motion in the ischemic segment after infusion of alkali. Precordial mapping showed a significant reduction in the number of leads with S-T segment elevation as well as in the sum of S-T segment elevations, but R wave amplitudes did not differ from those in control studies. Calculations of extracellular space, tissue
water
and cation content revealed a reduced gain of cell sodium ion and loss of cell potassium ion during ischemia after alkali treatment. The latter may account for the S-T segment responses, whereas enhanced ventricular performance may be related to reduced competition of hydrogen ion with calcium ion for binding sites on contractile protein.
...
PMID:Myocardial ischemia and cell acidosis: Modification by alkali and the effects on ventricular function and cation composition. 0 59
Myocardial cell pH has been measured with 5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione (DMO) in intact anesthetized dogs by a transient indicator dilution technique. Bolus injections of labeled DMO, vascular, extracellular, and
water
indicators were made into the anterior descending coronary artery, and blood samples were collected from the great cardiac vein. The steady-state distribution of DMO between cells and plasma was calculated from the indicator mean transit times, and the plasma pH. Myocardial cell pH was determined from the distribution value and plasma pH. Normal myocardial cell pH averaged 6.94. Changes in myocardial cell pH after infusions of acid or alkali.
Myocardial ischemia
induced by inflation of a coronary artery balloon resulted in progressive decreases in cellular pH to average values of 6.83 within the initial 15 min and to 6.59 within the interval between 20 and 70 min. Infusions of Na2CO3 tended to diminish intracellular acidosis although these infusions had little effect on the difference in pH between the myocardial cell and extracellular fluid.
...
PMID:In vivo myocardial cell pH in the dog. Response to ischemia and infusion of alkali. 23 67
If an environmental agent is strongly associated with only one disease then that is greater evidence in favour of a casual relationship than if that agent were also strongly associated with other unrelated diseases. Standard regression and correlation analysis are shown to be incapable of answering questions about disease specificity. A simple index, based upon regression, is proposed. The standardised regression coefficients in a regression equation based on the logistic transformation of a death rate are shown to have a particularly simple interpretation in terms of our index. The work is illustrated on an example drawn from the controversy concerning the association between area differences in
ischaemic heart disease
mortality and
water
hardness.
...
PMID:Statistical problems in studying the relative specificities of association between environmental agents and different diseases: a solution suggested. 48 28
In addition to currently known mechanisms of sudden death following
water
immersion, predominantly vagal cardio-depressive reflexes are discussed. The pronounced circulatory centralization in diving animals as well as following exposure to cold
water
indicates additional sympathetic activity. In cold
water
baths of 15 degrees C, our own measurements indicate an increase in plasma catecholamine levels by more than 300%. This may lead to cardiac arrhythmias by the following mechanism: Cold
water
essentially induces sinus bradycardia. Brady- and tachyarrhythmias may supervene as secondary complications. Sinusbradycardia may be enhanced by sympathetic hypertonus. Furthermore, ectopic dysrhythmias are liable to be induced by the strictly sympathetic innervation of the ventricle.
Myocardial ischemia
following a rise in peripheral blood pressure constitutes another arrhythmogenic factor. Some of these reactions are enhanced by alcohol intoxication.
...
PMID:[Sympatho-adrenal activity in acute cold stress. The mechanism of sudden death following water immersion]. 49 12
Potassium (34 mEq/L) cardioplegia was induced with cold blood (CBK) in three groups of six dogs undergoing 60 minutes of
myocardial ischemia
at a systemic temperature of 27 degrees +/- 2 degrees and a myocardial temperature of 7 degrees +/- 2 degrees C (crushed ice). Group 1 (CBK) animals were reperfused initially with 400 ml cold blood over 8 to 10 minutes at increasing pressures of up to 75 mm Hg. Group II (CBK-K) dogs were reperfused in the same manner as Group I with the addition of potassium chloride, 30 mEq/L. In Group III (CBKG-KG) glutathione, 30 mg/100 ml, was added to both the pre- and postischemic perfusions with CBK. After 30 minutes of reperfusion control studies were repeated. Heart rate, peak systolic pressure, rate of rise of left ventricular pressure, maximum velocity of contractile element, pressure-volume curves, coronary flow distribution, muscle stiffness, and heart
water
were not significantly different from control values. Total coronary flow and myocardial uptake of oxygen, lactate, and pyruvate did not serve to separate the three groups; the same was true for right ventricular creatine phosphate, adenosine triphosphate, and adenosine diphosphate during ischemia and recovery. Ultrastructural myofibrillar lesions were noted in all groups. thus, postischemic cardioplegia and use of a physiological reducing agent do not enhance CBK cardioplegia with topical and systemic hypothermia.
...
PMID:Cold-blood potassium cardioplegia: evaluation of glutathione and postischemic cardioplegia. 50 72
However great the success in the therapy of hypertension, atherosclerosis and
ischemic heart disease
has been gained today by recent efficient drugs, the definite healing of patients is not yet attained. The late discovery of reserpine, such an efficient drug of plant origin against hypertension, convinced so far reluctant scientists to consider the chemical compounds of the plant world. With respect to this traditional medical knowledge, it seems necessary to define more accurately the specificity of these healings-sometimes recommended unspecifically for a whole branch of medicine. This experimental verification should not use inconsiderately the present-day classification of diseases; there should be an awareness that conventional experimental methods in pharmacology are often unsuitable for revealing the real biological activity of one or another medicinal plant. The interest in the millennial empirical field of health care is acknowledged by the World Health Organization which promotes research and development of traditional medicine, along with investigations into its psychosocial and ethnographic aspects. These studies cover a number of plants growing in Bulgaria that have a healing effect in hypertension, atherosclerosis and
ischemic heart disease
according to the data of traditional medicine. Using screening methods, extracts and chemically pure substances were investigated; extraction was done with solvents such as
water
, ether, chloroform, dichloretan, ethanol, methanol, and acetone. Most of the experiments were carried out on anesthetized cats, rabbits and dogs. The substances tested were applied mainly intravenously, and in some experiments orally. Chronic experiments were also carried out on wakeful dogs with induced hypertension, on animals fed on an atherogenic diet, and on animals with induced arrhythmia and coronary spasm. Data are presented of clinical examination of some plants or of active substances isolated from them. Major results of these studies are presented for the following plants: Garlic, Geranium; Hellebore; Mistletoe; Olive; Valerian; Hawthorn; Pseucedanum arenarium; Periwinkle; Fumitory. For another 50 plants growing in Bulgaria and in other countries the author presents his and other investigators' experimental and clinical data about hypotensive, antiatheromatous and coronarodilatating action.
...
PMID:Plants and hypotensive, antiatheromatous and coronarodilatating action. 57 53
To explain the associations of
water
hardness and air temperature with area differences in
ischaemic heart disease
mortality, samples of tap
water
were obtained from homes in 61 county boroughs in England and Wales, and the concentration of calcium and 12 other elements was estimated. Multiple regressions were calculated with the death rates from various causes as dependent variables and with the concentration of the elements in the tap
water
, mean annual temperature, mean annual rainfall, and a socioeconomic index as independent variables. The well known negative association between
water
hardness and
ischaemic heart disease
was shown to be due to calcium, and none of 12 other elements examined appeared to contribute significantly to the association. Area differences in other causes of death also showed an association with calcium. There was little association between temperature and
ischaemic heart disease
.
...
PMID:Mortality and the concentration of elements in tap water in county boroughs in England and Wales. 58 57
A comparison was made of mortality from all causes, and from
ischaemic heart disease
, in the six Australian capital cities, for the years 1970, 1971 and 1972. Both rates were significantly higher in Brisbane and Sydney than in the other cities. Ninety per cent of the excess deaths in Brisbane men, and a large part of the excess deaths in Brisbane women and Sydney people of both sexes, were due to coronary disease. There was no relationship between either total or coronary mortality, and
water
softness or its magnesium content. So far these differences are unexplained.
...
PMID:Mortality from all causes, and from ischaemic heart disease, in the Australian capital cities. 60 Jan 57
To study the action of aspirin upon the myocardium per se, independent of thrombosis, coronary occlusion with a balloon catheter was induced in 53 anesthetized dogs divided into two groups. One group (N = 20) was treated daily with aspirin (600 mg/dog) for seven days and another (N = 33) was untreated. Left ventricular hemodynamics and precordial ECG mapping were used to assess the influence of
myocardial ischemia
over a four hour period. There were no significant differences in left ventricular function or extent of injury as judged by ECG mapping between the two groups. However, there was a significant decrease in the incidence of ventricular fibrillation in the treated dogs (5% vs 39%). Serial plasma samples for free fatty acid determination showed a significant rise in the untreated group. Aspirin blocked the FFA increment in the treated animals. Tissue samples from the ischemic area of left ventricle exhibited a significant reduction of the sodium and
water
increments, as well as a lesser potassium loss in the treated animals compared to the controls and may have been the basis for the lower incidence of arrhythmias. Since infusion of 51Cr labelled platelets showed no myocardial accumulation of platelets in either group, microthrombi did not appear to contribute to the observed differences.
...
PMID:Antiarrhythmic effects of aspirin during nonthrombotic coronary occlusion. 63 Jun 76
In a group of patients dying suddenly from
ischemic heart disease
, the uninfarcted heart muscle contained significantly lower concentrations of magnesium, iron, and potassium and a significantly higher concentration of calcium than the heart muscle from a group of normal controls and a group of patients dying more than three months after a coronary thrombosis. The late death group had significantly lower concentrations of manganese and copper than the normal group, and a slight decrease in magnesium concentration which was probably significant. There was no significant difference in the sodium concentration between the three groups. The results are discussed in relation to the increased death rate from
ischemic heart disease
in areas with soft drinking
water
, and possible dietary deficiencies in mineral salts.
...
PMID:Differences in metal content of the heart muscle in death from ischemic heart disease. 65 86
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>