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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
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)
28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
Bezold
-Jarisch reflex is an inhibitory reflex that originates from the heart, is mediated by the vagus nerve, and is manifested by hypotension and bradycardia. We present 4 pediatric cardiac surgical patients, aged 1 day to 9 months, who exhibited cardiovascular
collapse
in their early postoperative course. In each patient, cardiovascular deterioration was marked by an insidious decrease in arterial blood pressure without an associated change in heart rate, central venous pressure, or airway pressure. Bradycardia followed the decrease in blood pressure. The
Bezold
-Jarisch reflex was suspected and atropine was administered, first as a bolus injection at 0.01 mg/kg, and later, as a continuous infusion at 0.01 mg.kg-1.h-1. Atropine prevented recurrent episodes of hypotension and bradycardia. We believe the
Bezold
-Jarisch reflex is more prevalent than previously suspected in postoperative pediatric cardiac surgical patients.
...
PMID:Bezold-Jarisch reflex in postoperative pediatric cardiac surgical patients. 189 43
Continuous recording of beat-to-beat changes in haemodynamic parameters such as arterial pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and total peripheral resistance, was done in 52 uraemic patients. The study was performed during the haemodialysis session, using a system combining a personal computer, an arterial pressure recorder, and an electrical bioimpedance cardiography monitor. Forty-six episodes of dialysis-induced hypotension occurred in 26 patients. Systolic arterial pressure and total peripheral resistance decreased by -39.3 +/- 2% and -36.3 +/- 4% respectively during acute hypotension; in contrast, there was an increase in cardiac output (+13.9 +/- 6.7%), while heart rate and stroke volume did not change significantly. It was possible to distinguish two types of
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on the basis of heart rate behaviour: the classic 'tachycardiac'
collapse
with heart rate increase and stroke volume decrease, and the so-called 'bradycardiac'
collapse
with a paradoxical reduction in heart rate and an increase in stroke volume. 'Bradycardiac' collapses were observed in 54% of the cases. The administration of atropine in one patient resulted in an immediate increase in heart rate. The development of bradycardia and hypotension during haemodialysis seems to be related to a sudden parasympathetic vagal overactivity and could be attributed to the
Bezold
-Jarish reflex.
...
PMID:A haemodynamic study of hypotension during haemodialysis using electrical bioimpedance cardiography. 212 48
Effects of brevetoxin were evaluated in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital under conditions of controlled end-expiratory pCO2 and constant body temperature. Recordings were made of arterial blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory pattern, diaphragm EMG, evoked tibialis muscle twitch and evoked contraction of the nictitating membrane. Electrical stimulation was employed for periodic excitation of the medullary respiratory center, the phrenic nerve, the peroneal nerve and the cervical sympathetic nerve. Brevetoxin was prepared at a concentration of 1.0 mg/ml in an aqueous medium of 2.5% ethanol plus 2.5% Emulphor 620 (General Aniline and Film Corp., New York). Small i.v. bolus injections of the toxin (40 micrograms/kg) evoked, without tachyphylaxis, the
Bezold
-Jarisch reflex triad of bradycardia, hypotension and bradypnea. This effect was essentially abolished by vagotomy. Continued injections then resulted in pressor reactions and tachycardia, along with the development of respiratory dysrhythmia. Large doses of brevetoxin (160 micrograms/kg i.v.) caused somatomotor seizures accompanied by severe hypertension, that occurred even after decerebration and cervical spinal cord transection. Cranial intra-arterial and intra-cerebroventricular injections of brevetoxin produced hypertension and respiratory depression more effectively than did i.v. injections. Systemic cumulation of the toxin, with the respiration supported artificially, caused death from cardiovascular
collapse
, without significant blockade of neuromuscular and ganglionic transmission. It is concluded that brevetoxin exerts its major toxic effects on the circulation and respiration through reflex and central actions, largely sparing peripheral motor mechanisms.
...
PMID:Neurological analysis of respiratory, cardiovascular and neuromuscular effects of brevetoxin in cats. 299 23
This report documents a case of hemodynamic
collapse
during primary angioplasty (PCI) for acute inferior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). The patient had stable vital signs during the initial angiogram which had demonstrated an occluded mid right coronary artery (RCA). There was no evidence of right ventricular infarction or heart block. Reperfusion arrhythmia did not occur. The case illustrates triggering of the
Bezold
Jarisch Reflex (BJR) not by occlusion but reperfusion. In addition, this report illustrates the use of cough cardiopulmonary resuscitation (cough-CPR) to maintain consciousness during the BJR. Cough-CPR has previously been reported as a temporizing mechanism during ventricular arrhythmia prior to electrical cardioversion. This primary PCI case puts into clinical context the findings of historical animal studies and compares with clinical observations made during trials of intracoronary thrombolytic therapy.
...
PMID:Triggering of the Bezold Jarisch Reflex by reperfusion during primary PCI with maintenance of consciousness by cough CPR: a case report and review of pathophysiology. 1868 71