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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (
thinning
)
11,252
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infarct expansion, defined as an alteration in the ventricular topography due to
thinning
and lengthening of the infarcted segment, develops within the first few hours of the acute symptoms, mostly in patients with a large, transmural, anterior myocardial infarction. Shape changes, peculiar to risk region location and due to disparity in regional ventricular architecture, could be posited as the first step in the process of infarct expansion, with various cellular mechanisms contributing to subsequent continued early and late ventricular dilation. Because the increase in left ventricular volume is expected to be linearly dependent on the extent of the infarction, limiting infarct size, by thrombolysis, would proportionally reduce enlargement of the cavity. The effect of thrombolysis on left ventricular volume, however, seems not to be completely accounted for by the lessening effect of reperfusion on infarct size, because data suggest a restraining effect of reperfusion on the process of ventricular dilation in addition to the lessening effect on infarct size. If this turns out to be true, then the achievement of a patent vessel even beyond the time period when that patency may be expected to salvage myocardium would be further justified. Theoretical predictions substantiate the potential effectiveness in restraining ventricular dilation of stiffening of the necrotic region alone, independently of myocardial salvage in infarcted patients. The process of progressive ventricular dilation involves not only a primary alteration in function of the infarcted region, but also a time-dependent secondary change in the noninfarcted tissue itself, finalized to restore
stroke
volume despite a persistently depressed ejection fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ventricular remodeling and infarct expansion. 827 68
Although cardiomyocyte damage is normally irreversible, gene therapy and somatic cell transfer offer potential for improving function in damaged regions of the heart. However, in ischemic models of injury, variability in depth, size, and location of damage compromises statistical evaluation of in vivo function. We have adapted cryoablation to create a reproducible, posterior, transmural lesion within rabbit myocardium in which small changes in function are measurable in vivo. Before and at 2 and 6 wk postinjury, in vivo left ventricular intracavitary pressure and myocardial segment length were measured. Regional indexes of performance, segmental
stroke
work (SW), and percent systolic shortening (SS) were significantly decreased (P < 0.001) postcryoinjury as was the slope (Mw) of the linear preload recruitable SW relationship between SW and end-diastolic segment length (P = 0.0001). Decreased SW, SS, and Mw correlated with wall
thinning
, loss of myocytes, presence of fibroblasts, and transmural scar formation. Reproducible changes in regional myocardial performance in vivo postcryoinjury suggest that this is a reasonable model for evaluating novel therapies for cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:A load-independent in vivo model for evaluating therapeutic interventions in injured myocardium. 981 92
To investigate how insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) modulates cardiovascular function and myocardial apoptosis in heart failure, the therapeutic effects of IGF-I were determined in a canine model of dilated cardiomyopathy. The animals were paced at 220 beats/min, and the left ventricular (LV) chamber became dilated after 2 weeks. A subset of paced dogs was treated with s.c. injections of IGF-I from week 3 to week 4. After 4 weeks of pacing, untreated paced dogs developed significant ventricular dysfunction. IGF-I-treated paced dogs showed better cardiac output,
stroke
volume, LV end-systolic pressure, and LV end-diastolic pressure. Moreover, pulmonary wedge pressure and systemic vascular resistance were increased in the untreated group and decreased in the IGF-I-treated group. IGF-I treatment was associated with less
thinning
of the ventricular wall. Compared with the controls, untreated paced dogs showed increased apoptosis of cardiac muscle cells, which was partially suppressed by IGF-I treatment. The myocardial apoptotic index was negatively related to the thickness of the ventricular wall and to cardiac output, suggesting that ventricular remodeling/dysfunction involves the occurrence of myocardial apoptosis. Due to the close resemblance between this experimental model of dilated cardiomyopathy and human heart failure, the results of this study provide evidence that IGF-I may be a potential therapeutic agent for the failing human heart.
...
PMID:Insulin-like growth factor I improves cardiovascular function and suppresses apoptosis of cardiomyocytes in dilated cardiomyopathy. 1049 43
Electrical pacing at physiological rate induces myocardial remodeling associated with regional changes in workload, blood flow and oxygen consumption. However, to what extent energy-producing pathways are also modified within the paced heart remains to be investigated. Pacing could particularly affect glycogen metabolism since hypertrophy stimulates glycolysis and increased workload favors glucose over fat oxidation. In order to test this hypothesis, we used the embryonic chick heart model in which ventricular pacing rapidly resulted in
thinning
of the ventricle wall and thickening of the atrial wall. Hearts of stage 22HH chick embryos were submitted in ovo to asynchronous and intermittent ventricular pacing delivered at physiological rate during 24 h. The resulting alterations of glycogen content were determined in atrium, ventricle and conotruncus of paced and sham-operated hearts. Hemodynamic parameters of the paced and spontaneously beating hearts were derived from computerized image analysis of video recordings. With respect to sham, paced hearts showed a significant decrease in glycogen content (nmoles glucose units/microg protein; mean+/-S.D.) only in atrium (1.48+/-0.40 v 0.84+/-0.34, n=8) and conotruncus (0.75+/-0.28 v 0.42+/-0.23, n=8). Pacing decreased the end diastolic and
stroke
volumes by 34 and 44%, respectively. Thus, the rapid glycogen depletion in regions remote from the stimulation site appears to be associated with regional changes in workload and remodeling. These findings underscore the importance of the coupling mechanisms between metabolic pathways and myocardial remodeling in the ectopically paced heart.
...
PMID:Pacing redistributes glycogen within the developing myocardium. 1118 Oct 19
Atherosclerotic plaques were likened histologically to healing inflammatory lesions by Russell Ross, who proposed a "response to injury" hypothesis for their formation. More recently, intraplaque inflammation has been postulated to play a role in
thinning
of the fibrous cap, plaque rupture, and superadded thrombosis. Potential causes for vascular injury include mechanical stress, smoke exposure, hypercholesterolemia, hyperhomocysteinemia, and chronic infection (direct, or indirect). Blood levels of inflammatory markers (e.g., C-reactive protein [CRP]; serum amyloid A [SAA]; fibrinogen; plasma viscosity; erythrocyte sedimentation rate [ESR]; leukocyte count, low serum albumin) have been associated with vascular risk factors and with prevalent and incident atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) (coronary heart disease, [CHD];
stroke
; and peripheral arterial disease). More recently, cytokines (e.g., interleukin-6 [IL-6]) and soluble adhesion molecules (e.g., intercellular adhesion molecule-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1) have been associated with both risk factors and disease; and offer potential therapeutic targets for nonspecific "anti-inflammatory" treatment of arterial disease. Infections associated with arterial disease include specific infections (Chlamydia pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori) and nonspecific infections (periodontal infections, respiratory tract infections). Recent meta-analyses have shown that associations of serum markers of C. pneumoniae and H. pylori with arterial disease, risk factors, or potential intermediary mechanisms for disease are weaker than was first suggested by early reports. Likewise, further studies and meta-analyses are required to evaluate the epidemiologic relationships of CVD to periodontal infection and disease and to chronic pulmonary infections and disease. The weaker the associations between chronic infections and CVD, the larger is the size of randomized controlled trials required to establish (or exclude) a preventive effect of infection treatment. While control of chronic infection in the mouth, stomach or lungs is appropriate for its local effects, proving its efficacy in prevention of CVD presents a continuing challenge to medical science.
...
PMID:The relationship between infection, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease: an overview. 1188 52
The mandatory use of pharmacotherapy in human heart failure (HF) impedes further study of natural history and remodeling mechanisms. We created a sheep model of chronic, severe, ischemic HF [left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF) <35% stable over 4 wk] by selective coronary microembolization under general anesthesia and followed hemodynamic, energetic, neurohumoral, structural, and cellular responses over 6 mo. Thirty-eight sheep were induced into HF (58% success), with 23 sheep followed for 6 mo (21 sheep with sufficient data for analysis) after the LVEF stabilized (median of 3 embolizations). Early doubling of LV end-diastolic pressure persisted, as did increases in LV end-diastolic volume, LV wall stress, and LV wall
thinning
. Contractile impairment (LV end-systolic elastance, LV preload recruitable
stroke
work, and dobutamine-responsive contractile reserve) and diastolic dysfunction also remained stable. Cardiac mechanical energy efficiency did not recover. Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide levels remained elevated, but rises in plasma aldosterone and renin activity were transient. Collagen content increased 170%, the type I-to-III phenotype ratio doubled in the LV, but right ventricular collagen remained unaltered. Fas ligand cytokine levels correlated with expression of both caspase-3 and -2, suggesting a link in the apoptotic "death cascade." Caspase-3 activity also bore a close relationship to LV meridional wall stress calculated from echocardiographic and intraventricular pressure measurements. We concluded that the stability of chronic untreated severe ischemic HF depends on the recruitment of myocardial remodeling mechanisms that involve an interaction among hemodynamic load, contractile efficiency/energetics, neurohumoral activation, response of the extracellular matrix, wall stress, and the myocyte apoptotic pathway.
...
PMID:Remodeling of the chronic severely failing ischemic sheep heart after coronary microembolization: functional, energetic, structural, and cellular responses. 1514 56
Dilated cardiomyopathies (DCM) are due to progressive dilatation of the cardiac cavities and
thinning
of the ventricular walls and lead unavoidably to heart failure. They represent a major cause for heart transplantation and, therefore, defining an efficient symptomatic treatment for DCM remains a challenge. We have taken advantage of the hamster strain CHF147 that displays progressive cardiomyopathy leading to heart failure to test whether stimulation of a hypertrophic pathway could delay the process of dilatation.Six month old CHF147 hamsters were treated with IGF-1 so that we could compare the efficacy of systemic administration of human recombinant IGF-1 protein (rh IGF-1) at low dose to that of direct myocardial injections of a plasmid DNA containing IGF-1 cDNA (pCMV-IGF1).IGF-1 treatment did not induce a significant variation of ventricle mass, but preserved left ventricular (LV) wall thickness and delayed dilatation of cardiac cavities when compared to non-treated hamsters. Together with this reduction of dilatation, we also noted a reduction in the amount of interstitial collagen. Furthermore, IGF-1 treatment induced beneficial effects on cardiac function since treated hamsters presented improved cardiac output and
stroke
volume, decreased end diastolic pressure when compared to nontreated hamsters and also showed a trend towards increased contractility (dP/dt(max)).This study provides evidence that IGF-1 treatment induces beneficial structural and functional effects on DCM of CHF147 hamsters, hence making this molecule a promising candidate for future gene therapy of heart failure due to DCM.
...
PMID:Administration of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) improves both structure and function of delta-sarcoglycan deficient cardiac muscle in the hamster. 1561 44
Apart from the degree of stenosis, plaque morphology has emerged in recent years as an important contributory factor in
stroke
risk. Ultrasound studies have shown that hypo- or anechogenic plaques carry a higher risk of cerebrovascular events than echogenic ones. Similarly, heterogeneous plaques presenting a complex pattern of echogenicity in ultrasound have also been more frequently associated with the occurrence of neurological symptoms than homogeneous lesions. Further, most studies determining the surface characteristics in ultrasound have found that ulceration also predicted increased risk of subsequent
stroke
. These studies are, however, based on visual evaluation using different classification systems and presenting a high variability of intra- and interobserver agreement. A quantitative method using a computerised image analysis of the plaque based on a grey-scale median (GSM) value has recently been developed which allows a more objective and reproducible evaluation of plaque echogenicity. Several studies have also shown that low GSM values are associated with an increased
stroke
incidence. A stratified GSM analysis determining the GSM in each one millimeter-thick stratum of the plaque may represent an additional method of determining different components of unstable plaques, such as
thinning
of the fibrous cap and the position of the necrotic core near the surface. This article reviews the ultrasonic morphology of the carotid plaque, its clinical prognostic value and correlations with histopathological studies. Recent ultrasound developments in the assessment of plaque echogenicity are also discussed.
...
PMID:Ultrasonographic assessment of the morphological characteristics of the carotid plaque. 1638 Aug 50
A morphological study of 200 atherosclerotic carotid sinus (CS) plaques obtained at carotid endarterectomy revealed the structural components and processes characteristic for severe atherosclerosis (foci of atheromatosis and edema, necrosis of collagen and elastic fiber, newly formed vessels and hemorrhages of various duration, lipophages and lymphocytes, portions of fibrosis and calcification, covering
thinning
and ulceration, thrombi, and the contents of plagues (atheromatous masses, cholesterol crystals, lipophages, calcificates) on their surface). Clinical and morphological comparisons indicated that patients with
stroke
had a history of signs of severer atherosclerosis than those with asymptotic CS stenosis. They were found to have more commonly vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques that showed a predominance of atheromatosis foci over the portions of fibrosis and calcification, covering
thinning
and destruction, formation of thrombi onto its surface. It was ascertained that concomitant arterial hypertension might play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of hemorrhages into the atherosclerotic plague.
...
PMID:[Carotid sinus atherosclerosis]. 1792 73
Discrepancies exist regarding potential sex differences in the effects of ethanol on the myocardium. Therefore, the aims of this study were to determine if long-term ethanol consumption was associated with the development of a dilated cardiomyopathy (CM) in female rats and, second, to determine if the absence of ovarian hormones modulated this effect. Adult male and female (n=6-8/group) sham-operated and ovariectomized (OVX) Sprague-Dawley rats received the Lieber DeCarli ethanol-containing (8% vol/vol) or control liquid diet for 8 months. All ethanol groups showed echocardiographic evidence of a cardiomyopathy; however, more significant ethanol-elicited differences were found in the male ethanol group than in either the female or female OVX groups. In addition, the male ethanol group had significant reductions in in vivo measures of contractility, such as the maximum derivative of change in systolic pressure and preload recruitable
stroke
work. Sex differences were also apparent in the pattern and degree of posterior and septal wall thickness changes, in that the male ethanol group had more posterior and septal wall
thinning
. In conclusion, similar to male rats long-term ethanol consumption in gonad-intact and OVX female rats is associated with the development of a dilated cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Long-term effects of alcohol consumption in male and female rats. 1799 Jan 29
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