scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers in "Circulation in 1993"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Advances in the treatment of hypertension, myocardial ischemia, and valvular heart disease during the four decades of observation did not translate into appreciable improvements in overall survival after the onset of CHF in this large, unselected population.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Relatively limited epidemiological data are available regarding the prognosis of congestive heart failure (CHF) and temporal changes in survival after its onset in a population-based setting. METHODS AND RESULTS Proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the effects of selected clinical variables on survival after the onset of CHF among 652 members of the Framingham Heart Study (51% men; mean age, 70.0 +/- 10.8 years) who developed CHF between 1948 and 1988. Subjects were older at the diagnosis of heart failure in the later decades of this study (mean age at heart failure diagnosis, 57.3 +/- 7.6 years in the 1950s, 65.9 +/- 7.9 years in the 1960s, 71.6 +/- 9.4 years in the 1970s, and 76.4 +/- 10.0 years in the 1980s; p < 0.001). Median survival after the onset of heart failure was 1.7 years in men and 3.2 years in women. Overall, 1-year and 5-year survival rates were 57% and 25% in men and 64% and 38% in women, respectively. Survival was better in women than in men (age-adjusted hazards ratio for mortality, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.54-0.77). Mortality increased with advancing age in both sexes (hazards ratio for men, 1.27 per decade of age; 95% CI, 1.09-1.47; hazards ratio for women, 1.61 per decade of age; 95% CI, 1.37-1.90). Adjusting for age, there was no significant temporal change in the prognosis of CHF during the 40 years of observation (hazards ratio for men for mortality, 1.08 per calendar decade; 95% CI, 0.92-1.27; hazards ratio for women for mortality, 1.02 per calendar decade; 95% CI, 0.83-1.26). CONCLUSIONS CHF remains highly lethal, with better prognosis in women and in younger individuals. Advances in the treatment of hypertension, myocardial ischemia, and valvular heart disease during the four decades of observation did not translate into appreciable improvements in overall survival after the onset of CHF in this large, unselected population.

1,836 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There has been a consistent inverse relation between cardiovascular disease, primarily coronary heart disease, and many of the indicators of SES, and evidence for this relation has been derived from prevalence, prospective, and retrospective cohort studies.
Abstract: Despite recent declines in mortality, cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in the United States today. It appears that many of the major risk factors for coronary disease have been identified. Researchers are still learning about different modifiable factors that may influence cardiovascular diseases. Socioeconomic status may provide a new focus. The principal measures of SES have been education, occupation, and income or combinations of these. Education has been the most frequent measure because it does not usually change (as occupation or income might) after young adulthood, information about education can be obtained easily, and it is unlikely that poor health in adulthood influences level of education. However, other measures of SES have merit, and the most informative strategy would incorporate multiple indicators of SES. A variety of psychosocial measures--for example, certain aspects of occupational status--may be important mediators of SES and disease. The hypothesis that high job strain may adversely affect health status has a rational basis and is supported by evidence from a limited number of studies. There is a considerable body of evidence for a relation between socioeconomic factors and all-cause mortality. These findings have been replicated repeatedly for 80 years across measures of socioeconomic level and in geographically diverse populations. During 40 years of study there has been a consistent inverse relation between cardiovascular disease, primarily coronary heart disease, and many of the indicators of SES. Evidence for this relation has been derived from prevalence, prospective, and retrospective cohort studies. Of particular importance to the hypothesis that SES is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease was the finding by several investigators that the patterns of association of SES with coronary disease had changed in men during the past 30 to 40 years and that SES has been associated with the decline of coronary mortality since the mid-1960s. However, the declines in coronary mortality of the last few decades have not affected all segments of society equally. There is some evidence that areas with the poorest socioenvironmental conditions experience later onset in the decline in cardiovascular mortality. A number of studies suggest that poor living conditions in childhood and adolescence contribute to increased risk of arteriosclerosis. Some of these studies have been criticized because of their nature, and others for inadequate control of confounding factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

1,829 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This research presents a probabilistic procedure for human blood pressure determination by sphygmomanometry and shows clear trends in prognosis for high blood pressure in smokers and those with a history of heart disease.
Abstract: Copyright © 1993 American Heart Association. All rights reserved. Print ISSN: 0009-7322. Online ISSN: Circulation is published by the American Heart Association. 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 72514 1993;88;2460-2470 Circulation D Perloff, C Grim, J Flack, ED Frohlich, M Hill, M McDonald and BZ Morgenstern Human blood pressure determination by sphygmomanometry http://circ.ahajournals.org the World Wide Web at: The online version of this article, along with updated information and services, is located on

1,583 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cigarette smoking is associated with dose-related and potentially reversible impairment of endothelium-dependent arterial dilation in asymptomatic young adults, consistent with endothelial dysfunction.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDCigarette smoking is the most important modifiable risk factor for atherosclerosis. Endothelial dysfunction is an early event in atherogenesis, and we hypothesized that smoking might be associated with endothelial damage in the systemic arteries of otherwise healthy young adults.METHODS AND RESULTSWe studied noninvasively the brachial arteries of 200 subjects aged 15 to 57 years, all normotensive, nondiabetic with cholesterol level < or = 240 mg/dL and no family history of premature vascular disease: 80 control subjects aged 16 to 56 years (mean, 35), 80 current smokers aged 15 to 55 years (mean, 33), and 40 former smokers aged 25 to 57 years (mean, 38). Total lifetime amount smoked varied from 1 to 75 pack years in the smokers. Using high-resolution ultrasound, vessel diameter was measured at rest, during reactive hyperemia (with flow increase causing endothelium-dependent dilation), and after sublingual glyceryl trinitrate (GTN, an endothelium-independent vasodilator). Flow-mediated dilation (...

1,556 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Brief episodes of ischemia in one vascular bed protect remote, virgin myocardium from subsequent sustained coronary artery occlusion in this canine model, and implies that preconditioning may be mediated by factor(s) activated, produced, or transported throughout the heart during brief ischemic/reperfusion.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDOne or more brief episodes of coronary artery occlusion protect or "precondition" the myocardium perfused by that artery from a subsequent episode of sustained ischemia. We sought to determine whether ischemic preconditioning protects only those myocytes subjected to brief coronary occlusion or whether brief occlusions in one vascular bed also limit infarct size and/or attenuate contractile dysfunction in remote virgin myocardium subjected to subsequent sustained coronary occlusion.METHODS AND RESULTSIn the preliminary limb of the study, six anesthetized dogs underwent four episodes of 5-minute circumflex branch occlusion plus 5-minute reperfusion, followed by 1 hour of sustained left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion and 4.5 hours of reflow. Subendocardial blood flow during left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion (measured by injection of radiolabeled microspheres) was 0.07 +/- 0.03 mL.min-1 x g tissue-1, similar to the value of 0.07 +/- 0.02 mL.min-1 x g-1 observed in a ...

1,306 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There was an inverse dose-response relation of the AAI with CVD risk factors and subclinical and clinical CVD among older adults, and even those with modest, asymptomatic reductions in theAAI appear to be at increased risk of CVD.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDPeripheral arterial disease measured noninvasively by the ankle-arm index (AAI) is common in older adults, largely asymptomatic, and associated with clinically manifest cardiovascular disease (CVD). The criteria for an abnormal AAI have varied in previous studies. To determine whether there is an inverse dose-response relation between the AAI and clinical CVD, subclinical disease, and risk factors, we examined the relation of the AAI to cardiovascular risk factors, other noninvasive measures of subclinical atherosclerosis using carotid ultrasound, echocardiography and electrocardiography, and clinical CVD.METHODS AND RESULTSThe AAI was measured in 5084 participants > or = 65 years old at the baseline examination of the Cardiovascular Health Study. All subjects had detailed assessment of prevalent CVD, measures of cardiovascular risk factors, and noninvasive measures of disease. Participants were stratified by baseline clinical CVD status and AAI ( or = 0.8 to or = 0.9 to < 1.0, ...

1,160 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Measurement of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) has sufficient specificity to clarify the etiology of MBCK elevations in patients with acute or chronic skeletal muscle disease or renal failure, and Elevations of cTNI are highly specific for myocardial injury.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDLevels of MBCK can be increased in patients with skeletal muscle injury or renal failure in the absence of myocardial injury, causing diagnostic confusion. This study was designed to determine whether measurement of cardiac troponin I (cTnI), a myocardial regulatory protein with comparable sensitivity to MBCK, has sufficient specificity to clarify the etiology of MBCK elevations in patients with acute or chronic skeletal muscle disease or renal failure.METHODS AND RESULTSOf the patients (n = 215) studied, 37 had acute skeletal muscle injury, 10 had chronic muscle disease, nine were marathon runners, and 159 were chronic dialysis patients. Patients were evaluated clinically, by ECG, and by two-dimensional echocardiography. Total creatine kinase (normal, < 170 IU/L) was determined spectrophotometrically, and cTnI (normal, < 3.1 ng/mL) and MBCK (normal, < 6.7 ng/mL) were determined with specific monoclonal antibodies. Values above the upper reference limit were considered "elevated." Elevations of ...

1,159 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The availability of effective therapy for this often lethal disease emphasizes the importance of early and accurate diagnosis, and there is frequently a delay in the diagnosis of LQTS, and patients with syncope are often misdiagnosed.
Abstract: T he idiopathic long QT syndrome (LQTS) is a congenital disease with frequent familial transmission, characterized primarily by prolongation of the QT interval and by the occurrence of life-threatening tachyarrhythmias, particularly in association with emotional or physical stress.1-5 Among untreated symptomatic patients, lethality is high, with 20% mortality in the first year after the initial syncope and approximately 50% within 10 years3; however, the risk of death varies among different families. This poor prognosis has been significantly improved by the use of pharmacological or surgical antiadrenergic therapy or both, which has reduced long-term mortality to <5%.3,4,6 The availability of effective therapy for this often lethal disease emphasizes the importance of early and accurate diagnosis. Unfortunately, there is frequently a delay in the diagnosis of LQTS, and patients with syncope are often misdiagnosed, most commonly as affected by a seizure disorder. In its most characteristic presentation, with obvious QT prolongation and stress-induced syncope, the diagnosis of LQTS is quite straightforward for physicians aware of the disease. In cases of borderline QT prolongation and/or absence of symptoms, however, a correct diagnosis may be more difficult. It was for this reason that a first set of diagnostic criteria (Table 1) was proposed in 1985.3 The major merit of that proposal was that it provided a logical and quantitative approach to the clinical diagnosis of LQTS by giving a different weight to major and minor criteria. Its major limitation was that it used the traditional, but untested for diagnostic purposes, cutoff value of QT, >440 msec '2. This also resulted in a rather black-and-white situation in which patients were judged to have an entirely normal or abnormal duration of ventricular repolarization on the basis of a difference of a few milliseconds in a measurement fraught with difficulties, such as interobserver variability.7

1,106 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that abnormalities of endothelial function are also present in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and may contribute to the pathogenesis of vascular disease in these individuals.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDEndothelium-dependent vasodilation is abnormal in experimental models of diabetes mellitus. We postulated that abnormalities of endothelial function are also present in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and may contribute to the pathogenesis of vascular disease in these individuals.METHODS AND RESULTSVascular reactivity was measured in the forearm resistance vessels of 15 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and 16 age-matched normal subjects. No patient had hypertension or dyslipidemia. Each subject was pretreated with aspirin to inhibit endogenous production of prostanoids. Methacholine chloride (0.3 to 10 micrograms/min) was administered via the brachial artery to assess endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Sodium nitroprusside (0.3 to 10 micrograms/min) and verapamil (10 to 300 micrograms/min) were infused intra-arterially to assess endothelium-independent vasodilation; phenylephrine (0.3 to 3 micrograms/min) was administered to examine vasoconstrictor responsiven...

1,100 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These results provide the experimental basis for determining relative maximum flow or fractional flow reserve of both the epicardial coronary artery and the myocardium, including collateral flow, from pressure measurements during maximum arteriolar vasodilation.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDSeverity of coronary artery stenosis has been defined in terms of geometric dimensions, pressure gradient-flow relations, resistance to flow and coronary flow reserve, or maximum flow capacity after maximum arteriolar vasodilation. A direct relation between coronary pressure and flow, however, may only be presumed if the resistances in the coronary circulation are constant (and minimal) as theoretically is the case during maximum arteriolar vasodilation. In that case, pressure measurements theoretically can be used to predict maximum flow and assess functional stenosis severity.METHODS AND RESULTSA theoretical model was developed for the different components of the coronary circulation, and a set of equations was derived by which the relative maximum flow or fractional flow reserve in both the stenotic epicardial artery and the myocardial vascular bed and the proportional contribution of coronary arterial and collateral flow to myocardial blood flow are calculated from measurements of arterial, ...

1,075 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interventions to improve aerobic capacity may mitigate the stiffening of the arterial tree that accompanies normative aging, as shown in the example of endurance trained older men relative to their less active age peers.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDIt has been well established that arterial stiffness, manifest as an increase in arterial pulse wave velocity or late systolic amplification of the carotid artery pressure pulse, increase

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that stress protein elevation, rather than the nonspecific effects of thermal or ischemic stress, may be responsible for the myocardial protection seen in this model.
Abstract: BACKGROUND To test the hypothesis that the heat shock response is associated with myocardial salvage, the heat stress protein (HSP) content of cardiac tissue was increased by either ischemic or thermal stress. METHODS AND RESULTS Rabbits were divided into four groups. Ischemic pretreatment (n = 15) comprised four 5-minute episodes of coronary ligation separated by 10 minutes of reperfusion. The corresponding control group (n = 21) underwent surgical preparation without coronary ligation. Thermal pretreatment (n = 16) involved whole-body temperature elevation to 42 degrees C for 15 minutes; corresponding controls (n = 15) were treated with anesthetic alone. Twenty-four hours later, hearts were removed for HSP estimation or infarct size assessment after a 30-minute coronary ligation. Myocardial HSP72 content assessed by Western blotting was elevated by both ischemic and thermal pretreatments (2.5 +/- 0.2 units, n = 4, and 2.8 +/- 0.3 units, n = 4, mean +/- SEM; P = NS, respectively) compared with the corresponding control groups (1.0 +/- 0.3, n = 4, P < or = .01 and 0.3 +/- 0.1, n = 4, P < or = .01, respectively). HSP60 was preferentially elevated by ischemic pretreatment. After a 30-minute coronary occlusion and 120 minutes of reperfusion, ischemic and thermal pretreatments limited infarct size as a percentage of the volume at risk by 28.8 +/- 5.2% vs 52.0 +/- 5.2%, P < or = .01 and 32.8 +/- 3.8% vs 56.9 +/- 6.5%, P < or = .01, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Myocardial stress protein induced by either sublethal thermal or ischemic injury is associated with myocardial salvage. Our findings suggest that stress protein elevation, rather than the nonspecific effects of thermal or ischemic stress, may be responsible for the myocardial protection seen in this model. Our observations may have important implications regarding myocardial adaptation to brief periods of ischemia.

Journal Article
TL;DR: Patients with 1MH involving the descending thoracic aorta who have no evidence of progression and become pain free can probably be treated conservatively but require antihypertensive therapy and serial aortic imaging surveillance indefinitely.
Abstract: Background. Intramural hematoma of the thoracic aorta (IMH) is a diagnosis of exclusion and represents spontaneous, localized hemorrhage into the wall of the thoracic aorta in the absence of bona fide aortic dissection, intimal tear, or penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer. This process may arise from primary vasa vasorum hemorrhage within the aortic media or rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque. The clinical presentation of patients with IMH mimics that of acute aortic dissection; moreover, considerable diagnostic confusion exists despite the use of many different imaging modalities. The optimal mode of management of patients with IMH (medical versus medical plus surgical) remains problematic because of the paucity of information available

Journal ArticleDOI
Martin Ungerer1, M Böhm1, J S Elce1, E Erdmann1, Martin J. Lohse1 
TL;DR: In addition to other alterations found in failing hearts, the diminished response to beta-receptor agonists appears to involve the combined effects of enhanced expression ofbeta ARK and reduced expression of beta 1-receptors.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDIn chronic heart failure, the positive inotropic effects of beta-adrenergic receptor agonists are greatly reduced, in part as a result of two alterations of the cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors: loss of their function (receptor uncoupling) and reduction of their number (downregulation). In vitro studies have shown that a major mechanism leading to beta-adrenergic receptor uncoupling involves phosphorylation of the receptors by the specific beta-adrenergic receptor kinase (beta ARK).METHODS AND RESULTSWe have therefore investigated expression of beta ARK and beta-adrenergic receptors in samples from the left ventricles of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy or ischemic cardiomyopathy and from nonfailing control ventricles. Contractile responses to beta-receptor stimulation were decreased in the failing hearts compared with control hearts, whereas those to forskolin and calcium remained unchanged. The messenger RNA (mRNA) levels of beta ARK, beta 1- and beta 2-receptors, and of glyceraldehyde ph...

Journal Article
TL;DR: Age, serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking, platelet aggregability, serum copper, serum selenium, and blood hemoglobin were the strongest predictors of 2-year increase of common carotid IMT.
Abstract: Background. Investigations of the progression of atherosclerosis in human arteries suggest that changes in the thickness of the arterial intima-media complex, observable with B-mode ultrasonography, may precede development of atherosclerotic lesions. For epidemiological studies and clinical trials, B-mode ultrasound has the advantage that it is noninvasive, can be used in nonsymptomatic subjects, and can be carried out repeatedly, thus reducing the necessary sample size. In the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease disk Factor Study, we have assessed the reliability of B-mode ultrasound through studying intraobserver and interobserver variability

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Criteria for identifying reentry circuit sites using computer simulations was developed and tested during catheter mapping in humans to predict sites at which radiofequency current application terminated ventricular tachycardia.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDVentricular tachycardia reentry circuits in chronic infarct scars can contain slow conduction zones, which are difficult to distinguish from bystander areas adjacent to the circuit during...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The composite of data presented here supports the hypothesis that lipid-lowering therapy selectively depletes that relatively small but dangerous subgroup of fatty lesions containing a large lipid core and dense clusters of intimal macrophages, which are effectively stabilized and clinical event rate is accordingly decreased.
Abstract: The consensus of evidence from angiographic trials demonstrates both coronary artery and clinical benefits from lowering of lipids by a variety of regimens. The findings of reduced arterial disease progression and increased regression have been convincing but, at best, modest in their magnitude. For example, among those treated intensively in FATS, the mean improvement in proximal stenosis severity per patient was < 1% stenosis, and only 12% of all lesions showed convincing regression. In view of these modest arterial benefits, the associated reductions in cardiovascular events have been surprisingly great. For example, coronary events were reduced 75% in FATS; this was entirely a result of a 93% reduction in the likelihood that a mildly or moderately diseased arterial segment would experience substantial progression to a severe lesion at the time of a clinical event. We believe that the magnitude of the clinical benefit is best explained in terms of this observation, according to the following lines of reasoning. Clinical events most commonly spring from lesions that are initially of mild or moderate severity and then abruptly undergo a disruptive transformation to a severe culprit lesion. The process of plaque fissuring, leading to plaque disruption and thrombosis, triggers most clinical coronary events. Fissuring is predicted by a large accumulation of core lipid in the plaque and by a high density of lipid-laden macrophages in its thinned fibrous cap. Lesions with these characteristics constitute only 10-20% of the overall lesion population but account for 80-90% of the acute clinical events. In the experimental setting, normalization of an atherogenic lipid profile substantially decreases the number of lipid-laden intimal macrophages (foam cells) and depletes cholesterol from the core lipid pool. In the clinical setting, intensive lipid lowering virtually halts the progression of mild and moderate lesions to clinical events. Thus, the reduction in clinical events observed in these trials appears to be best explained by the relation of the lipid and foam cell content of the plaque to its likelihood of fissuring and by the effects of lipid-lowering therapy on these "high-risk" features of plaque morphology. The composite of data presented here supports the hypothesis that lipid-lowering therapy selectively depletes (regresses) that relatively small but dangerous subgroup of fatty lesions containing a large lipid core and dense clusters of intimal macrophages. By doing so, these lesions are effectively stabilized and clinical event rate is accordingly decreased.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data suggest that concentrations of circumferential tensile stress in the atherosclerotic plaque may play an important role in plaque rupture and myocardial infarction, however, plaque rupture may not always occur at the region of highest stress, suggesting that local variations in plaque material properties contribute to plaque rupture.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDAlthough rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque is considered to be the cause of most acute coronary syndromes, the mechanism of plaque rupture is controversial.METHODS AND RESULTSTo test the hypothesis that plaque rupture occurs at sites of high circumferential stress in the diseased vessel, the distribution of stress was analyzed in 24 coronary artery lesions. Histological specimens from 12 coronary artery lesions that caused lethal myocardial infarction were compared with those from 12 stable control lesions. A finite element model was used to calculate the stress distributions at a mean intraluminal pressure of 110 mm Hg. The maximum circumferential stress in plaques that ruptured was significantly higher than maximum stress in stable specimens (4,091 +/- 1,199 versus 1,444 +/- 485 mm Hg, p < 0.0001). Twelve of 12 ruptured lesions had a total of 31 regions of stress concentration of more than 2,250 mm Hg (mean, 2.6 +/- 1.4 high stress regions per lesion); only one of 12 control lesions had a s...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Slow conduction perpendicular to the fiber direction in infarcted myocardial tissue is caused by a "zigzag" course of activation at high speed.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDVentricular tachycardias occurring in the chronic phase of myocardial infarction are caused by reentry. Areas of slow conduction, facilitating reentry, are often found in the infarcted zone. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the mechanism of slow conduction in the chronic infarcted human heart.METHODS AND RESULTSSpread of activation was studied in infarcted papillary muscles from hearts of patients who underwent heart transplantation because of infarction. Recordings were carried out on 10 papillary muscles that were superfused in a tissue bath. High-resolution mapping was performed in areas revealing slow conduction. Activation delay between sites perpendicular to the fiber direction and 1.4 mm apart could be as long as 45 milliseconds. Analysis of activation times revealed that activation spread in tracts parallel to the fiber direction. Conduction velocity in the tracts was between 0.6 and 1 m/s. Although tracts were separated from each other over distances up to 8 mm, they often con...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that patients with essential hypertension have a defect in the endothelium-derived nitric oxide system that may at least partly account for both the increased vascular resistance under basal conditions and the impaired response to endothelia-dependent vasodilators.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Patients with essential hypertension have abnormal endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Because the endothelium exerts its action on the vascular smooth muscle through the release of several substances, it is important to identify which of these factors is involved in the abnormal response of hypertensive arteries. METHODS AND RESULTS To investigate the role of endothelium-derived nitric oxide in this abnormality, we studied the vascular effect of the arginine analogue NG-monomethyl-L-arginine, an inhibitor of the endothelial synthesis of nitric oxide, under baseline conditions and during infusion of acetylcholine, an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, and sodium nitroprusside, a direct smooth muscle dilator. The study included 11 hypertensive patients (seven men; age, 46.5 +/- 9 years) and 10 normal control subjects (seven men; age, 45.7 +/- 7 years). Drugs were infused into the brachial artery, and the response of the forearm vasculature was measured by strain-gauge plethysmography. Basal blood flow was similar in normal control subjects and hypertensive patients (2.97 +/- 0.7 versus 2.86 +/- 1.1 mL.min-1.100 mL-1, respectively). NG-monomethyl-L-arginine produced a significantly greater decrease in blood flow in control subjects than in patients (1.08 +/- 0.6 versus 0.32 +/- 0.4 mL.min-1.100 mL-1; p < 0.004). The vasodilator response to acetylcholine was reduced in patients compared with control subjects (maximum flow, 8.2 +/- 4 versus 16.4 +/- 8 mL.min-1.100 mL-1; p < 0.001). NG-monomethyl-L-arginine blunted the vasodilator response to acetylcholine in control subjects (maximum flow decreased from 16.4 +/- 8 to 7.01 +/- 3 mL.min-1.100 mL-1; p < 0.004); however, the arginine analogue did not significantly alter the response to acetylcholine in hypertensive patients (maximum flow, 8.2 +/- 4 versus 8.01 +/- 5 mL.min-1.100 mL-1). NG-monomethyl-L-arginine did not modify the vasodilator response to sodium nitroprusside in either control subjects or patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that patients with essential hypertension have a defect in the endothelium-derived nitric oxide system that may at least partly account for both the increased vascular resistance under basal conditions and the impaired response to endothelium-dependent vasodilators.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is a dose-response effect of fish oil on blood pressure of -0.66/-035 mm Hg/g wt-3 fatty acids, and the hypotensive effect may be strongest in hypertensive subjects and those with clinical atherosclerotic disease or hypercholesterolemia.
Abstract: BACKGROUND In a meta-analysis of 31 placebo-controlled trials on 1356 subjects, we examined the effect of omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil on blood pressure by grouping studies that were similar in fish oil dose, length of treatment, health of the subjects, or study design. METHODS AND RESULTS The mean reduction in blood pressure caused by fish oil for the 31 studies was -3.0/-1.5 mm Hg (95% confidence intervals: systolic blood pressure: -4.5, -1.5; diastolic blood pressure: -2.2, -0.8). There was a statistically significant dose-response effect when studies were grouped by omega-3 fatty acid dose: -1.3/-0.7 mm Hg at doses < or = 3 g/d, -2.9/-1.6 mm Hg at 3.3 to 7 g/d, and -8.1/-5.8 mm Hg at 15 g/d. Both eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid were significantly related to blood pressure response. There was no effect on blood pressure in eight studies of "healthy" persons (mean reduction, -0.4/-0.7 mm Hg) at an overall mean dose of 4.2 g omega-3 fatty acids/d. By contrast, there was a significant effect of -3.4/-2.0 mm Hg in the group of hypertensive studies with a mean fish oil dose of 5.6 g/d and on systolic blood pressure only in six studies of hypercholesterolemic patients (-4.4/-1.1 mm Hg) with a mean dose of 4.0 g/d. A nonsignificant decrease in blood pressure was observed in four studies of patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (-6.3/-2.9 mm Hg). Variations in the length of treatment (from 3 to 24 weeks), type of placebo, and study design (crossover or parallel groups) did not appear to account for inconsistent findings among studies. CONCLUSIONS There is a dose-response effect of fish oil on blood pressure of -0.66/-0.35 mm Hg/g omega-3 fatty acids. The hypotensive effect may be strongest in hypertensive subjects and those with clinical atherosclerotic disease or hypercholesterolemia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Almost 26% of patients may develop limited leftventricular dilatation within 4 weeks after first infarction, which helps to restore cardiac index and stroke index at rest and to preserve exercise performance and therefore remains compensatory.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDLeft ventricular enlargement and the development of chronic heart failure are potent predictors of survival in patients after myocardial infarction. Prospective studies relating progressive ventricular enlargement in individual patients to global and regional cardiac dysfunction and the onset of late chronic heart failure are not available. It was the aim of this study to define the relation between left ventricular dilatation and global and regional cardiac dysfunction and to identify early predictors of enlargement and chronic heart failure in patients after myocardial infarction.METHODS AND RESULTSLeft ventricular volumes, regional area shrinkage fraction in 18 predefined sectors (gated single photon emission computed tomography), global ejection fraction, and hemodynamics at rest and during exercise (supine bicycle, 50 W, 4 minutes, Swan-Ganz catheter) were assessed prospectively 4 days, 4 weeks, 6 months, and 1.5 and 3 years after first myocardial infarction. Seventy patients were assigned ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A subgroup of patients with noninfarcted collateral-dependent myocardium, immature or insufficiently developed collaterals do not provide adequate flow reserve and it is proposed that these alterations result from repeated episodes of ischemia as opposed to chronic hypoperfusion.
Abstract: BACKGROUND. Even in the absence of a previous myocardial infarction, patients with coronary artery disease often present with chronic regional wall motion abnormalities that are reversible spontaneously or after coronary revascularization. In these patients, regional dysfunction has been proposed to result either from prolonged postischemic dysfunction (myocardial "stunning") or from adaptation to chronic hypoperfusion (myocardial "hibernation"). This study examines which of these two mechanisms is responsible for the chronic regional dysfunction often detected in patients with angina and noninfarcted collateral-dependent myocardium. METHODS AND RESULTS. Twenty-six anginal patients (19 men; mean age, 60 +/- 9 years old) with chronic occlusion of a major coronary artery but without previous infarction were studied. Positron emission tomography was performed to measure absolute regional myocardial blood flow with 13N-ammonia at rest (n = 26) and after intravenous dipyridamole (n = 11). The kinetics of 18F-deoxyglucose and 11C-acetate were measured to calculate the rate of exogenous glucose uptake and the regional oxidative metabolism (n = 15). Global and regional left ventricular function was evaluated by contrast ventriculography at baseline (n = 26) and after revascularization (n = 12). Transmural myocardial biopsies from the collateral-dependent area were obtained in seven patients during bypass surgery and analyzed by optical and electron microscopy. According to resting regional wall motion, patients were separated into groups with and without dysfunction of the collateral-dependent segments. In patients with normal wall motion (n = 9), regional myocardial blood flow, oxidative metabolism, and glucose uptake were similar among collateral-dependent and remote segments. By contrast, in patients with regional dysfunction (n = 17), collateral-dependent segments had lower myocardial blood flow (77 +/- 25 versus 95 +/- 27 mL.min-1.100 g-1, p < 0.001), smaller k values (slope of 11C clearance reflecting oxidative metabolism, 0.049 +/- 0.015 versus 0.068 +/- 0.020 min-1, p < 0.001) and higher glucose uptake (relative 18F-deoxyglucose-to-flow ratio of 1.9 +/- 1.6 versus 1.2 +/- 0.2, p < 0.05) compared with remote segments. However, myocardial blood flow and k values were similar among collateral-dependent segments of patients with and without segmental dysfunction. After intravenous dipyridamole, collateral-dependent myocardial blood flow increased from 78 +/- 5 to 238 +/- 54 mL.min-1.100 g-1 in three patients with normal wall motion and from 88 +/- 17 to only 112 +/- 44 mL.min-1.100 g-1 in eight patients with regional dysfunction. There was a significant (r = -0.85, p < 0.001) inverse correlation between wall motion abnormality and collateral flow reserve. Analysis of the tissue samples obtained at the time of bypass surgery showed profound structural changes in dysfunctioning collateral-dependent areas, including cellular swelling, loss of myofibrillar content, and accumulation of glycogen. Despite these alterations, the regional wall motion score improved significantly in the patients studied before and after revascularization (from 3.8 +/- 1.3 to 0.8 +/- 0.9, p < 0.005). CONCLUSIONS. In a subgroup of patients with noninfarcted collateral-dependent myocardium, immature or insufficiently developed collaterals do not provide adequate flow reserve. Despite nearly normal resting flow and oxygen consumption, these collateral-dependent segments exhibit chronically depressed wall motion and demonstrate marked ultrastructural alterations on morphological analysis. We propose that these alterations result from repeated episodes of ischemia as opposed to chronic hypoperfusion and represent the flow, metabolic, and morphological correlates of myocardial "hibernation."

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of prerandomization measurements on subsequent mortality was examined using data from the Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trials (V-HeFT I, 641 patients; V-HEFT II, 804 patients).
Abstract: Background. Recognition of the complex pathophysiology of heart failure and its high mortality has emphasized the need for prognostic markers that can be used in clinical assessment as well as in the design of mortality trials. Data from the Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trials (V-HeFT I, 641 patients; V-HeFT II, 804 patients) were therefore examined to determine the influence of prerandomization measurements on subsequent mortality. Methods and Results. Patients entered into these trials were men with cardiac dysfunction and reduced peak exercise capacity

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that plasma levels of BNP mainly reflect the degree of ventricular overload and that the secretion patterns of ANP and BNP vary with underlying cardiac disorders of CHF with different degrees of overload in atria and ventricles.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDThe plasma levels of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) are increased in relation to the severity of congestive heart failure (CHF). This study was designed to examine whether the secretion patterns of ANP and BNP vary with underlying cardiac disorders of CHF with different degrees of overload in atria and ventricles.METHODS AND RESULTSWe measured plasma levels of ANP and BNP in the aorta in 20 patients with mitral stenosis (MS) in whom atria are mainly overloaded, 30 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in whom both atria and ventricles are overloaded, and 20 control subjects during cardiac catheterization. Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) was significantly higher in the MS and DCM groups (16.7 +/- 4.7 mm Hg and 15.1 +/- 7.7 mm Hg, respectively) than in the control group (7.2 +/- 1.1 mm Hg, p < 0.01), whereas there was no significant difference between the MS and DCM groups. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) was significantly higher...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the plasma level of brain natriuretic peptide is increased markedly in patients with acute myocardial infarction and may reflect the degree of left ventricular dysfunction in these patients.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDBrain natriuretic peptide is a novel natriuretic peptide that is secreted predominantly from the ventricles, and its plasma levels have been shown to be markedly increased in patients with chronic congestive heart failure This study was designed to examine the plasma levels of brain natriuretic peptide as well as atrial natriuretic peptide in patients with acute myocardial infarctionMETHODS AND RESULTSWe examined the plasma levels of brain natriuretic peptide as well as atrial natriuretic peptide in 50 consecutive patients (36 men and 14 women; mean age, 66 years) with acute myocardial infarction over the time course of 4 weeks The plasma level of brain natriuretic peptide was significantly increased on admission in patients with acute myocardial infarction compared with controls (92 +/- 28 versus 52 +/- 05 pg/mL, P < 01) and reached the peak level of 319 +/- 58 pg/mL at 164 +/- 07 hours after admission Thereafter, the level decreased and then again increased, forming the second peak of

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although tests for the MB isoenzyme of creatine kinase in plasma have served all of these purposes for nearly three decades, increases in MBCK are not as specific for myocardial injury as first believed and occur too late for optimal early diagnosis of infarction or prompt detection of coronary recanalization.
Abstract: M odern medical practice requires rapid decisions. Patients must be triaged faster, treated more expeditiously, and discharged earlier. Diagnostic tests used to evaluate patients with possible myocardial ischemia/infarction must be simple to perform and must rapidly and accurately accomplish several goals: (1) Differentiate patients with and without acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Only a small percentage (10% to 20%) of patients with chest discomfort or other symptoms compatible with ischemia have infarction.1 There is enthusiasm for the concept that molecular markers might be able to define this group rapidly enough to aid in deciding which patients should receive treatment with thrombolytic agents and which patients are at sufficiently low risk that they could be sent home or cared for in a less intensive and thus less costly facility than an intensive care unit. (2) Distinguish patients who have coronary recanalization after treatment with thrombolytic agents from those who do not so that those in need of additional treatment can be identified. (3) Permit estimation of the extent of myocardial damage, the most reliable predictor of survival after acute myocardial infarction.2 Although tests for the MB isoenzyme of creatine kinase (CK) in plasma have served all of these purposes for nearly three decades, increases in MBCK are not as specific for myocardial injury as first believed and occur too late for optimal early diagnosis of infarction or prompt detection of coronary recanalization. In addition, the complex kinetics of release and clearance after reperfusion confound analyses of infarct size. Because of these limitations, alternative markers have been investigated. Are they better, or will these markers have similar or even more significant limitations than MBCK?

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Helical and retrograde streams are consistent features of intra-aortic flow in healthy subjects that result, at least in part, from the curvature of the arch and the pulsatility of flow in it.
Abstract: BACKGROUNDHelical and retrograde secondary flows have been recorded in the aorta, but their origins and movements in relation to the arch have not been clarified. We set out to do this using magnetic resonance velocity mapping.METHODS AND RESULTSThree-directional phase contrast cine magnetic resonance velocity mapping was used to map multidirectional flow velocities in the aortas of 10 healthy volunteers. Computer processing was used to visualize flow vector patterns in selected planes. Right-handed helical flows predominated in the upper aortic arch in late systole, being clearly recognizable in 9 of the 10 subjects. Nonaxial components of velocity in this region reached 0.29 m/s (+/- 0.05 m/s) as axial velocities declined from a peak of 1.0 m/s (+/- 0.1 m/s). Helical flow patterns in the upper descending aorta varied between subjects, apparently depending on arch curvature. End-systolic retrograde flow originated from regions of blood with low momentum, usually along inner wall curvatures. Flow studies ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is increasing evidence that thyroid hormones have direct chronotropic effect on the heart that are independent of the sympathetic nervous system, and could be mediated in part by sympathetic activation.
Abstract: Cardiovascular manifestations are a frequent finding in hyperthyroid and hypothyroid states. In this review, potential mechanisms by which thyroid hormones may exert their cardiovascular effects and pathophysiological consequences of such effects are briefly discussed. Two major concepts have emerged about how thyroid hormones exert their cardiovascular effects. First, there is increasing evidence that thyroid hormones exert direct effects on the myocardium, which are mediated by stimulation of specific nuclear receptors, which in turn leads to specific mRNAs production. Furthermore, there is some evidence that thyroid hormones may also activate extranuclear sites and may directly alter plasma membrane function. Second, thyroid hormones interact with the sympathetic nervous system by altering responsiveness to sympathetic stimulation presumably by modulating adrenergic receptor function and/or density. Pathophysiological consequences of such direct and indirect thyroid hormone effects include increased myocardial contractility and relaxation that may be related to stimulation by T3 of specific myocardial enzymes. However, when left ventricular hypertrophy occurs in association with hyperthyroidism, it may be related to either direct thyroid hormone-induced stimulation of myocardial protein synthesis or to thyrotoxicosis-induced increases in cardiac work load. Although hyperthyroidism generally has little or no effect on mean arterial blood pressure, hypothyroidism is often associated with increases in diastolic blood pressure that are reversible after hormone substitution and may be mediated in part by sympathetic activation. Moreover, there is increasing evidence that thyroid hormones have direct chronotropic effect on the heart that are independent of the sympathetic nervous system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal Article
TL;DR: The majority of patients fared well, however, there was a higher-than-normal prevalence of serious arrhythmia and sudden death, including those with small VSDs, and admission severity was the best predictor of survival.
Abstract: Background From 1958 to 1969, 1,280 patients (mostly children) with ventricular septal defects (VSDs) were admitted to the First Natural History Study of Congenital Heart Defects (NHS-1) after cardiac catheterization. Most with small defects and Eisenmenger's syndrome were managed medically; most with large VSDs were managed surgically. Of those with moderate-size defects, some were managed medically, and some were managed surgically. Most had a second catheterization at the conclusion of NHS-1. More than 15 years have elapsed since NHS-1, and most of the cohort are adults. This report (Second Natural History Study) addresses the long-term results of medical and surgical management. Methods and results Of an original cohort of 1,280 patients, 1,099 were alive at completion of NHS-1. New data were obtained on 976 (76.3%) of the original cohort. Probability of 25-year survival was 87%, and admission severity was the best predictor of survival. Of the 860 patients managed medically during NHS-1, 245 subsequently required surgical closure of the VSD. Only 5.5% of patients who had surgical closure required a second operation. On follow-up, there was a higher-than-normal prevalence of serious arrhythmias. Bacterial endocarditis occurred rarely. Of patients with small VSDs, 94.1% were in New York Heart Association functional class I. With the exception of those with Eisenmenger's syndrome, most patients had a final clinical status that was excellent or good. Conclusions The majority of patients fared well. However, there was a higher-than-normal prevalence of serious arrhythmia and sudden death, including those with small VSDs.