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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Aortic Input Impedance during Nitroprusside Infusion: A RECONSIDERATION OF AFTERLOAD REDUCTION AND BENEFICIAL ACTION

Carl J. Pepine, +3 more
- 01 Aug 1979 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 2, pp 643-654
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TLDR
The data indicate that nitroprusside acutely alters both the mean and pulsatile components of vascular load to effect improvement in ventricular function in patients with heart failure.
Abstract
Beneficial effects of nitroprusside infusion in heart failure are purportedly a result of decreased afterload through “impedance” reduction. To study the effect of nitroprusside on vascular factors that determine the total load opposing left ventricular ejection, the total aortic input impedance spectrum was examined in 12 patients with heart failure (cardiac index 20 mm Hg). This input impedance spectrum expresses both mean flow (resistance) and pulsatile flow (compliance and wave reflections) components of vascular load. Aortic root blood flow velocity and pressure were recorded continuously with a catheter-tip electromagnetic velocity probe in addition to left ventricular pressure. Small doses of nitroprusside (9-19 μg/min) altered the total aortic input impedance spectrum as significant (P < 0.05) reductions in both mean and pulsatile components were observed within 60-90 s. With these acute changes in vascular load, left ventricular end diastolic pressure declined (44%) and stroke volume increased (20%, both P < 0.05). Larger nitroprusside doses (20-38 μg/min) caused additional alteration in the aortic input impedance spectrum with further reduction in left ventricular end diastolic pressure and increase in stroke volume but no additional changes in the impedance spectrum or stroke volume occurred with 39-77 μg/min. Improved ventricular function persisted when aortic pressure was restored to control values with simultaneous phenylephrine infusion in three patients. These data indicate that nitroprusside acutely alters both the mean and pulsatile components of vascular load to effect improvement in ventricular function in patients with heart failure. The evidence presented suggests that it may be possible to reduce vascular load and improve ventricular function independent of aortic pressure reduction.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of aging on changing arterial compliance and left ventricular load in a northern Chinese urban community.

TL;DR: The results indicate that aging and not concomitant atherosclerosis (known to be rare in Asian populations) is the dominant factor associated with reduced arterial compliance and increased left ventricular load in these subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitroprusside in critically ill patients with left ventricular dysfunction and aortic stenosis.

TL;DR: Nitroprusside rapidly and markedly improves cardiac function in patients with decompensated heart failure due to severe left ventricular systolic dysfunction and severe aortic stenosis and provides a safe and effective bridge to aorti-valve replacement or oral vasodilator therapy in these critically ill patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arterial elastance and wave reflection augmentation of systolic blood pressure: deleterious effects and implications for therapy.

TL;DR: Increased elastance (or stiffness, inverse of compliance) of the central elastic arteries is the primary cause of increased systolic and pulse pressure with advancing age and in patients with cardiovascular disease, including hypertension, and is due to degeneration and hyperplasia of the arterial wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arterial hemodynamics in human hypertension.

TL;DR: Hemodynamic abnormalities of essential hypertension are compatible with an increased vasomotor tone that is further unmasked during generalized beta blockade, and were eliminated with vasodilatation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arterial wave reflection in heart failure.

W K Laskey, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1987 - 
TL;DR: Nitroprusside diminishes the potentially adverse impact of wave reflections by decreasing the magnitude of the reflected wave and altering its timing, and additional dose titration studies are necessary to fully assess the benefits of pharmacologic vasodilation during exercise.
References
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Blood Flow in the Arteries

Journal ArticleDOI

Hemodynamic determinants of oxygen consumption of the heart with special reference to the tension-time index.

TL;DR: The hemodynamic determinants of myocardial oxygen utilization were ascertained in the isolated, metabolically supported, nonfailing canine heart and the primary determinant was found to be the total oxygen requirement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forward and backward waves in the arterial system

TL;DR: The total amount of reflection in the arterial system of the dog is evaluated during control, high, and low peripheral resistance, and an occluded descending aorta.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arterial impedance as ventricular afterload.

TL;DR: "Afterload," defined as the external factors that oppose the shortening of muscle fibers, is as important a determinant of myocardial performance in the intact heart as it is in the papillary muscle preparation.
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