The American journal of cardiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of esmolol and nitroprusside for acute post-cardiac surgical hypertension.
Because acute systemic hypertension early after cardiac surgery has been linked to catecholamine elevation, an open-label, randomized, crossover study was performed to compare the efficacy of esmolol, a new ultra-short-acting intravenous beta-blocking agent, to nitroprusside, the standard therapy. Controlled drug infusions to maximal dosage (esmolol, 300 micrograms/kg/min, and nitroprusside, 10 micrograms/kg/min) were titrated to achieve at least a 15% reduction in systolic pressure. ⋯ Diastolic BP was reduced from 71 +/- 12 to 64 +/- 11 mm Hg with esmolol and from 71 +/- 12 to 52 +/- 13 mm Hg with nitroprusside infusion (both p less than 0.05). Esmolol infusion resulted in decreased heart rate, cardiac index and stroke volume index and increased right atrial pressure (all p less than 0.05), whereas nitroprusside infusion resulted in increased heart rate and cardiac index and decreased right atrial pressure, pulmonary arterial wedge pressure and systemic vascular resistance (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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To determine the frequency and severity of cardiac arrhythmias in intracranial subarachnoid hemorrhage, 120 nonselected patients were prospectively studied by 24-hour Holter monitoring. Arrhythmias were found in 96 of 107 patients (90%) with adequate Holter recording: ventricular premature complexes in 49, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia in 5, supraventricular premature complexes in 29, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia or atrial fibrillation in 9, sinoatrial block and arrest in 29, second-degree atrioventricular block in 1, atrioventricular dissociation in 4 and idioventricular rhythm in 2. Life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias (torsades de pointes-type ventricular tachycardia) occurred in 4 patients, degenerating into either ventricular flutter or fibrillation in 2. ⋯ No correlation was found between age, clinical condition, site and extent of subarachnoid hemorrhage and either the occurrence or severity of arrhythmias. The results of our study indicate an extremely high incidence of arrhythmias, sometimes serious, in subarachnoid hemorrhage, especially in the first 48 hours after hemorrhage. Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring is therefore mandatory.
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The efficacy of intravenous flecainide acetate (maximum 2 mg/kg or 150 mg given at a rate of 15 mg/min) was assessed in patients with acute supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) (within 24 hours). Fifty patients were studied, 46 with spontaneous SVT and 4 with induced SVT at electrophysiologic assessment. ⋯ Adverse effects were associated with larger dosage and atrial flutter or atrial reentrant tachycardia. Thus, flecainide acetate is effective in converting to sinus rhythm acute atrial fibrillation and AV nodal and AV reentrant tachycardias, but not atrial flutter or atrial reentrant tachycardia.
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A review of 8 studies involving 3,996 offspring of parents who have congenital heart disease revealed that the risk for all defects was substantially higher if the affected parent was the mother rather than the father. The risk ratio ranged from a high of 6.39 for aortic stenosis to a low of 1.48 for patent ductus arteriosus, and the ratio was statistically significant in aortic stenosis (p = 0.025) and ventricular septal defect (p less than 0.001). ⋯ The preliminary conclusion is that although many familial cases of congenital heart disease are compatible with multifactorial inheritance and vulnerability to teratogens, an important subset of cases, particularly in some high-risk families, may be better explained by cytoplasmic inheritance than by multifactorial or mendelian modes. Current genetic counseling should take into account the differences in risk to offspring of affected mothers while confirmation and further investigation proceeds.