The American journal of cardiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Hemodynamic comparison of primary venous or arteriolar dilatation and the subsequent effect of furosemide in left ventricular failure after acute myocardial infarction.
The hemodynamic effect of venous dilatation (intravenous isosorbide dinitrate [ISDN]) and arteriolar dilatation (intravenous hydralazine), both as firstline treatment and then combined with intravenous furosemide, were evaluated in a randomized, between-group comparison in 20 men with severe acute left-sided cardiac failure after myocardial infarction (MI). Both ISDN (50 to 200 micrograms/kg/hour) (Group 1) and hydralazine (0.15 mg/kg) (Group 2) reduced systemic arterial pressure (p less than 0.05) and vascular resistance (p less than 0.05). Pulmonary artery occluded pressure was reduced (p less than 0.01) only by ISDN, whereas heart rate (p less than 0.01), cardiac output (p less than 0.01) and stroke volume (p less than 0.05) were increased only after hydralazine. ⋯ In conclusion, ISDN-induced venous dilatation is preferable to primary arteriolar dilatation by hydralazine as first-line treatment in acute left-sided cardiac failure. However, hydralazine and furosemide in combination were equally effective in reducing pulmonary artery occluded pressure and increasing cardiac output. The influences of each regimen on prognosis await further investigation.
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Amiodarone was administered to 154 patients who had sustained, symptomatic ventricular tachycardia (VT) (n = 118) or a cardiac arrest (n = 36) and who were refractory to conventional antiarrhythmic drugs. The loading dose was 800 mg/day for 6 weeks and the maintenance dose was 600 mg/day. Sixty-nine percent of patients continued treatment with amiodarone and had no recurrence of symptomatic VT or ventricular fibrillation (VF) over a follow-up of 6 to 52 months (mean +/- standard deviation 14.2 +/- 8.2). ⋯ The most common symptomatic adverse reactions were tremor or ataxia (35%), nausea and anorexia (8%), visual halos or blurring (6%), thyroid function abnormalities (6%) and pulmonary interstitial infiltrates (5%). Although large-dose amiodarone is highly effective in the long-term treatment of VT or VF refractory to conventional antiarrhythmic drugs, it causes significant toxicity in approximately 50% of patients. However, when the dose is adjusted based on clinical response or the development of adverse effects, 75% of patients with VT or VF can be successfully managed with amiodarone.
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Preload and afterload were controlled intraoperatively in 2 groups of patients with valvular regurgitation and congestive heart failure in order to determine the effect of fluid loading on weight gain and subsequent recovery. As a part of their anesthetic management before cardiopulmonary bypass, 16 patients were given 1 liter of crystalloid with nitroprusside infused at 1 microgram/kg/min and 16 received 4 liters of crystalloid with nitroprusside at 4 micrograms/kg/min. Arterial and filling pressures were kept the same in both groups. ⋯ For the first 2 postoperative days, body weight remained unchanged and thereafter, both groups lost weight at 0.6 kg/day. Preoperative weight was reached on day 7 and discharge occurred on day 15, 2 kg below control. Thus, a modest operative weight gain in these patients is inevitable, benign, and independent of the volume of fluid infused before bypass.
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This study reports the occurrence of bradycardia and hypotension (Bezold-Jarisch reflex) induced by myocardial reperfusion. Among 92 patients undergoing interventional catheterization for intracoronary thrombolysis in an early phase of acute myocardial infarction, left anterior descending, right coronary, and left circumflex (LC) arteries were identified as the "infarct vessel" in 44, 41, and 7 cases, respectively. The Bezold-Jarisch reflex occurred in 15 of 23 patients (65%) after right coronary recanalization and in 1 of 34 patients after left anterior descending recanalization. ⋯ Atropine, postural changes, or temporary pacing, or all 3, were generally sufficient to control symptoms. The findings of this study are substantially parallel to those reported by others and confirm that reperfusion of the inferoposterior myocardium is capable of stimulating a cardioinhibitory reflex. Follow-up data available in 15 patients with occluded and recanalized right coronary arteries indicate that the occurrence of the Bezold-Jarisch reflex after reperfusion is not a reliable predictor of myocardial salvage.
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The hemodynamic effects of breathing 95% oxygen were evaluated in 26 children with congenital heart disease. Aortic, pulmonary arterial, right atrial, and pulmonary arterial wedge pressure, aortic and pulmonary artery oxygen saturation, and blood gas, cardiac index, and heart rate were measured in room air and after each patient had breathed 95% oxygen for 10 (n = 26) and 20 (n = 5) minutes. Measurements were repeated with the patient again breathing room air for 10 (n = 11) and 20 (n = 6) minutes. ⋯ To determine whether reflex bradycardia is responsible for these oxygen-induced hemodynamic changes, heart rate was kept constant by atrial pacing in a second group of 5 patients. In these children, significant decreases in cardiac index, stroke index, and oxygen consumption, and increases in systemic vascular resistance also occurred with 95% oxygen. Thus, in children with acyanotic congenital heart disease, hyperoxia increases aortic pressure and systemic vascular resistance and decreases cardiac index, stroke index, oxygen consumption, and oxygen transport.