Background: Cocaine and ethanol are often abused concomitantly, and this combination may be more lethal than either substance alone. Although previous studies showed that cocaine causes coronary arterial vasoconstriction, the combined effect of cocaine and ethanol on the coronary vasculature in humans is unknown. Thus, we assessed the effects of intranasal cocaine, intravenous ethanol, or a cocaine-ethanol combination on heart rate, systemic arterial pressure, and coronary arterial dimensions in humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study was designed to assess the left ventricular peak systolic pressure/end-systolic volume (PSP/ESV) ratio in predicting symptomatic improvement with valve replacement in patients with aortic regurgitation and enlarged left ventricular volume.
Background: Patients with aortic regurgitation and a left ventricular end-systolic volume < or = 60 ml/m2 show symptomatic improvement with valve replacement, whereas the response of those with an enlarged end-systolic volume > 60 ml/m2 is mixed. Most benefit, but some do not.