Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) are prescribed in a wide variety of cardiovascular conditions. Overdose of this commonly used drug can result in negative physiologic consequences including severe hypotension and even death due to metabolic and hemodynamic compromise. We report the fatal case of an amlodipine overdose, which caused intractable acidosis and cardiovascular failure in a 51-year-old male.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) during postpartum period is rare. In the current manuscript we present a case of a postpartum patient who developed ACS attributed to coronary vasospasm in the absence of vasocontrictive medication or smoking. This condition resolved with intracoronary injection of nitroglycerine and verapamil.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportance: Heart failure (HF), with or without reduced ejection fraction, and multidrug-resistant hypertension (RHT) are major worldwide health problems of ever-increasing proportions. The mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) spironolactone and eplerenone have proved valuable additions to the overall management of these disorders in patients without significant renal dysfunction.
Observations: Neurohormonal activation, including aldosteronism, in HF and RHT, has provided the pathophysiologic basis for the inclusion of MRA in the overall management of these disorders and the respective survival benefit and control of blood pressure.
Cardiomyocytes must be responsive to demands placed on the heart's contractile work as a muscular pump. In turn, myocyte size is largely dependent on the workload they perform. Both hypertrophied and atrophic myocytes are found in the normal and diseased ventricle.
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