Publications by authors named "Gerstenblith G"

Studies of the effect of age on cardiac function during exercise are confounded by the increasing prevalence of disease and sedentary lifestyle that accompany aging and by the lack of techniques to clearly distinguish between the contribution of changes in central circulatory and peripheral factors to the age-related alterations in cardiovascular physiology. Although diastolic filling is delayed at rest, end diastolic volume is not compromised either at rest or during exercise. Exercise heart rate is invariably reported to decrease with increasing age, whereas stroke volume has been reported to be both increased and decreased in studies of different populations.

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Measurements of cardiac performance for humans at various ages is influenced by the variable examined, the population and techniques employed, and the factors that co-vary with age, including the presence of disease and physical conditioning. Interstudy differences in the extent to which occult coronary disease is present in older subjects and in the level of physical conditioning among subjects may underlie the variable perspectives contained in the literature of how aging affects cardiovascular function. In carefully screened, highly motivated but not athletically trained community-dwelling subjects, resting cardiovascular parameters are not age related except for systolic blood pressure, which increases with age.

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To determine whether prophylactic antiarrhythmic therapy influences mortality in high-risk patients after acute myocardial infarction, 143 such patients were randomized in a double-blind individually dose-adjusted, placebo-controlled trial an average of 14 +/- 7 days after myocardial infarction and followed for 1 year. Patients were judged to be at high risk on the basis of (1) ejection fraction less than 40% (n = 60), (2) arrhythmias of Lown class 3 or higher (n = 26), or (3) both (n = 57). Aprindine was chosen because of its long half-life, few side effects, and antiarrhythmic efficacy.

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Furosemide is an effective diuretic that initiates a rapid diuresis and peripheral vasodilatation through renal adenylate cyclase inhibition and prostaglandin synthesis. Recently, it has been shown to be associated with activation of the neurohumoral vasoconstrictor mechanism and a further compromise of left ventricular function in patients with heart failure. The present study was performed to investigate the direct effects of furosemide on myocardial performance in the isolated perfused rabbit heart.

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Unstable angina that occurs in the early postinfarction period is associated with an increased incidence of unfavorable cardiac events despite aggressive medical therapy. We examined the results of coronary angioplasty in 47 consecutive patients with postinfarction unstable angina who were referred for the procedure 12.9 +/- 7 days following myocardial infarction, 14 of which were Q wave and 33 of which were non-Q-wave.

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The cardiac functional and metabolic consequences of pyridoxine deficiency were studied in rats maintained on a pyridoxine-deficient diet for 10 weeks. Because food intake was diminished in the pyridoxine-deficient rats, a second group of animals was fed a diet restricted to the intake of the pyridoxine-deficient animals. The inotropic response (developed pressure) to an isoproterenol or Ca2+ concentration response curve was measured simultaneously with high energy phosphate levels using a modified Langendorf apparatus and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

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To evaluate the extent to which the Frank-Starling mechanism is utilized during successive stages of vigorous upright exercise, absolute left ventricular end-diastolic volume and ejection fraction were determined by gated blood pool scintigraphy at rest and during multilevel maximal upright bicycle exercise in 30 normal males aged 26-50 yr, who were able to exercise to 125 W or greater. Left ventricular end-systolic volume, stroke volume, and cardiac output were calculated at rest and during each successive 3-min stage of exercise [25, 50, 75, 100, and 125-225 W (peak)]. During early exercise (25 W), end-diastolic and stroke volumes increased (+17 +/- 1 and +31 +/- 4%, respectively), with no change in end-systolic volume.

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Unstable angina is a common ischemic syndrome that is characterized by chest pain occurring at rest often with transient ischemic electrocardiographic changes. Although most patients with unstable angina experience relief of pain with intensive medical therapy while in the coronary care unit, they subsequently have a high incidence of unfavorable cardiac events usually occurring within several months. Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring for ischemia has demonstrated a relatively high incidence of ischemic episodes both in patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris.

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The acute effects of doxorubicin on coronary perfusion and left ventricular pressures and intracellular phosphate metabolite levels, the latter obtained by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, were measured simultaneously in isolated, isovolumic rat hearts (Langendorf preparation) perfused at constant flow. Nineteen experimental hearts were perfused for 70 min with oxygenated HEPES-buffered solution containing 6 mg/L doxorubicin. These were compared with 18 control hearts (C), perfused under identical conditions but without doxorubicin, by repeated measures analysis of variance.

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We examined the prevalence and prognostic importance of silent myocardial ischemia detected by continuous electrocardiographic monitoring in 70 patients with unstable angina. All the patients received intensive medical treatment with nitrates, beta-blockers, and calcium-channel blockers. Continuous electrocardiographic recordings were made during the first two days in the coronary care unit to quantify the frequency and duration of asymptomatic ischemic episodes, defined as a transient ST-segment shift of 1 mm or more.

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Hypertension in the elderly is a common problem confronting the practitioner today. The rationale for treating hypertensive elderly patients is presented in this article. Guidelines for the use of specific agents for the treatment of older patients are also discussed.

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Unstable angina pectoris is a high-risk ischemic syndrome with complex, interacting pathophysiologic mechanisms that include coronary atherosclerosis, coronary vasoconstriction, and thrombosis. The roles of various medical strategies, including nitrates, beta blockers, calcium antagonists, and antiplatelet, anticoagulant, and thrombolytic agents, are discussed in conjunction with revascularization procedures such as coronary angioplasty and bypass surgery.

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Isolated adult rat hearts perfused in an isovolumic mode were used to study the effects of sodium-potassium pump inhibition and sodium-calcium exchange alterations on the tissue content of adenosine triphosphate, phosphocreatine, inorganic phosphate, and intracellular pH, all measured by phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Rates of oxygen consumption, contractile function, and the cell contents of calcium, sodium, and potassium also were determined. The inhibition of sodium-potassium adenosine triphosphatase, either by the reduction in perfusate potassium from 5.

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Cardiac volumes by equilibrium gated cardiac blood pool scans and heart rate were measured in the supine and sitting positions in 64 male volunteer subjects (age 25-80 yrs) who had been rigorously screened to exclude cardiovascular disease. After the upright position was assumed, the average cardiac output of all subjects was unchanged but heart rate increased and stroke volume decreased due to a decrease in end diastolic volume. Neither the supine or sitting cardiac output nor the average postural change in cardiac output, cardiac volumes or heart rate was age-related.

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An abnormal resting ST segment renders the stress ECG impossible to interpret. Therefore, one must substitute a radionuclide stress evaluation in the presence of digitalis, left bundle-branch block, left ventricular hypertrophy, a paced rhythm, or any other condition that would cause abnormal baseline ST segments. All these are more common in the elderly.

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The relationships and correlations among functional, metabolic, and ionic consequences of low sodium perfusion were studied in isovolumic, retrograde-aortic perfused working rat hearts by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance, oxygen consumption, and atomic absorption spectrometry. Reduction of perfusate sodium from 144 to 74, 51, 39, and 25 mM in four separate groups of hearts via lithium substitution for 15 minutes decreased cell sodium to mean values of 62, 51, 43, and 36 mumol/g dry weight, respectively (P less than 0.001 vs.

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A randomized prospective clinical trial compared combined treatment with intraaortic balloon pumping and intravenous nitroglycerin for 4 to 5 days with routine clinical management in 20 patients with extensive myocardium at risk for infarction as evidenced by a thallium defect score of 7.0 units or greater. No significant differences in mortality or clinical outcome were observed between the 10 patients receiving the combined treatment and the 10 receiving routine management.

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To evaluate functional recovery in 20 consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction who received recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator, serial two-dimensional echocardiograms were performed before and immediately after tissue plasminogen activator administration and at 1 and 10 days postinfarction. Tissue plasminogen activator was administered intravenously (17 patients) or by intracoronary infusion (3 patients) after angiographic confirmation of total occlusion. Reperfusion, documented by angiography, occurred in 13 of the 20 patients.

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The acute effects of nifedipine withdrawal were studied in 81 patients with angina at rest who had completed a prospective, double-blind, randomized trial of nifedipine versus placebo. Thirty-nine of the 81 patients (group 1) were withdrawn from nifedipine or placebo at the time of coronary artery bypass surgery for uncontrolled angina or left main coronary artery disease. When the patients withdrawn from nifedipine were compared with those withdrawn from placebo, no significant differences were seen in the incidence of hypotension, myocardial infarction, significant arrhythmias or vasopressor or vasodilator requirements during the perioperative period.

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Metabolic and functional recovery following 60 minutes of low flow (0.1 ml/min) ischemia were compared in rabbit hearts perfused with normal sodium and potassium, low sodium (120 mM NaCl replaced by 120 mM LiCl), or zero potassium perfusate during ischemia. During the control, pre-ischemic, and reperfusion periods, all hearts were perfused identically with normal sodium and potassium.

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Although unstable angina can be initially controlled with medical therapy in most patients, there is a high incidence of subsequent death, myocardial infarction, or need for coronary bypass surgery to control symptoms. Identification at the time of presentation of the patient likely to do poorly on continued medical therapy would be useful in advising consideration of surgical therapy. Since coronary arterial spasm may have a significant role in the pathophysiology of unstable angina in some patients, the recently developed calcium channel antagonists may therefore be of particular benefit in the medical therapy of unstable angina.

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We hypothesized that after a Ca2+-free period the magnitude of the Na+ gradient at the onset of Ca2+ reperfusion would grade the ensuing cell Ca2+ gain. Rabbit interventricular septa perfused with Hepes buffered solution (pH 7.4, [Ca2+] = 1.

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