Publications by authors named "L K Tschumperlin"

Background: Peripheral vasodilatation in response to muscarinic agonists has been shown to be subnormal during heart failure. However, a more recent study suggested that the abnormal muscarinic-induced vasodilatation was not due to abnormal nitric oxide synthase activity. This study was designed to show that nitric oxide synthase contributes to desmopressin-induced forearm vasodilatation and to determine whether vasodilatation mediated by nitric oxide synthase is abnormal during heart failure.

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Background: Patients with heart failure have reduced peripheral blood flow at rest, during exercise, and in response to endothelium-dependent vasodilators. Nitric oxide formed from L-arginine metabolism in endothelial cells contributes to regulation of blood flow under these conditions. A randomized, double-blind crossover study design was used to determine whether supplemental oral L-arginine can augment peripheral blood flow and improve functional status in patients with moderate to severe heart failure.

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Treatments for heart failure, such as flosequinan, may have opposite effects on survival and quality of life. The Living With Heart Failure questionnaire was used to examine patients' willingness to risk drug-induced death for improved quality of life. In addition, patients' opinions concerning worthwhile improvements in the Living With Heart Failure score were described to provide a perspective for interpreting the results of clinical trials.

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Endothelium-dependent vasodilation of peripheral resistance vessels is abnormal in patients with heart failure, but there are little in vivo data on endothelium-dependent vasodilation of peripheral conduit vessels. This study assessed endothelium-dependent vasodilation of forearm conduit and resistance vessels in normal subjects and patients with heart failure. The effects of intraarterial endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent vasodilators on both forearm conduit (brachial artery) and resistance vessels were assessed in 9 patients with New York Heart Association class II-III heart failure and 11 normal subjects of similar age.

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Patients with congestive heart failure demonstrate attenuated endothelium-dependent vasodilation of the peripheral vasculature, but there are no data regarding the effect of therapies on this abnormality or whether this abnormality is reversible. This study was performed to address the hypothesis that abnormalities in endothelium-dependent vasodilation in heart failure are improved by heart transplantation. Forearm blood flow responses to the intraarterial administration of a dose range of methacholine, an endothelium-dependent vasodilator, and nitroprusside, an endothelium-independent vasodilator, were examined in 2 separate protocols.

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