Background: In chronic heart failure (CHF), several plasma biomarkers identify subjects at risk of death over the midterm. However, their long-term predictive value in the context of other candidate predictors has never been assessed. This information may prove valuable in the management of a chronic disease with a long natural history, as CHF is today.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypertrophy is the response of cardiac muscle to altered hemodynamic loads. The increase in ventricular wall thickness normalizes increased wall stress and, therefore, hypertrophy is initially beneficial. However, progressive hypertrophy is associated with deleterious long-term consequences that significantly increase the risk of mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated whether intervention with antioxidant vitamins C and E in enteral feeding influenced oxidative stress and clinical outcome in critically ill patients. Two-hundred-sixteen patients expected to require at least 10 days of enteral feeding completed the study. One-hundred-five patients received enteral feeding supplemented with antioxidants, and 111 control patients received an isocaloric formula.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFApoptosis of arterial cells induced by oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) is thought to contribute to the progression of vascular dysfunction and atherogenesis. It is well established that diabetes mellitus is accompanied by both glycosylation and oxidation of LDL (glc-oxLDL), but the biological effects of these modified lipoproteins are poorly understood. We demonstrate here for the first time that glc-oxLDL increases TUNEL positivity and caspase-3 activation (by Western blot and immunocytochemistry) of human coronary smooth muscle cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Preinfarction angina, a clinical equivalent of ischemic preconditioning, seems to protect against in-hospital death, cardiogenic shock, and the combined endpoints in adult but not in elderly patients with acute myocardial infarction. Experimental evidence indicates that caloric restriction may restore ischemic preconditioning in aged animals.
Objective: The objective was to verify whether body mass index (BMI) influences the cardioprotective effect of preinfarction angina in the elderly.
Objective: Hypercholesterolemia (HC) and hypertension (HT) are both major risk factors for the development and progression of atherosclerotic heart disease, and their co-existence has been associated with an increased incidence of cardiac events in clinical studies. HC and HT are individually associated with abnormal myocardial vascular function, but whether HT exacerbates the HC-induced myocardial vascular dysfunction remains unclear.
Methods: We studied in pigs the effect of renovascular HT superimposed on diet-induced HC (HC+HT) on myocardial perfusion and microvascular permeability in vivo (using electron-beam computed tomography) in response to cardiac challenge (i.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
February 2003
Several experimental and clinical studies have shown that oxidized low-density lipoprotein and oxidation-sensitive mechanisms are central in the pathogenesis of vascular dysfunction and atherogenesis. Here, we have used p66(Shc-/-) and WT mice to investigate the effects of high-fat diet on both systemic and tissue oxidative stress and the development of early vascular lesions. To date, the p66(Shc-/-) mouse is the unique genetic model of increased resistance to oxidative stress and prolonged life span in mammals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The myocardial length-tension and the force-frequency relations are important mechanisms that regulate the contractile strength of the heart.
Aims: To evaluate in humans the effect on left ventricular function of the interaction between the myocardial length-tension and force-frequency relations.
Methods And Results: Eight patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and 6 control subjects underwent radionuclide monitoring of left ventricular function during atrial pacing, saline loading and atrial pacing at the end of saline loading.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2002
The effects of chronic treatment with nitric oxide-containing aspirin (NO-aspirin, NCX-4016) in comparison with regular aspirin or placebo on the development of a chronic disease such as atherosclerosis were investigated in hypercholesterolemic low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-receptor-deficient mice. Male mice were assigned randomly to receive in a volume of 10 ml/kg either placebo (n = 10), 30 mg/kg/day NO-aspirin (n = 10), or 18 mg/kg/day of regular aspirin (n = 10). After 12 weeks of treatment, the computer-assisted imaging analysis revealed that NO-aspirin reduced the aortic cumulative lesion area by 39.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Advancing age is an independent predictor of increased mortality after acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Several hypotheses have been developed to try to explain this phenomenon, but data available about the efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in older patients are still not conclusive. The goal of this study was to investigate the efficacy of thrombolysis in adult and older patients who suffered their first AMI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) is a member of seven transmembrane domain G protein-coupled receptors activated by proteolytic cleavage. PAR-2 is involved in inflammatory events and cardiac ischemic reperfusion injury. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of PAR-2 in experimental myocardial ischemic preconditioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
June 2002
Ischemic preconditioning (PC) has been proposed as an endogenous form of protection against-ischemia reperfusion injury. We have shown that PC does not prevent postischemic dysfunction in the aging heart. This phenomenon could be due to the reduction of cardiac norepinephrine release, and it has also been previously demonstrated that age-related decrease of norepinephrine release from cardiac adrenergic nerves may be restored by caloric restriction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Patients with mild heart failure show a reduction in preload reserve mechanism during volume expansion. At this time, the effects of volume expansion on left ventricular (LV) diastolic filling in this subset of patients have not been well characterized.
Methods: We evaluated the effects of acute volume loading on Doppler parameters of LV filling in 10 healthy control subjects and in 12 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM).
Restenosis after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty is caused by neointimal hyperplasia, which involves impairment of nitric oxide (NO)-dependent pathways, and may be further exacerbated by a concomitant aging process. We compared the effects of NO-releasing-aspirin (NCX-4016) and aspirin (ASA) on experimental restenosis in both adult and elderly rats. Moreover, to ascertain the efficacy of NCX-4016 during vascular aging, we fully characterized the release of bioactive NO by the drug.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of radiofrequency as a means of synchronization and stimulation does not necessitate an external lead, and thus has allowed the construction of an implantable device for long-term treatment of reentry tachycardias. The device is used along with Amiodarone therapy and can be triggered by the patient himself.
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