An improved procedure for the transformation of 5'-O-monomethoxytrityl-2'-O-acetyl-3'-phosphates of uridine la, inosine ib and 6-N-benzoyladenosine lc into corresponding 3'/2,2,2-trichloroethyl, 2-cyanoethyl/-phosphates iiaic is reported. H NMR characterization of nucleoside 3'-phosphotriesters is presented. New conditions i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSome of the laboratory difficulties in assessing infarction size produced by intermittent coronary artery occlusion were demonstrated by using an epicardial mapping technique in anesthetized open-chest dogs. Intermittent occlusion of a left anterior descending coronary artery branch resulted in a marked elevation of the ST segment above the baseline in the areas of the myocardium supplied by this vessel. Repeated occlusions after administration of normal saline as a control produced less ST-segment elevation thn that noted during control occlusions; however, repeated occlusions after infusion of quinidine produced a further lessening in ST-segment elevation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiazepam was administered to ten patients with heart disease during diagnostic cardiac catheterization, in order to determine whether or not this drug's circulatory actions could alter results obtained during the procedure. Diazepam produced no change in baroreceptor sensitivity; however, there was a significant rise in heart rate and a significant fall in aortic systolic and left ventricular end-diastolic pressures. Cardiac index was unchanged, whereas stroke volume fell significantly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Cardiol
September 1976
The influence of transducer position and angulation upon the mitral systolic echo was studied in 100 presumably healthy females. Echocardiographic studies were performed from the second, third, fourth and fifth intercostal spaces (ICS). The role of the sound beam's path relative to cardiac motion was assessed by analyzing the recorded mitral valve pattern as a function of transducer orientation, independent of the absolute ICS used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical, electrocardiographic, phonocardiographic, and echocardiographic examinations were performed in 100 presumably healthy young females. Treadmill testing and ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring were performed in a selected group of these subjects. Phonocardiograms, recorded with the subjects supine at rest, after inhalation of amyl nitrite, and in the upright position, revealed a 17% incidence of nonejection clicks and/or late or mid- to late systolic murmurs (PHONO-MSCLSM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince quinidine is one of the few agents available to treat and prevent ventricular arrhythmias in ambulatory patients, its hemodynamic effects have been reevaluated. When given in therapeutic doses to anesthetized mongrel dogs, quinidine significantly reduced heart rate, aortic pressure and flow, but it did not significantly change the first derivative of the left ventricular pressure curve (left ventricular dp/dt) in nine dogs. A subsequent group of dogs was studied after vagotomy and practolol administration to block cardiac reflexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe synthesis of 2'-O-methylcytidylyl (3'-5')cytidine by the triester method using as protecting groups, 2,2,2-trichloroethyl for phosphate hydroxyl group, p-chlorophenyoxyacetyl for 5-hydroxyl group, methoxymethylidene for 2',3'-cis-diol system, and benzoyl for the exo-amino group of cytidine is presented. The obtained product was characterised by UV, electrophoresis, chromatography and an enzymatic digestion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient with papillary muscle disease caused by myocardial infarction was studied before and after injection of phenylephrine. The pulmonary wedge pressure was normal at rest. However, pressures and murmur changes, occurring spontaneously and after injection of phenylephrine, suggested that intermittent severe mitral regurgitation contributed significantly to the recurrent episodes of acute left heart failure presented by this patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Endocrinol (Paris)
December 1967