An electrocardiographic recording method with an associated reading guide, designed for epidemiological studies on Chagas' disease, was tested to assess its diagnostic reproducibility. Six cardiologists from five countries each read 100 electrocardiographic (ECG) tracings, including 30 from chronic chagasic patients, then reread them after an interval of 6 months. The readings were blind, with the tracings numbered randomly for the first reading and renumbered randomly for the second reading.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEleven patients with moderate to severe hypertension were studied at the Vargas Hospital of Caracas. The patients were pretreated with labetalol, 800 to 1200 mg/day, orally, over a period of 1 week, after which an intravenous infusion of dopamine, .5 to 3 micrograms/kg/minute, was given.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEleven patients with moderate to severe hypertension were pre-treated with oral labetalol 800-1200 mg/day for one week, prior to receiving two i.v. infusions of dopamine 1-3 micrograms/kg/min each of 30 min each, before and after the i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn open, non-comparative study, with a new calcium antagonist-tiapamil, was undertaken in 22 patients with mild and moderate essential hypertension (stage I-II WHO). After a two-week placebo period, patients were treated with tiapamil, 300-600 mg twice daily during a period of six weeks (Dose-finding period). Thereafter patients were continued on tiapamil during a 54 week period (Long-term follow-up).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrazosin and propranolol were compared in an open, crossover study to determine their effects on plasma lipids and lipoproteins. After a four-week placebo period, 10 hypertensive patients were randomly assigned to prazosin treatment (Group I) and another 10 to propranolol treatment (Group II) for eight weeks. After a second four-week placebo period, treatment in each group was switched to the alternative drug for eight weeks.
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