Purpose: This report describes the results of an observational, retrospective cohort study, evaluating the use of iron sucrose (IS) and red blood cell (RBC) transfusions in patients with cancer in routine clinical practice in France. A parallel investigated cohort treated with ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) has been reported earlier.
Methods: Data of patients with a solid tumour or haematological malignancy who have received IS or an RBC transfusion during 2010 from 3 months prior (M) to 3 months post first treatment (M) were analysed.
Objective: To evaluate the remodeling of large arteries according to age at menopause, duration of menopause, and use of hormone therapy (HT).
Design: A cross-sectional study consisting of baseline measurements of a multicentric randomized trial were used to evaluate arterial parameters.
Setting: The study was conducted in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands in academic hospitals and private clinics.
Aim: To define reference values for mean common carotid artery intima-media thickness (CCAIMT(mean)) from subjects without conventional cardiovascular risk factors.
Methods: This nationwide study involved cardiologists at 246 centres in France. A total of 5,433 subjects with and without conventional cardiovascular risk factors participated.
The year 2004 was not marked by major pharmacological advances, but by confirmation of previous "evidence". Several innovative drugs for stable angina (ranolazine, ivabradine), some interesting results in acute coronary syndrome (PROVE IT study), some classic concepts (cannabinoid receptors and their antagonists such as rimonabant) applied to novel indications (treatment of obesity), hopes for the "sartans" revived in the light of new evidence (VALUE study), advances in the management of diabetes and hypertension (ASCOT and CARDS studies), nebivolol which is not just a betablocker but also produces the NO radical (is this why it decreased the mortality of heart failure in the elderly in the SENIOR study?). In contrast, although Chronadalate did not live up to expectations for coronary insufficiency, the year was marked above all by the much heralded withdrawal of Vioxx for increasing cardiovascular risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Intima-media thickness (IMT) is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular and cerebral ischemic events, but its correlation with the absolute cardiovascular risk is not known in large populations. The Paroi Arterielle et Risque Cardiovasculaire (PARC) Study is an epidemiological study designed to correlate conventional assessment of cardiovascular risk with the mean IMT of the common carotid.
Methods: In the PARC study, 6,416 subjects were enrolled, including 80.
Taking into account all the risk factors and blood pressure levels, as indicated by several American and European recommendations available since 1997, is a leading strategy to reduce mortality and morbidity of hypertensive patients. The aim of this study was to quantify how, in 1999. French practitioners applied recommendations on hypertension (HTN), diabetes and hypercholesterolemia in recently diagnosed hypertensive patients and to evaluate whether or not the recommended targets were met.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSystolic time intervals and brachial circulation, evaluated by pulsed Doppler in terms of arterial diameter, blood velocity and flow, and vascular resistance, were studied in 12 hyperthyroid patients and in 12 normal controls. In patients, arterial circulation was studied before and during mechanical exclusion of the hand, and hemodynamic measurements were repeated after beta-blocker treatment and after obtainment of euthyroid state. Compared with controls, patients had higher heart rate (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cardiovasc Pharmacol
October 1992
Arterial compliance in humans is generally measured by modeling analysis of pulse tracing or of pulse wave propagation in the arterial tree. It is decreased in hypertension in part because elevation of blood pressure stiffens the arteries by stretching the rigid collagen fibres of their walls. Using a modeling evaluation of the compliance-pressure relationship in large arteries, it is possible to correct compliance from the mechanical effect (passive effect) due to pressure elevation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of antihypertensive drugs on the large arteries consist of two parts: the passive effect due to the change in pressure and the active effect, the drug action per se. This study proposes a method of dissociating the passive effect from the active effect. The diameter of the arterial artery was determined by the pulsed Doppler method and the pulse wave velocity of the brachioradial artery by mecanography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypertensive and diabetic mellitus diseases are known to increase stiffness of the arterial wall. However these alterations probably involve different mechanisms. To this end, we compared the effect of hypertension and diabetes on large artery caliber and elasticity at real pressure conditions and at the same level of pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypertension may influence the atherosclerotic process of large arteries via pressure and shear forces. The pressure force dilates and stiffens arteries because of the non-linear elastic behaviour of arterial walls. This partly explains the increased diameter and decreased compliance of the brachial artery in hypertensive subjects compared with normotensive controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrasonic detection of atherosclerotic plaque of carotid abdominal aortic and femoral arteries and evaluation of risk factors were performed in 208 hypercholesterolemic men without cardiovascular disease. Twenty-six percent of them had no plaque. Plaque at the carotid, aortic, and femoral sites was found in 37%, 48%, and 53% of subjects, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1. Blood cells and vascular endothelial cells are subjected to a wide range of haemodynamically generated shear stress forces. In vitro, membrane stretching or shear stress have been observed to activate ion channels and cell metabolism and to facilitate erythrocyte and platelet aggregation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relations between carotid arteries and/or abdominal aortic plaque and cardiovascular risk factors were investigated by ultrasonography in 161 untreated hypercholesterolemic normotensive men. Of them, 58 had no plaque (NP group), 34 had carotid but not aortic plaque (CP group), 34 had aortic but not carotid plaque (AP group) and 35 had both carotid and aortic plaques (CAP group). Groups significantly differed for age, smoking, blood pressure, and the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypertension may induce early alterations in large arteries by 2 mechanical stresses: one related to intravascular pressure, the other to blood flow dynamics. Distending pressure force acts in a circumferential direction, inducing decreased arterial distensibility. Arterial distensibility can be evaluated in humans by measurement of arterial compliance and pulse-wave velocity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrachial artery flow patterns were studied in 10 hyperthyroid and 10 normal subjects. Mean blood velocity and flow were evaluated by pulsed Doppler, and peak systolic acceleration was calculated by computer-assisted digitization of the instantaneous velocity curve. Compared to control subjects, hyperthyroid patients had higher velocity and flow (p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Mal Coeur Vaiss
July 1989
Segmental pressure drop and longitudinal resistance of brachial artery were evaluated in 11 normotensive (NT) and 19 hypertensive (HT) subjects of similar age by measuring arterial diameter (D), blood velocity (V) and flow (Q) with pulsed Doppler and blood viscosity (mu) at 96 sec-1 with a coaxial cylinder viscometer. Mean pressure drop (delta P) per unit of length of artery was calculated according to the relation delta P = 4 tau/D, where tau is the mean wall shear stress evaluated on the basis of a Poiseuille velocity profile by the formula: r = vV/D. Brachial artery resistance per unit of length was deduced as the (delta P/Q) ratio.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulsatile wall shear conditions close to the brachial artery were evaluated in 11 normotensive and in 19 hypertensive patients of similar age by determining arterial diameter and centerline blood velocity with a pulsed Doppler and blood viscosity at 96 sec-1 with a coaxial cylinder viscometer. A Womersley model of intraluminal distribution of blood velocities enabled to determine from unsteadiness parameter alpha of Womersley, arterial diameter and maximal minimal and pulse (maximal-minimal) values of centerline velocity, the maximal minimal and pulse shear rate and shear stress (product between shear rate and viscosity) close to the endothelium. Compared to normotensives hypertenvises had higher arterial diameter (p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of ketanserin (40 mg p.o.) on blood pressure and brachial haemodynamics (brachial artery diameter, brachial blood velocity and blood flow) have been compared in a double-blind study with those of ritanserin (10 mg p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe elastic response of the thoracic aorta to increasing steps of angiotensin was studied in chronic instrumented conscious dogs with and without parasympathetic blockade by atropine. A pressure microtransducer and two ultrasonic crystals diametrically opposed and fixed in the adventitia enabled to determine the mean and systolic-diastolic changes of pressure (P) and diameter (D). By computing these measurements two representative indexes of dynamic elastic modulus in vivo were calculated; the elastic modulus of Peterson (Ep) Ep = delta P/D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForearm arterial hemodynamics, including measurements of brachial artery diameter and compliance with pulsed Doppler velocimetry, were determined before and after acute administration of labetalol in patients with sustained essential hypertension. Labetalol caused a significant and rapid drop in blood pressure, with a decrease in forearm vascular resistance and an increase in brachial blood flow. Brachial artery diameter did not change, whereas arterial compliance increased significantly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiameter, blood velocity, and flow of the brachial artery and vascular resistance of the brachial circulation were evaluated with a pulsed Doppler velocimeter before and after wrist occlusion in 8 younger and 8 older normotensive subjects and in 11 younger and 11 older hypertensive patients. Before occlusion, no differences existed between younger and older normotensives. However, in hypertensives, systolic peak velocity was higher in younger than in older hypertensives (P less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Cardiol Angeiol (Paris)
November 1987
Forearm arterial hemodynamics, including measurements of brachial artery diameter and compliance with pulsed Doppler velocimetry were determined before and after acute administration of labetalol in patients with sustained essential hypertension. Labetalol caused a significant and rapid drop in blood pressure with a decrease in forearm vascular resistance and an increase in brachial blood flow. Brachial artery diameter did not change while arterial compliance significantly increased.
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