This 2-year comparative study of EchoCG data dynamics included 230 CHD patients after primary non-Q-wave myocardial infarction of whom 76 were treated with A CE inhibitor perindopril throughout the study period (group 1) and 72 with perindopril and carvedilol (non-selective alpha-1, beta-1,2 adrenergic receptor blocker) (group 2). The control group was comprised of 82 patients that could not use either medicine for a variety of reasons. These patients developed signs of post-infarction left ventricular remodeling (enhanced MS and LVMM index, left ventricular spherization, cavity enlargement, systolic and diastolic LF dysfunction).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To study left ventricular structural and functional changes in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and chronic cor pulmonale (CCP) at different stages of a cardiac remodeling process.
Subjects And Methods: Echocardiography was used to examine 98 patients with COPD complicated by the development of CCP in a number of cases. The significant signs of CCP were absent in 19 patients; the signs of compensated and decompensated CCP in 41 and 38 patients, respectively.
Informative value of clinical, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic diagnostic criteria of compensated chronic pulmonary heart (CPH) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) was considered. The study included 229 patients with COPD of which 105 (group 1) showed no signs of CPH, 71 (group 2) had compensated and 53 (group 3) uncompensated CPH. They were examined by the standard echoCG method using an Acuson-128 HR apparatus (USA) and 12-lead ECG during a 2 year-long follow-up period.
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