Publications by authors named "Roger J C Hall"

Myocardial stunning (temporary post-ischaemic contractile dysfunction) may be caused by oxidative stress and/or impaired myocyte calcium homeostasis. Regional myocardial stunning was induced in open-chest pigs (segment shortening reduced to 68.3+/-4.

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Approximately 50,000 valve replacement operations take place in Europe annually and almost as many valve repair procedures. Previous European guidelines on management of patients after valve surgery were last published in 1995 and were limited to recommendations about antithrombotic prophylaxis. American guidelines covering the broader topic of the investigation and treatment of patients with valve disease were published in 1998 but devoted relatively little space to post-surgical management.

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We studied the effect of enhanced external counterpulsation (EECP) in 23 consecutive patients with stable angina pectoris who had a positive dobutamine stress echocardiogram. After EECP, stress-induced wall motion score (WMS) improved by > or =2 grades in 43% of the patients (n = 10); the average improvement was 5.3 +/- 3.

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Chronic stable angina pectoris (CSAP) resulting from coronary artery disease (CAD) is common in elderly patients, and significantly reduces their quality of life. Myocardial revascularisation procedures in this age group entail significant risks, largely related to comorbidities rather than advanced age itself. Coronary artery anatomy is more likely to be technically unsuitable for revascularisation and angina more resistant to drug treatment.

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Myocardial stunning and hibernation are two entities that have become increasingly recognised as clinically important causes of reversible left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. Their occurrence is important as resting myocardial dysfunction, which was once thought to be irreversible, may recover if ischaemia is lessened or abolished. Recent evidence has suggested that cumulative stunning can occur in man and may in fact be responsible for the phenomenon of hibernation.

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Background: Myocardial hibernation may result from repetitive episodes of transient ischaemia leading to prolonged dysfunction. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression has been demonstrated in animals following brief, non-lethal ischaemia-reperfusion injury. We therefore, hypothesised that in human hibernating myocardium: 1).

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Objectives: In patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), we sought to demonstrate normal myocardial blood flow (MBF) and myocardial oxygen consumption (MMRO(2)) to post-ischemic myocardium that exhibited reversible dysfunction and the relation between the severity of the dysfunction and the preceding ischemia.

Background: In animal models of stunning, MBF and MMRO(2) are normal or near normal, and the severity of stunning is related to the degree of the preceding ischemia.

Methods: Myocardial blood flow and MMRO(2) were measured using positron emission tomography and oxygen 15-labelled water (H(2)(15)O) and oxygen 15-labelled oxygen ((15)O(2)), respectively, in 14 patients with CAD and normal left ventricular (LV) function.

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