Publications by authors named "S Malendowicz"

Objectives: We sought to determine whether the benefit of training for vasodilation in the skeletal muscle vasculature of patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) is likely to be caused at the molecular level primarily by increased nitric oxide (NO) production or decreased inactivation of NO.

Background: Physical training reverses endothelium dysfunction in patients with CHF, mediated by increased NO bioactivity. Some animal studies support a mechanism whereby training results in increased vascular NO levels by sustained transcriptional activation of the endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) gene, presumably due to shear stress.

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Background: Vascular remodeling occurs in the skeletal muscle of patients with severe congestive heart failure (CHF); this remodeling is mediated in part by increased activity of the renin-angiotensin system. Animal models suggest that in the vasculature, angiotensin II receptor type 2 (AT2-R) expression may be upregulated in pathological states associated with vascular remodeling. The therapeutic effects of an AT1-R antagonist may, therefore, be in part due to increased plasma angiotensin II levels, which stimulate AT2-R.

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The GATA-6 transcription factor is expressed in quiescent vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in culture, and levels of its transcript are rapidly downregulated on mitogen stimulation. In this study, we demonstrate that the GATA-6 transcript, protein, and DNA-binding activity are downregulated in rat carotid arteries on balloon injury. Downregulation was detected at 1 and 3 days after injury and recovered by 7 days.

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The transthyretin (TTR) Ile 122 variant is associated with cardiac amyloidosis in individuals of African descent. To determine the prevalence of the allele encoding TTR Ile 122 in African-Americans, we have used PCR and restriction analysis to test DNA from African-Americans from various geographic areas, and found an allele frequency of 66/3376 (0.020), which is higher than the value we previously reported in a much smaller pilot study.

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