Publications by authors named "Wolpers H"

Background: Evidence from human and animal models indicate that excessive central sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) plays a pathogenic role in triggering and sustaining hypertension. Thus, treatments targeting this neurogenic (sympathetic) triggered hypertension were evaluated and renal sympathetic denervation (RND) showed promising results. However, little is known about the parameters influencing efficacy of high frequency energy in the arterial model.

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Background: Carotid artery stenting (CAS) from the femoral approach can be anatomically very difficult and the incidence of complications is higher in patients with anatomical variations of the aortic arch, difficulties related to peripheral vascular disease and/or with access site complications. Because the typical morphology in patients with a bovine- or type-III aortic arch applies for an arterial access from the right upper extremity (e.g.

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After showing significantly lower complication rates in diagnostic coronary angiography, the radial artery access was successfully introduced as a useful vascular access site for transradial percutaneous coronary intervention in order to enhance patients' comfort and reduce hospital workload and costs. Moreover, due to the reduced need for antiplatelet therapy cessation as a result of lower bleeding complications, patients treated with transradial access showed a significantly better cardiac outcome in randomized interventional acute coronary syndrome studies.Procedural success and postprocedural radial arteritis or radial occlusions are closely related to anatomical circumstances (e.

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Aims: Recurrent stenosis and stent thrombosis are still major concerns after drug eluting stent placement which inhibits not only the restenostic process but endothelialisation as well. In contrast, through accelerating rapid endothelialisation and development of an earlier functional endothelial layer, passive coatings have shown encouraging results. The objective of the present study was to investigate the clinical outcome and rate of recurrent stenosis of silicon carbide passive coated cobalt chromium stents (PROKinetic Coronary Stent with PROBIO coating, Biotronik AG, Switzerland) on restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention.

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Unlabelled: Our objective was to investigate the properties of [1-(11)C]acetate as a quantitative perfusion tracer for myocardial PET studies.

Methods: We determined the flow dependence of the effective acetate extraction by a comparison with [(13)N]ammonia in 24 patients at rest (n = 8) and under pharmacologic vasodilation (n = 16). Furthermore, we compared the statistical quality of the perfusion values derived with both tracers.

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Improved expansion of stents using high-pressure implantation technique with subsequent antiplatelet therapy has improved patient outcome regarding the incidence of subacute stent thrombosis, bleeding complications and restenosis. Whether high-pressure implantation per se guarantees adequate stent expansion remains unclear. The aim of the study was to determine (1) stent expansion after high-pressure implantation technique and (2) whether stent expansion influences rate of target lesion revascularization within 6 months of follow-up.

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Background: Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging can be used to optimize implantation of intracoronary stents; the variability of the measurements, however, remains unclear. Our aim in this study was to determine the intraobserver and interobserver variability of IVUS measurements after stent implantation.

Methods: Ninety-four patients underwent implantation of 100 Palmaz-Schatz stents in 98 lesions (79 de novo and 19 restenotic).

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The absence of angiographic findings despite significant coronary artery disease has been previously described. Possible explanations for the limitation of plaque detection by angiography include compensatory vessel enlargement in face of intracoronary plaque formation, the lack of reference segments in diffuse atherosclerosis as well as technical limitations. Intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS) imaging provides the possibility of direct plaque visualization.

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Background: Dual positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with a perfusion tracer and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) can detect myocardial viability. This approach may be replaced by a single 11C-acetate study, which enables quantification of both regional blood flow and oxidative metabolism. The significance of acetate-derived indexes for myocardial viability is examined.

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We present a case of posttraumatic myocardial infarction after blunt chest trauma in a previously healthy man. Coronary angiography showed an eccentric occlusion in the midportion of the left anterior descending artery. Subsequent intracoronary ultrasound imaging revealed a severe intimal dissection.

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Unlabelled: Carbon-11-labeled acetate is a unique tracer for noninvasive assessment of myocardial oxidative metabolism with PET. Because adequate kinetic models have been missing, data evaluation in the past was performed mostly with phenomenological approaches such as mono- or biexponential fitting which cannot account for the influence of finite input duration and blood volume encountered in noninvasive PET investigations.

Methods: To investigate to what extent the current data evaluation schemes are justified, we developed a comprehensive model of [1-11C]-acetate kinetics in the myocardium which incorporates five tissue compartments: free acetate, activated acetate, CO2 precursors, amino acids and CO2.

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Coronary transplant vasculopathy is known to be associated with an early impairment of endothelium-dependent vasodilatation. In this study the largely endothelium-independent dilator response to dipyridamole was evaluated in 22 patients 36 +/- 17 months after transplantation in relation to their angiographic findings. The dipyridamole coronary reserve was measured by N-13 ammonia and positron emission tomography (PET).

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Background: Positron emission tomography-derived 11C-labeled acetate kinetics have been shown to reflect myocardial oxidative metabolism. The objective of the study was to use this metabolic imaging technique in combination with an evaluation of left ventricular work as an index of ventricular mechanical efficiency.

Methods And Results: The effects of ventricular ejection fraction and loading on this index were studied quantitatively in a canine experimental model.

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Methods And Results: With echocardiography and dynamic carbon 11-labeled acetate (C-11 acetate) positron emission tomographic imaging, C-11 acetate kinetics and a parameter that estimates mechanical ventricular efficiency (the work metabolic index) were defined in eight patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. The effect of afterload reduction with nitroprusside on these parameters was evaluated in six of these patients. Nitroprusside increased stroke work index but decreased the C-11 clearance rate.

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Mono- and biexponential fitting of myocardial 11C-acetate kinetics does not account for the effect of recirculating 11C activity following intravenous injection of the tracer. A tracer kinetic model comprising two and three compartments was developed to describe intravascular and myocardial 11C-acetate kinetics defined by PET. This model approach including a correction for 11C-metabolites in blood was validated by correlating the model parameter estimates with directly measured oxygen consumption (MVO2) in 11 closed-chest dog experiments over a wide range of cardiac work.

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Because tracer techniques are gaining an increasing importance for imaging flow (and metabolism) in the heart, experimental evidence is needed on the role of convection and diffusion in the transcoronary transport of solutes. In the present work, the transport of four different inert gases through the coronary system is studied in five closed-chest dog experiments and is compared with a digital multicapillary convection-diffusion model. Transport may be defined as flow dependent, as judged by the gross similarity of shape of the time-normalized dilution curves.

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We studied the heterogeneity of myocardial blood flow in nine anesthetized closed-chest dogs using an indicator-dilution technique that allows the stochastic description of transport characteristics for three inert gases (helium, argon, and xenon) from the coronary inflow to outflow. The results show that under normal conditions the transcoronary transport of the tracers is spatially heterogeneous. Heterogeneity is strongly dependent on the arterial oxygen tension over a range of 40-200 Torr.

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As the impact of cardiac pacing on myocardial energetics has not yet been established, this laboratory investigation was undertaken to evaluate the effects of right atrial (AP), right ventricular apex (VP) and atrioventricular sequential pacing (AVP) on cardiac energetics in a closed-chest model. Ninety-two pacing interventions were performed in ten anesthetized mongrel dogs with normal loading conditions and contractile states. The energetic effects of pacing were assessed in terms of myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2), its hemodynamic determinants and cardiac efficiency.

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For indicator-dilution studies, complete thermal recovery after passage of heat through the pulmonary circulation would be desirable. However, the results in the literature obtained by extrapolation techniques are inconsistent. To overcome problems of the extrapolation approach, transport functions of the pulmonary circulation (including the left heart) were computed by deconvolution of pulmonary arterial and aortic pairs of thermodilution curves after central venous indicator injection (10 ml of an ice-cold blood indocyanine green dye mixture).

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This study evaluates the routine mathematic approach (monoexponential extrapolation) for analysis of transpulmonary thermal-dye dilution curves and estimates the effects of systemic-indicator recirculation by use of a deconvolution technique. Fifteen dogs anesthetized with N2O-piritramid were studied before and after induction of pulmonary edema by oleic acid. After introduction of central venous indicator (10 ml of a mixture of cold blood and indocyanine green dye), dilution data were recorded from the pulmonary artery and the ascending aorta.

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Validation studies of inert gas techniques are limited in number and usually have not included circumstances with marked heterogeneity of flow. This study was intended to investigate the validity of the method in experimental animals under various hemodynamic conditions by parallel application of helium, argon, krypton and xenon as indicators and by comparison with direct flow measurements. Gases were applied by single breath inhalation.

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3-(1H-imidazol-1-yl-methyl)-2-methyl-1H-indole-1-propanoic acid (UK 38.485), a novel imidazole derivative, was employed to study potential protective effects of thromboxane synthetase inhibition on ischemically stressed canine myocardium. In anaesthetized open-chest mongrel dogs (n = 5) repeated ischemia (3 min) was produced by proximal, intermittent occlusion of the left anterior descending artery.

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This study was performed to examine potential protective effects of UK 38.485, an inhibitor of thromboxane synthetase, in canine myocardium stressed by transient ischemia. On anesthetized open-chest mongrel-dogs (n = 9) repeated ischemia (3 min) was produced by proximal, intermittent occlusion of the left anterior descending artery.

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