3 results match your criteria: "Allen Pavilion of New York Presbyterian Hospital[Affiliation]"

Ventriculovascular coupling in systolic and diastolic heart failure.

Curr Cardiol Rep

May 2006

Clinical Cardiovascular Research Laboratory for the Elderly, Allen Pavilion of New York Presbyterian Hospital, 5141 Broadway, 3 Field West, Room 035, New York, NY 10034, USA.

Pressure-volume analysis has provided critical insight into ventricular mechanics, and it has elucidated the underlying mechanisms of heart failure (HF). Renewed interest in ventriculovascular coupling, the interaction of the left ventricle and the arterial system, has developed from recent investigations focusing on the importance of heart rate control in systolic HF, blood pressure lability in the elderly, and acute pulmonary edema in patients with HF and a normal ejection fraction. These data suggest that abnormal ventriculovascular coupling may be an additional pathophysiologic mechanism underlying the development of HF with a normal ejection fraction and may provide a target for novel therapies.

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Ventricular structure and function in hypertensive participants with heart failure and a normal ejection fraction: the Cardiovascular Health Study.

J Am Coll Cardiol

March 2007

Clinical Cardiovascular Research Laboratory for the Elderly, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Allen Pavilion of New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York 10034, USA.

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate left ventricular (LV) size and structure in elderly subjects with hypertension (HTN) and heart failure who have a normal ejection fraction (HFNEF) in a large population-based sample.

Background: The pathophysiology of HFNEF is incompletely understood but is generally attributed to LV diastolic dysfunction with normal or reduced LV diastolic chamber size despite greater than normal filling pressures.

Methods: In the Cardiovascular Health Study (n = 5,888), demographic and clinical characteristics and ventricular structure and function were compared in healthy normal subjects (healthy; n = 499), subjects with HTN but not heart failure (HTN; n = 2,184), and subjects with HTN and HFNEF (HFNEF; n = 167).

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Ventriculovascular coupling in systolic and diastolic heart failure.

Curr Heart Fail Rep

December 2005

Clinical Cardiovascular Research Laboratory for the Elderly, Allen Pavilion of New York Presbyterian Hospital, 5141 Broadway, 3 Field West, Room 035, New York, NY 10034, USA.

Pressure-volume analysis has provided critical insight into ventricular mechanics, and it has elucidated the underlying mechanisms of heart failure (HF). Renewed interest in ventriculovascular coupling, the interaction of the left ventricle and the arterial system, has developed from recent investigations focusing on the importance of heart rate control in systolic HF, blood pressure lability in the elderly, and acute pulmonary edema in patients with HF and a normal ejection fraction. These data suggest that abnormal ventriculovascular coupling may be an additional pathophysiological mechanism underlying the development of HF with a normal ejection fraction and may provide a target for novel therapies.

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