36 research outputs found

    Assessment of left ventricular diastolic function in children after successful repair of aortic coarctation

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    The purpose of the study was an assessment of left ventricular diastolic function in children after the successful repair of aortic coarctation (CoA). The prospective study concerned 32 pediatric patients after the CoA surgery. Tissue Doppler imaging parameters including strain and strain rate and the conventional echocardiographic indexes were analyzed in patients and healthy controls. Analysis of mitral annulus velocities, Eā€“Eā€² ratio, strain, and strain rate of left ventricular mid-cavity segments and conventional indexes of mitral inflow showed the worsening of left ventricular diastolic mechanics in the study group compared to healthy controls. The E/Eā€² ratio was significantly higher in the study group compared to the control group (8.30Ā Ā±Ā 3.24 vs. 6.95Ā Ā±Ā 1.36; pĀ <Ā 0.05). The early diastolic strain rate to late diastolic strain rate ratio as well as early to late diastolic strain ratio of the left ventricular mid-cavity segments were significantly lower in the study group compared to healthy controls (1.81Ā Ā±Ā 0.63 vs. 3.74Ā Ā±Ā 1.53; pĀ <Ā 0.001 and 1.20Ā Ā±Ā 0.49 vs. 3.41Ā Ā±Ā 1.26; pĀ <Ā 0.001). No differences of the pulmonary venous flow parameters between those two groups were observed. The left ventricular diastolic mechanics in hypertensive patients after CoA repair did not differ from normotensive subjects. Hypertensive and normotensive children after surgical repair of CoA are found to have worsening of the left ventricular diastolic mechanics suggesting the impairment of the active myocardial relaxation

    Nitrendipine, a calcium-entry blocker. Renal and humoral effects in human arterial hypertension.

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    Thirteen patients with hypertension and normal renal function received nitrendipine, a calcium entry blocker. Nitrendipine did not modify renal blood flow (RBF) or glomerular filtration rate (GFR), decreased mean arterial pressure (MAP) and total peripheral resistance, and did not significantly change cardiac output. Individual RBF changes did not correlate with MAP or cardiac output modifications. Mean arterial pressure changes were inversely correlated with basal renin levels and directly associated with age. Plasma catecholamines and plasma renin activity increased, but plasma aldosterone and plasma volume did not change significantly. However, the greater decrements of MAP tended to be associated with the greater increases in plasma volume. Data show that long-term calcium entry blockade by nitrendipine does not modify RBF or GFR despite the decreased renal perfusion pressure. Further, nitrendipine may be more effective in older patients and the presence of low renin

    Clinical and systemic hemodynamic effects of nitrendipine.

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    The antihypertensive effects of nitrendipine were evaluated in 12 subjects with hypertension, one of whom could not tolerate the drug for more than 3 days; hence hemodynamics were studied in the 11 subjects who were treated for 2 wk. In one patient taking 40 mg twice a day, blood pressure reduction was associated with a hemodynamic pattern of hyperkinetic circulation. Of the other 10 subjects, all of whom were taking 20 mg twice a day, two did not respond, but 8 had significant reduction in mean arterial pressure (136 +/- 4.3 to 106 +/- 3.2 mm Hg) resulting from a decrease in total peripheral resistance (52 +/- 3.7 to 35 +/- 2.6 U X m2). Changes in cardiac output, heart rate, and cardiopulmonary volume varied widely among subjects, such that average changes did not attain significance. Heart rate and cardiopulmonary volume, however, changed in the same direction, which suggests that the alterations in both were related to the degree of reflex sympathetic stimulation induced by nitrendipine. Plasma renin activity (PRA) increased during treatment (2.6 +/- 1.0 to 9.3 +/- 4.1 ng/ml/hr), whereas the increase in plasma aldosterone (PA) levels did not attain significance (13.7 +/- 1.6 to 21.5 +/- 4.5 ng/dl). As a result, PA/PRA decreased (16.1 +/- 4.9 to 9.4 +/- 2.6). These results suggest that calcium entry blockade might have interfered with steroidogenesis, thus blunting the effect of increased PRA. Finally, blood pressure response to nitrendipine in the whole group correlated inversely with pretreatment PRA (r = -0.88), suggesting greater activity of the drug in low-renin hypertension
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