38 research outputs found

    Inhaled nitric oxide for high-altitude pulmonary edema

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    BACKGROUND. Pulmonary hypertension is a hallmark of high-altitude pulmonary edema and may contribute to its pathogenesis. When administered by inhalation, nitric oxide, an endothelium-derived relaxing factor, attenuates the pulmonary vasoconstriction produced by short-term hypoxia. METHODS. We studied the effects of inhaled nitric oxide on pulmonary-artery pressure and arterial oxygenation in 18 mountaineers prone to high-altitude pulmonary edema and 18 mountaineers resistant to this condition in a high altitude laboratory (altitude, 4559 m). We also obtained lung-perfusion scans before and during nitric oxide inhalation to gain further insight into the mechanism of action of nitric oxide. RESULTS. In the high-altitude laboratory, subjects prone to high-altitude pulmonary edema had more pronounced pulmonary hypertension and hypoxemia than subjects resistant to high-altitude pulmonary edema. Arterial oxygen saturation was inversely related to the severity of pulmonary hypertension (r=-0.50, P=0.002). In subjects prone to high-altitude pulmonary edema, the inhalation of nitric oxide (40 ppm for 15 minutes) produced a decrease in mean (+/-SD) systolic pulmonary-artery pressure that was three times larger than the decrease in subjects resistant to such edema (25.9+/-8.9 vs. 8.7+/-4.8 mm Hg, P<0.001). Inhaled nitric oxide improved arterial oxygenation in the 10 subjects who had radiographic evidence of pulmonary edema (arterial oxygen saturation increased from 67+/-10 to 73+/-12 percent, P=0.047), whereas it worsened oxygenation in subjects resistant to high-altitude pulmonary edema. The nitric oxide-induced improvement in arterial oxygenation in subjects with high-altitude pulmonary edema was accompanied by a shift in blood flow in the lung away from edematous segments and toward nonedematous segments. CONCLUSIONS. The inhalation of nitric oxide improves arterial oxygenation in high-altitude pulmonary edema, and this beneficial effect may be related to its favorable action on the distribution of blood flow in the lungs. A defect in nitric nitric oxide synthesis may contribute to high-altitude pulmonary edema

    Recurrent Ischemic Lesions After Acute Atherothrombotic Stroke

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    Use of Platelet Function Testing Before Pipeline Embolization Device Placement

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    Supine Bicycle Exercise Echocardiography: A Potent Immediately Available Tool for Detection and Localization of Myocardial Ischemia for the Initial Cardiologist

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    BACKGROUND: Exercise echocardiography (EE) is being used increasingly as an investigative technique now that dynamic images can be captured digitally. Its equivalent reliability with scintigraphic methods has been demonstrated in a hospital setting. This study analyzes its impact on daily practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Standardized progressive stress was produced by supine bicycle ergometry. Echocardiographic images of complete cardiac cycles were obtained in standard apical and parasternal short-axis views before, during, and after maximum effort, and digitized for simultaneous analysis of synchronized images at rest and during exercise. Two hundred sixteen patients (175 men and 41 women; mean age 58 +/- 10 years) were studied. RESULTS: Image quality was suboptimal in 4 cases. In the remaining 212 cases, ischemia was detected in 91 cases, and the test was negative in 114 cases and doubtful in 7 cases. Control by selective coronary angiography, as indicated by the clinical situation, was performed in 52 cases. In this particular group, EE showed 87% sensitivity, which is significantly higher than the 59% recorded for conventional exercise testing (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: EE by bicycle ergometer in the supine position is a valid, noninvasive investigative technique that can be used in an outpatient situation (feasibility 95%) since it is readily available. Its value appears to be greatest in cases in which exercise ECG is not conclusive. A negative result enables the initial cardiologist to reassure the patient immediately, which has been demonstrated in the literature to have favorable prognostic value. (ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Volume 13, May 1996

    Echocardiographie a l'effort sur cyclo-ergometre en position couchee: une methode d'investigation simple et efficace, a la portee du cardiologue de premier recours pour la detection et la localisation de l'ischemie du myocarde. [Bicycle exercise echocardiography in the supine position: a simple and effective study method for the detection and localization of myocardial ischemia by the first consulted cardiologist]

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    Exercise echocardiography is increasingly used as an investigative technique, now that dynamic images can be captured digitally. Its equivalent reliability compared to scintigraphic methods has been demonstrated in a hospital setting. This study is an attempt to analyse its impact in daily practise. Standardized progressive stress was provided by bicycle ergometry in a supine position. Echocardiographic images of complete cardiac cycles were obtained in standard apical and parasternal short axial views before, during and after maximum effort and digitized for simultaneous analysis of synchronized images at rest and during exercise. 279 patients were studied (231 men, 48 women, mean age 61 +/- 10 years). Image quality was suboptimal in four cases. In the remaining 275 cases, ischemia was detected in 125 cases, the test was negative in 141 cases and doubtful in nine cases. Control by selective coronary angiography, as motivated by the clinical situation, was performed in 72 cases. In this particular group, exercise echocardiography showed 89% sensitivity, which is significantly higher than the figure of 63% recorded for conventional exercise testing (p < 0.0001). Exercise echocardiography by bicycle ergometer in a supine position is a valid, noninvasive investigative technique which can be used in an outpatient situation (feasibility 95%), since it is available on the spot. Its value appears greatest in cases where exercise ECG was not conclusive. A negative result enables the first consulted cardiologist to reassure the patient immediately, the favourable prognostic value of such a result having been demonstrated in the literature

    Outbreak of early syphilis in an institution for the care of adults with mental disorders

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    This paper describes the features of an outbreak of early syphilis in an institution for the care of adults with mental disorders. A case-note review was performed. In the period June to November 2001, 87 cases of syphilis were diagnosed [25 primary, 21 secondary and 41 early latent syphilis in 983 inmates (crude attack rate 8·9%)]. Among them 82 were heterosexual, four were homosexual or bisexual, and for one case sexual preference was not established. About half the cases were known to be promiscuous. The initial case was not identified. Penicillin therapy was administered to all cases and all known or suspected sexual contacts. Sporadic cases of syphilis have, however, continued to emerge from time to time. Institutions for patients with mental disorders are vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases, and special strategies should be devised for their control

    Heart rate recovery of individuals undergoing cardiac rehabilitation after acute coronary syndrome.

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    An efficient cardiac rehabilitation programme (CRP) can improve the functional ability of patients after acute coronary syndrome (ACS). To examine the effect of a CRP on parasympathetic reactivation and heart rate recovery (HRR) measured after a 6-min walk test (6MWT), and correlation with 6MWT distance and well-being after ACS. Eleven normoweight patients after ACS (BMI<25kg/m javax.xml.bind.JAXBElement@28fffae4 ; 10 males; mean [SD] age 61 [9] years) underwent an 8-week CRP. Before (pre-) and at weeks 4 (W4) and 8 (W8) during the CRP, they performed a 6MWT on a treadmill, followed by 10-min of seated passive recovery, with HRR and HR variability (HRV) recordings. HRR was measured at 1, 3, 5 and 10min after the 6MWT (HRR1, HRR3, HRR5, HRR10), then modelized by a mono-exponential function. Time-domain (square root of the mean of the sum of the squares of differences between adjacent normal R-R intervals [RMSSD]) and frequency-domain (with high- and low-frequency band powers) were used to analyse HRV. Participants completed a mental and physical well-being questionnaire at pre- and W8. Exhaustion after tests was assessed by the Borg scale. Pearson correlation was used to assess correlations. HRR3, HRR5 and HRR10 increased by 37%, 36% and 28%, respectively, between pre- and W8 (P<0.05), and were positively correlated with change in 6MWT distance (r=0.58, 0.66 and 0.76; P<0.05). Percentage change in HRR3 was positively correlated with change in well-being (r=0.70; P=0.01). Parasympathic reactivation (RMSSD) was improved only during the first 30sec of recovery (P=0.04). Among patients undergoing a CRP after ACS, increased HRR after a 6MWT, especially at 3min, was positively correlated with 6MWT distance and improved well-being. HRR raw data seem more sensitive than post-exercise HRV analysis for monitoring functional and autonomic improvement after ACS
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