28 research outputs found

    Electrocardiographic Changes After Physical-training in Patients With Myocardial-infarction

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    Electrocardiographic voltage measurements were performed in 24 men with an inferior myocardial infarction before and after 14 ± 0.5 weeks of physical training. Oxygen uptake at peak exercise increased 42% and heart rate at rest was significantly decreased after training. Increases were found in the magnitude of the R waves in leads II, aVF and V4to V6; of the S wave in leads V1and V3; of the T waves in V5and V6; and of the Sokolow index of QRS voltage. Also, the magnitude of the mean electrical vector in the frontal plane was significantly higher after training. These data were compared with those derived from two electrocardiographic tracings, separated by an average of 19 ± 1.5 weeks, of 20 other patients with an inferior myocardial infarction who were comparable in age, weight, risk factor and delay between infarction and first examination, but who were not trained.When the electrocardiographic changes between the two observations were compared for the two groups, the trained patients show significant increases in the magnitude of the R wave in the left precordial leads, and leads II and aVF and the Sokolow voltage criterion; in the magnitude of the T wave in leads V5and V6; and in the magnitude of the mean electrical vector in the frontal plane. It is concluded that physical training in patients with myocardial infarction can alter cardiac structure, as evaluated by voltage measurements on the electrocardiogram

    Effect of dexfenfluramine treatment on body weight, blood pressure and noradrenergic activity in obese hypertensive patients.

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    The effect of dexfenfluramine (dF) on body weight, blood pressure and noradrenergic activity were studied in 30 obese hypertensive patients randomly divided into two groups and treated for 3 months either with dF (30 mg daily; 16 subjects) or placebo (Pl; 14 subjects). 11 patients from the dF group and 9 patients given Pl completed the entire experimental protocol, including monthly visits for metabolic and hormonal measurements, as well as a bicycle exercise test with arterial catheterisation for haemodynamic and catecholamine measurements performed before and after 3 months of treatment. A progressive significant decrease in body weight, averaging 6.0 kg after 3 months was observed in the dF-treated group, whereas loss of weight in the placebo group (1.4 kg) was not significant. While blood pressure and noradrenergic activity, assessed as changes in the plasma levels and urinary excretion of norepinephrine, remained unaffected in the Pl group, a significant drop in the supine systolic and diastolic blood pressures, as well as in the resting venous norepinephrine level and in urinary norepinephrine excretion was found after the first month of dF administration. In addition, the exercise-induced rise in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, as well as in arterial plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine concentrations, was significantly reduced after 3 months of dF administration; there were no such changes in the Pl-treated group. The results of the present study indicate that, in addition to the weight-reducing effect of dexfenfluramine, its hypotensive effect may be mediated by a decrease in noradrenergic activity

    QT dispersion in myocardial infarction: influence of lead combination

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    This study aimed at comparing QT dispersion (QTD) in various combinations of surface ECG leads among 1,000 normal subjects (NL), and in 200 patients with anterior (AMI) or inferior (IMI) myocardial infarction without previous ventricular tachyarrhythmias. On an averaged beat of 15 simultaneous leads (12-leads+XYZ-Leads) and through interactive editing, QTD is automatically computed. In each lead combination, mean values were significantly higher in AMI and IMI than in NL(p<0.01). In each clinical group, QTD was quite similar in the 12 leads and the 15 leads, whereas XYZ leads showed lower values. However, the discriminant power of XYZ leads was significantly higher since it allowed one to identify 22% of the IMI patients and 46% of the AMI patients with QTD, exceeding the 97.5 percentile of the normal grou

    Early short-term intensive cardiac rehabilitation induces positive results as long as one year after the acute coronary event: a prospective one-year controlled study.

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    AIMS: The one-year effects of early and short-term intensive cardiac rehabilitation programmes in patients after acute myocardial infarction or coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) are not well established. METHODS AND RESULTS: One to four weeks after hospital discharge for acute myocardial infarction (n=55) or CABG (n=54), 109 patients were included in a multidisciplinary ambulatory cardiac rehabilitation programme, lasting 2 to 3 months and including a mean of 33 daily sessions. A complete cardiological assessment of the classical coronary risk factors was performed at entry into the study and again 12 months later, that is 9 to 10 months after the end of the rehabilitation programme. Major effects at one-year follow-up were a high rate of aspirin intake, a low rate of smoking (14% of the patients), a 15% increase in physical capacity, a 7 beats/min decrease in resting heart and a 4 mg/dl increase in the HDL-cholesterol. Body weight increased by 4.9 kg in the patients who stopped smoking; the modest increase in body weight in the other patients reflected a partial weight recovery in the CABG patients. Blood pressure levels also increased at the end of the study but our data in CABG patients and their extrapolation to the post MI patients strongly suggest a progressive return of blood pressure to the pre-acute event levels. In a control group matched for age, sex and type of coronary event, no significant modifications were observed after one year, except for an increase in body weight of 1.7 kg (P < 0.000).CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac rehabilitation which started early after an acute coronary event and regularly followed during 2 to 3 months induced beneficial effects which were still present 9 to 10 months later. Weight gain after smoking cessation was prevalent. The lack of changes in the control group reinforced the benefit of cardiac rehabilitation
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