Rho-kinase plays an important role in calcium sensitization for vascular smooth muscle (VSMC) contraction and may be involved in the inappropriate coronary vasoconstriction during exercise-induced myocardial ischemia. In this multicenter phase II study, the anti-anginal effect of fasudil, which is metabolized to a specific Rho-kinase inhibitor hydroxyfasudil after oral administration, was examined in patients with stable effort angina. In the phase IIa trial, after a 2-week washout period of anti-anginal drugs, 45 patients received increasing doses of fasudil (5, 10, and 20 mg TID for every 2 weeks). The fasudil treatment significantly prolonged the maximum exercise time and the time to the onset of 1-mm ST segment depression on treadmill exercise test (both p < 0.01), whereas blood pressure and heart rate during exercise were unchanged before and after the treatment. Higher doses of fasudil (20 and 40 mg TID) were subsequently tested in 22 patients in the same manner with similar positive results. In the phase IIb trial, after a 2-week washout period of anti-anginal drugs, 125 patients were assigned, in a double-blind manner, to a 4-week oral treatment with a different dose of fasudil (5, 10, 20, or 40 mg TID) and treadmill exercise test was performed before and after the treatment. Again, both maximum exercise time and time to the onset of 1-mm ST segment depression were prolonged in all groups. A significant dose-response relation was noted across the treatment groups for the exercise tolerance index that was determined by the combined effect of exercise time and ST segment depression (p = 0.006). Fasudil was well tolerated in both trials without any serious adverse reactions. These results suggest the efficacy and adequate safety profile of fasudil, the first drug in a novel class of vasodilators, for the treatment of stable effort angina.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of the vagal blocker atropine on the fractal nature of human heart rate variability (HRV) at rest. Approximately 10-min segments of beat-to-beat heartbeat intervals, i.e., HRV, of 10 normal subjects and 11 cardiac disease patients were measured before and after intravenous injection of 0.5-0.75 mg atropine sulfate. HRV data were analyzed by coarse graining spectral analysis (Y. Yamamoto and R. L. Hughson, Physica 68D: 250-264, 1993) to break down their total power into harmonic and nonharmonic (fractal) components. The harmonic component was used to calculate the contribution of high (> 0.15 Hz)-frequency components to total HRV power (%HF). From the fractal component, the contribution of the fractal component to total HRV power (%fractal), the spectral exponent beta, and Hurst scaling exponent (H) were calculated. For both normal subjects and cardiac patients, atropine resulted in significantly (P < 0.05) less mean HRV and significantly (P < 0.05) greater beta compared with control, whereas mean values for %fractal were as high as 70% and were not significantly (P > 0.05) different between atropine and control. The mean value of H with atropine was significantly (P < 0.05) greater than that for control. Directional changes in %HF and beta were consistent with only one exception for a patient who had the smallest change in log %HF by atropine. The normally irregular fractal pattern of resting HRV was decreased by atropine as shown by the decrease in %HF and the increase in beta.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Coronary vasospasm may provoke vascular injury that leads to the formation of neointima in VAP patients similar to that seen with restenosis. Coronary spasm may thus play a key role in the rapid coronary stenosis progression in certain patients with VAP.
Inflow characteristics of left and right ventricular filling were assessed in 40 patients with myocardial infarction and in 10 normal subjects by pulsed Doppler echocardiography. Patients with myocardial infarction were subdivided into four groups, focusing on the involvement of right ventricular and septal branches of the coronary arteries. Group I consisted of 11 patients with anterior infarction who showed an obstructive lesion of the proximal left anterior descending branch involving the first septal perforator with a patent right coronary artery. Group II consisted of 10 patients with inferior infarction who showed an obstructive lesion of the proximal right coronary artery involving the right ventricular branch. Group III consisted of 12 patients with both anterior and inferior infarction who showed obstructive lesions of both the proximal left anterior descending branch and the right coronary artery involving the right ventricular branch. Group IV consisted of seven patients with lateral infarction who showed an obstructive lesion of the diagonal branch or branches of the circumflex coronary artery with a patent left anterior descending branch and right coronary artery. Three measurements were performed from the transmitral and transtricuspidal inflow velocity patterns to assess the left and right ventricular diastolic behaviors. These measurements were: acceleration half-time, deceleration half-time of early diastolic rapid inflow, and the ratio of the peak velocity of early diastolic rapid inflow to that of the late diastolic inflow due to the atrial contraction. Impaired diastolic filling of the left ventricle compensated by enhanced left atrial contraction was observed in patients with myocardial infarction from groups I, II, III and IV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
PETCO2 was below normal in cardiac patients at rest and during exercise. PETCO2 was correlated with exercise capacity and cardiac output during exercise, and the sensitivity and specificity of PETCO2 regarding decreased cardiac output were good. PETCO2 may be a new ventilatory abnormality marker that reflects impaired cardiac output response to exercise in cardiac patients diagnosed with heart failure.
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