ILR findings showed results other than NMS in a small, although non-negligible, number of patients older than 40 years. TT was unable to discriminate between presumed NMS and non-NMS with the exception of an asystolic response which was highly specific.
Permanent cardiac pacing is effective in reducing recurrence of syncope in patients ≥ 40 years with severe asystolic possible NMS with a few complications. The study shows that 61% of patients with a diagnosis of NMS made by ILR received a pacemaker but 5.1 ILRs had to be implanted to find one patient who finally had a pacemaker implanted.
A comparative study of the effects of oral and sublingual captopril on the hemodynamics of the peripheral musculocutaneous vasculature was carried out on ten patients with essential hypertension. Both routes of administration of captopril lead to lower blood pressure and decreased regional resistance, and to an increased arterial blood flow at rest. The first measurable effect and the peak effect on blood pressure and peripheral hemodynamics appear slightly earlier with sublingual administration. The data provided in this study support the usefulness of the sublingual route in clinical situations in which oral administration of captopril is not feasible.
The study investigates the genesis of the third heart sound (S3) in ischemic heart disease based on a mass-spring model. In such a system, the natural frequency of vibration, Fn, depends on the elastic constant, k, and the mass, m, according to the following relationship: Fn = 1/2 π k/m. To identify the cardiac structures representing k and m, the correlations between the energy of the S3 spectrum and the echocardiographic parameters were searched for. The results are consistent with a model in which k is represented by the thickness of the left ventricle and m by its blood content. The k/m ratio emerges as an important determining factor of the acoustic quality of S3, and yields information on the dysfunction of the left ventricle in ischemic heart disease.
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