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1.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 3: 35, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27774451

ABSTRACT

Hyponatremia is the most common electrolyte abnormality and is often neglected, especially in elderly and seemingly terminal patients. Hyponatremia can be asymptomatic or can cause symptoms ranging from nausea and lethargy to convulsions and coma. This condition has become increasingly common over time with a similar time course to the increase in adoption of low salt diets. The popularization of low salt may not be justified in people with normal kidney function in whom the compatible statistically based evidence that salt causes hypertension has been challenged by experimental evidence to the contrary.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19519370

ABSTRACT

The process of atherothrombosis is known to involve endothelial pathology (first drug target), plaque formation (second drug target) and thrombosis (third drug target). However it has recently been postulated that, even before endothelial pathology occurs, the very first step in the process of atherothrombosis is dysfunction of the arterial glycocalyx that lies between the endothelial cells and the blood [1]. So there are really four drug targets, and perhaps the arterial glycocalyx will become the most important for future early prevention of people at risk. We will review the data available on the relationship of glycocalyx dysfunction to risk factors for atherothrombosis and indicate the areas of research that are required to elucidate this important new subject. Up to the present time, hyperglycaemia and oxidised LDL have been identified as causing glycocalyx dysfunction, and we will seek publications on drugs that modify these effects. Attempts are being made to explore the possibility of drug-induced reversal of hyperglycaemia-induced glycocalyx dysfunction. Progress is, however, dependent on grants being made available for work with the essential large animal (pig) experimental model for testing glycocalyx function. Such grants have hitherto not been sufficiently forthcoming, and this needs to be brought urgently to the attention of the pharmaceutical industry.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/metabolism , Endothelium, Vascular/metabolism , Glycocalyx/physiology , Animals , Arteries/metabolism , Arteries/pathology , Atherosclerosis/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/pathology , Cardiovascular Diseases/drug therapy , Cardiovascular Diseases/pathology , Endothelium, Vascular/pathology , Glycocalyx/drug effects , Humans , Hyperglycemia/drug therapy , Hyperglycemia/metabolism , Microvessels/metabolism , Microvessels/pathology
4.
Exp Physiol ; 92(3): 541-8, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17303649

ABSTRACT

Myocardial blood flow and oxygen consumption are heterogeneously distributed. Perfusion and myocardial oxygen consumption are closely correlated in the normal heart. It is unknown how this metabolism-perfusion relation is influenced by sympathetic denervation. We investigated this question in seven chloralose-anaesthetized dogs, 3-4 weeks after regional sympathetic denervation of the left circumflex coronary artery area of supply of the left ventricle. Measurements were made of local myocardial blood flow (MBF, in ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1)), measured with microspheres, and myocardial oxygen consumption ( , in mumol min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1)) in the same location, calculated from the (13)C spectrum of tissue extracts after intracoronary infusion of 3-(13)C-lactate. Since both innervated and denervated regions are subject to the same arterial pressure, lower blood flow indicates higher resistance. Mean MBF was 5.56 ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1) (heterogeneity of 3.47 ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1)) innervated, 7.48 ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1) (heterogeneity of 3.62 ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1)) denervated (n.s.). Significant linear relations were found between MBF and M Vo2 of individual samples within the innervated and denervated regions. The slopes of these relations were not significantly different, but the adjusted mean was significantly higher in the denervated regions (+1.92 ml min(-1) (g dry wt)(-1), an increase of 38% of the mean MBF at the pooled mean M Vo2, P = 0.028, ANCOVA). The ratio MBF/M Vo2(in ml micromol(-1)) was significantly higher, being 0.296 +/- 0.167 ml micromol(-1) in the denervated region compared with the innervated region, 0.216 +/- 0.126 ml micromol(-1), P = 0.0182, Mann-Whitney U test. These results indicate that sympathetic tone under chloralose anaesthesia imposes a moderate vasoconstrictive effect in the myocardium that is not detected by comparison of the mean blood flow or resistance.


Subject(s)
Coronary Circulation , Heart/physiology , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology , Animals , Carbon Isotopes , Catecholamines/metabolism , Citric Acid Cycle/physiology , Dogs , Heart Rate/physiology , Lactates/metabolism , Regional Blood Flow/physiology , Sympathectomy , Sympathetic Nervous System/surgery , Vasoconstriction
5.
Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ; 34(2): 197-205, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16951953

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Positron emission tomography (PET) studies in patients with diabetic autonomic neuropathy (DAN) have demonstrated the impact of this disease on cardiac sympathetic innervation and myocardial blood flow (MBF). To investigate the effects of selective partial sympathetic denervation of the left ventricle (LV) on baseline and hyperaemic MBF, we measured myocardial presynaptic catecholamine re-uptake (uptake-1), beta-adrenoceptor (beta-AR) density and MBF non-invasively by means of PET in a canine model of regional sympathetic denervation. METHODS: In 11 anaesthetised dogs, the sympathetic nerves of the free wall and septum of the LV were removed by means of dissection and phenol painting. Three weeks later, the animals were studied with PET. MBF was measured at baseline and following i.v. adenosine (140 microg kg(-1) min(-1)) and dobutamine (20 microg kg(-1) min(-1)) using(15)O-labelled water. Sympathetic denervation was confirmed by an 80+/-12% decrease in the volume of distribution (V(d)) of [(11)C]hydroxyephedrine (HED) compared with innervated regions. Myocardial beta-AR density was measured using [(11)C]CGP12177. RESULTS: Innervated and denervated regions showed no differences in MBF at baseline and during adenosine or dobutamine. [(11)C]HED V(d)was inversely correlated with MBF in both regions at baseline, and the correlation was lost during hyperaemia in denervated regions. However, for any given value of MBF, [(11)C]HED V(d)was significantly lower in the denervated regions. beta-AR density was comparable in denervated and innervated regions (17.9+/-4.2 vs 18.4+/-3.3 pmol g(-1); p=NS). CONCLUSION: In this experimental model, selective, regional sympathetic denervation of the LV, which results in a profound reduction in [(11)C]HED V(d), did not affect baseline or hyperaemic MBF. In addition, we demonstrated that, under baseline conditions, there was a significant inverse correlation between [(11)C]HED V(d)and MBF in both denervated and innervated regions.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Autonomic Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Blood Flow Velocity , Coronary Circulation , Disease Models, Animal , Hyperemia/diagnostic imaging , Hyperemia/physiopathology , Animals , Autonomic Denervation , Dogs , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Heart/innervation , Radionuclide Imaging
6.
J Biomech ; 39(14): 2657-64, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16256122

ABSTRACT

In order to determine the mode of beat-to-beat decay of contractility from very high levels, we studied the beat-by-beat decay of cardiac contractility following potentiation. Such decay curves are normally analysed using a mono-exponential decay function, which assumes that a fixed fraction of activator calcium ions is recirculated from one beat to the next. We postulated that there might be deviations from such a mono-exponential expression at high levels of contractility. In single sucrose-gap voltage clamp experiments of isolated ferret papillary muscle, we obtained very high contractility by potentiation due to prolonged depolarisations. We found a bi-exponential decay in 9 of 11 muscles studied, in which the initial decay is much faster than the subsequent slower decay, as judged by residual variance of least-squares exponential fitting and by analysis of covariance using a linear equation (force of beat versus force of previous beat), p = 0.0089. In the slower decay period (physiological range), the decay was identical to that following post-extrasystolic potentiation in the same muscles studied with conventional stimulation.


Subject(s)
Myocardial Contraction/physiology , Papillary Muscles/physiology , Ventricular Function, Right/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Calcium Signaling/physiology , Ferrets , In Vitro Techniques , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
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