Search results for "HEART"

showing 10 items of 3201 documents

Medium-term effects of bisoprolol administration on renal hemodynamics and function in mild to moderate essential hypertension

2007

Arterial hypertension is a significant cause of end-stage renal failure; effective treatment of hypertensive patients reduces the rate of progression of this disorder. ss-Blockers, particularly nonselective agents, are associated with deterioration of renal function in patients with chronic renal failure. Previous studies on the interaction of the beta1-selective adrenergic antagonist bisoprolol with kidney function have been performed only acutely and over the short term. This study was designed to evaluate the antihypertensive efficacy and effects on renal hemodynamics and function of bisoprolol during medium-term (6 mo) treatment of patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension. …

renal hemodynamicsAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaAdrenergic beta-AntagonistsHemodynamicsRenal functionBlood PressureKidney Function TestsPlaceboEssential hypertensionDrug Administration ScheduleRenal CirculationInternal medicineHeart ratemedicineAdrenergic antagonistBisoprololHumansPharmacology (medical)Antihypertensive Agentsbusiness.industryessential hypertensionGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseBlood pressureBisoprololHypertensionCardiologyFemalebusinessmedicine.drugAdvances in Therapy
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Heart rate and other risk factors in outpatients with stable coronary artery disease in Latvia

2011

Heart rate and other risk factors in outpatients with stable coronary artery disease in Latvia The aim of the study was to characterise coronary artery disease (CAD) outpatients in Latvia by risk factors (RF) including heart rate (HR), physical examination data, clinical data and treatment. Twelve practitioners had each examined and questioned 6 to 12 patients with established CAD (n = 120). The most frequent cardiovascular (CV) RF and co-morbidity were dyslipidemia (94.2%) and hypertension (78.3%), respectively. Prevalence of increased resting HR (≥70 bpm) was 35.9% and 33.6%, when measured by pulse palpation and electrocardiography, respectively. Regarding other RFs, prevalence of treated…

resting heart ratemedicine.medical_specialtyMultidisciplinaryFramingham Risk ScoreGeneral interestScienceQmedicine.diseaseRESTING HEART RATECoronary artery diseaseInternal medicineHeart rateoutpatientmedicineCardiologyrisk factorscoronary artery diseaseProceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B, Natural Sciences
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Nitrate and nitrite in the diet: How to assess their benefit and risk for human health

2015

Nitrate is a natural constituent of the human diet and an approved food additive. It can be partially converted to nitrogen monoxide, which induces vasodilation and thereby decreases blood pressure. This effect is associated with a reduced risk regarding cardiovascular disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke. Moreover, dietary nitrate has been associated with beneficial effects in patients with gastric ulcer, renal failure, or metabolic syndrome. Recent studies indicate that such beneficial health effects due to dietary nitrate may be achievable at intake levels resulting from the daily consumption of nitrate-rich vegetables. N-nitroso compounds are endogenously formed in humans. However…

risk analysisNitriteischemia-reperfusion injuryPhysiologyBenefitNitric OxideToxicologyNitratereduces blood-pressureNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundNitrateRisk FactorsNeoplasmsVegetablesmedicineAnimalsHumansfluke opisthorchis-viverriniNitritenih-aarp dietNitritesToxicologiecolorectal-cancer riskCarcinogenRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicVLAGNitratesChemistryN-nitroso compoundsmedicine.diseasenitrosatable drug exposureDietMeat ProductsDisease Models Animaln-nitroso compoundsBlood pressureBiochemistryNitrosationMetabolic syndromecoronary-heart-diseaseRisk assessmentBiomarkersNitroso Compoundsinorganic nitrateneural-tube defectsFood ScienceBiotechnology
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Warming temperatures and ectoparasitic sea lice impair internal organs in juvenile Atlantic salmon

2021

As a consequence of climate change and open net-pen salmon farming, wild Atlantic salmon Salmo salar are increasingly likely to encounter elevated temperatures and parasite abundances during their early marine migration. Such stressors can compromise fitness by diminishing liver energy stores and impairing cardiac muscle. To assess whether temperature and infestation by salmon lice Lepeophtheirus salmonis are important correlates of liver energy stores and cardiac muscle performance in juvenile salmon, we experimentally infested fish at 3 abundances of louse infestation (zero, low, and high) and 5 temperatures (10, 13, 16, 19, and 22°C). At the end of the experiment (i.e. when sea lice reac…

salmon farmslohiheartparasitismikalatäitilmastonmuutoksetliverclimate changekalanviljelyaquacultureLepeophtheirus salmonisloisetparasitic diseasescardiosomatic indexhepatosomatic indexlämpötilalämpeneminenfysiologiset vaikutukset
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Rat Cardiac progenitor cells and their application in cell therapy

2015

cells and the subsequent heart failure. When the pharmacological approach no longer complies with the disease evolution, organ transplantation appears to be the only treatment able to rescue the patient life. Cell therapy promises to be clinically efficient and would allow circumventing many limitations of organ transplantation, such as organ low availability, major surgical procedures, high costs and longterm immunosuppression [1]. We designed porous Poly-Lactic Acid (PLLA) and Fibroin scaffolds to deliver CPCs in the heart, we isolated and characterized CPCs for the expression of c-Kit, MDR-1 and Sca-1 by flow cytometry, we tested their degree of differentiation in vitro studying the expr…

scaffold heart cardiac stem cellsCardiac progenitor cells; biomaterials; cell therapy.
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Heart rate variability and self-control–A meta-analysis

2016

We read the commentary on our meta-analysis with great interest and we greatly appreciate that the authors developed suggestions for further research on heart rate variability (HRV) and self-control. While we mostly support these suggestions, we believe that it is necessary to clarify some points raised with respect to our meta-analysis. The first point brought up by the authors of the commentary is the focus of our meta-analysis on HRV instead of vagal tone and the inclusion of studies using the standard deviation of RR intervals (SDNN). They argue that only vagal tone and HRV metrics reflecting vagal tone are expected to be linked to self-control according to both the Neurovisceral Integr…

self-regulationself-controllcsh:BF1-990Context (language use)Affect (psychology)050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHeart rate variabilityPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesVagal toneReactivity (psychology)General Psychologyparasympathetic nervous systemGeneral Commentary05 social sciencesheart rate variabilityvagal toneModerationparasympathetic activitylcsh:PsychologyPolyvagal TheoryMeta-analysisPsychologySocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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Sex differences in correlates of intermediate phenotypes and prevalent cardiovascular disease in the general population

2015

Background: There are marked sex differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD) manifestation. It is largely unknown how the distribution of CVD risk factors or intermediate phenotypes explain sex-specific differences. Methods and Results: In 5000 individuals of the population-based Gutenberg Health Study, mean age 55 ± 11 years, 51% males, we examined sex-specific associations of classical CVD risk factors with intima-media thickness, ankle-brachial index, flow-mediated dilation, peripheral arterial tonometry, echocardiographic, and electrocardiographic variables. Intermediate cardiovascular phenotypes were related to prevalent CVD [coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke, myocardial i…

sex differencesPathologymedicine.medical_specialtylcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) systemPopulationDiseaseCardiovascular MedicineCoronary artery diseasenon-invasive vascular functionInternal medicinemedicineMyocardial infarctioncardiovascular diseaseseducationeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryNoninvasive vascular functionmedicine.diseaseBlood pressurePopulation-based Studylcsh:RC666-701Heart failureCohortOriginal Research in MedicineCardiologycardiac functionCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessBody mass indexcardiovascular epidemiologyFrontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
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Sex Differences in the Physiological Network of Healthy Young Subjects

2021

Within human physiology, systemic interactions couple physiological variables to maintain homeostasis. These interactions change according to health status and are modified by factors such as age and sex. For several physiological processes, sex-based distinctions in normal physiology are present and defined in isolation. However, new methodologies are indispensable to analyze system-wide properties and interactions with the objective of exploring differences between sexes. Here we propose a new method to construct complex inferential networks from a normalization using the clinical criteria for health of physiological variables, and the correlations between anthropometric and blood tests b…

sex differencesmedicine.diagnostic_testPhysiologyheart rate variabilityhealthanthropometric measuresHuman physiologyblood testBiologyAnthropometrySexual dimorphismphysiological networkPhysiology (medical)sexual dimorphismmedicineGlucose homeostasisHeart rate variabilityBlood testQP1-981Association (psychology)Network approachDemographyOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Physiology
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Role of Biological Sex in the Cardiovascular-Gut Microbiome Axis

2022

There has been a recent, unprecedented interest in the role of gut microbiota in host health and disease. Technological advances have dramatically expanded our knowledge of the gut microbiome. Increasing evidence has indicated a strong link between gut microbiota and the development of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). In the present article, we discuss the contribution of gut microbiota in the development and progression of CVD. We further discuss how the gut microbiome may differ between the sexes and how it may be influenced by sex hormones. We put forward that regulation of microbial composition and function by sex might lead to sex-biased disease susceptibility, thereby offering a mechani…

sex differencesvasculaturegut microbiotaMini ReviewcardiovascularRC666-701heart failureDiseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) systemCardiovascular MedicineCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinedigestive systemFrontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
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EFFECTS OF SHIFT WORK ON CARDIOVASCULAR ACTIVITY, SERUM CORTISOL AND WHITE BLOOD CELLS COUNT IN A GROUP OF ITALIAN FISHERMEN

2012

We analyzed the effects of working activity and working shifts on the circadian rhythmicity and circadian phase relations of serum cortisol level, white blood cells count, resting heart rate and systolic/diastolic blood pressure in a group of italian fishermen. We observed a shift-induced displacement of cortisol secretion and a modification in leukocyte count. Moreover, systolic/diastolic blood pressure and resting heart rate were markedly influenced by the night shift, whereas no appreciable changes were observed after the morning and afternoon shifts, compared to pre-working values. These data suggest that the human circadian system is greatly influenced by shift work, and serum cortisol…

shift work cortisol leukocyte count heart rate vagal tone job strain circadian rhythmsSettore MED/44 - Medicina Del Lavoro
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