899 results on '"Warltier, David C"'
Search Results
2. Far red/near infrared light treatment promotes femoral artery collateralization in the ischemic hindlimb
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Lohr, Nicole L., Ninomiya, James T., Warltier, David C., and Weihrauch, Dorothée
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- 2013
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- View/download PDF
3. Failure of Isoflurane Cardiac Preconditioning in Obese Type 2 Diabetic Mice Involves Aberrant Regulation of MicroRNA-21, Endothelial Nitric-oxide Synthase, and Mitochondrial Complex I
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Ge, Zhi-Dong, Li, Yingchuan, Qiao, Shigang, Bai, Xiaowen, Warltier, David C., Kersten, Judy R., Bosnjak, Zeljko J., and Liang, Mingyu
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- 2018
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4. RSR13, A Synthetic Allosteric Modifier of Hemoglobin, Enhances Recovery of Stunned Myocardium in Dogs
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Pagel, Paul S., Hettrick, Douglas A., Montgomery, Matthew W., Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., Hudetz, Antal G., editor, and Bruley, Duane F., editor
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- 1998
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5. Ischemia-Induced Coronary Collateral Angiogenesis
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Weihrauch, Dorothee, Tessmer, John P., Kersten, Judy R., Pagel, Paul S., Hettrick, Douglas A., Chilian, William M., Warltier, David C., Hudetz, Antal G., editor, and Bruley, Duane F., editor
- Published
- 1998
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6. Ventricular Function
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Warltier, David C., Stanley, T. H., editor, and Bailey, P. L., editor
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- 1996
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7. The Coronary Circulation
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Warltier, David C., Stanley, T. H., editor, and Bailey, P. L., editor
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- 1996
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8. Cardiovascular Actions of Desflurane
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Warltier, David C., Stanley, T. H., editor, and Bailey, P. L., editor
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- 1996
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9. Endothelial–cardiomyocyte crosstalk enhances pharmacological cardioprotection
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Leucker, Thorsten M., Bienengraeber, Martin, Muravyeva, Maria, Baotic, Ines, Weihrauch, Dorothee, Brzezinska, Anna K., Warltier, David C., Kersten, Judy R., and Pratt, Phillip F., Jr.
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- 2011
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10. History of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Is Associated With Impaired Neuropsychometric Performance After Coronary Artery Surgery
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Hudetz, Judith A., Gandhi, Sweeta D., Iqbal, Zafar, Patterson, Kathleen M., Byrne, Alison J., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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- 2010
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11. Preoperative Dispositional Optimism Correlates With a Reduced Incidence of Postoperative Delirium and Recovery of Postoperative Cognitive Function in Cardiac Surgical Patients
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Hudetz, Judith A., Hoffmann, Raymond G., Patterson, Kathleen M., Byrne, Alison J., Iqbal, Zafar, Gandhi, Sweeta D., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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- 2010
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12. Ketamine Attenuates Delirium After Cardiac Surgery With Cardiopulmonary Bypass
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Hudetz, Judith A., Patterson, Kathleen M., Iqbal, Zafar, Gandhi, Sweeta D., Byrne, Alison J., Hudetz, Anthony G., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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- 2009
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13. Morphine Reduces the Threshold of Helium Preconditioning Against Myocardial Infarction: The Role of Opioid Receptors in Rabbits
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Pagel, Paul S., Krolikowski, John G., Amour, Julien, Warltier, David C., and Weihrauch, Dorothee
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- 2009
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- View/download PDF
14. Enhancement of nitric oxide release from nitrosyl hemoglobin and nitrosyl myoglobin by red/near infrared radiation: Potential role in cardioprotection
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Lohr, Nicole L., Keszler, Agnes, Pratt, Phillip, Bienengraber, Martin, Warltier, David C., and Hogg, Neil
- Published
- 2009
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15. Near infrared light protects cardiomyocytes from hypoxia and reoxygenation injury by a nitric oxide dependent mechanism
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Zhang, Rong, Mio, Yasushi, Pratt, Philip F., Lohr, Nicole, Warltier, David C., Whelan, Harry T., Zhu, Daling, Jacobs, Elizabeth R., Medhora, Meetha, and Bienengraeber, Martin
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- 2009
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16. Reactive Oxygen Species and Mitochondrial Adenosine Triphosphate–Regulated Potassium Channels Mediate Helium-Induced Preconditioning Against Myocardial Infarction In Vivo
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Pagel, Paul S., Krolikowski, John G., Pratt, Phillip F., Jr, Shim, Yon Hee, Amour, Julien, Warltier, David C., and Weihrauch, Dorothee
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- 2008
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17. Postoperative delirium is associated with postoperative cognitive dysfunction at one week after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
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Hudetz, Judith A., Byrne, Alison J., Patterson, Kathleen M., Pagel, Paul S., and Warltier, David C.
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Coronary artery bypass -- Complications and side effects ,Delirium -- Risk factors ,Cardiac patients -- Psychological aspects ,Surgery -- Complications ,Surgery -- Risk factors ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Postoperative delirium with cognitive impairment frequently occurs after cardiac surgery. It was hypothesized that delirium is associated with residual postoperative cognitive dysfunction in patients after surgery using cardiopulmonary bypass. Male cardiac surgical patients (M age = 66 yr., SD = 8; M education = 13 yr., SD = 2) and nonsurgical controls (M age = 62, SD = 7; M education = 12, SD = 2) 55 years of age or older were balanced on age and education. Delirium was assessed by the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist preoperatively and for up to 5 days postoperatively. Recent verbal and nonverbal memory and executive functions were assessed (as scores on particular tests) before and 1 wk. after surgery. In 56 patients studied (n = 28 Surgery; n = 28 Nonsurgery), nine patients from the Surgery group developed delirium. In the Surgery group, the proportion of patients having postoperative cognitive dysfunction was significantly greater in those who experienced delirium (89%) compared with those who did not (37%). The odds of developing this dysfunction in patients with delirium were 14 times greater than those who did not. Postoperative delirium is associated with scores for residual postoperative cognitive dysfunction 1 wk. after cardiac surgery. DOI 10.2466/PR0.105.3.921-932
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- 2009
18. Myocardial interstitial fluid inhibits proliferation and cardiomyocyte differentiation in pluripotent embryonic stem cells
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Van Orman, Jordan R., Weihrauch, Dorothee, Warltier, David C., and Lough, John
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Cell differentiation -- Research ,Embryonic stem cells -- Physiological aspects ,Heart attack -- Care and treatment ,Heart attack -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Several recent studies have demonstrated that the transplantation of pluripotent routine embryonic stem cells (mESCs) can improve or restore the function of infarcted myocardium. Although the extent of remuscularization and its contribution to the restoration of function are unclear, these outcomes are likely strongly influenced by factors in the infarcted and/or ischemic environment. As an initial step toward understanding how the ischemic environment of host myocardium affects transplanted pluripotent cells, we have taken a reductionist approach wherein mESCs are cultured in medium containing ischemic myocardial interstitial fluid (iMIF). iMIF is generated in canine myocardium during eight hourly episodes of transient ischemia and collected on a daily basis, over a 24-day collection period, iMIF strongly reduced the numbers of pluripotent mESCs after 11 days in culture. This inhibitory effect, which was most pronounced for iMIF pools from early time points of the 24-day collection period, resulted from an inhibition of cell proliferation, iMIF also inhibited the differentiation of pluripotent mESCs into cardiomyocytes. By contrast, the expression of vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cell markers was relatively unaffected, consistent with previous findings that iMIF promotes angiogenesis. Taken together, these results suggest that whereas the ischemic/ infarcted environment is favorable to stem cell-mediated angiogenesis, it is hostile to cardiac myogenesis. These findings also imply that observations of mESC-mediated improvement of cardiac function after transplantation of pluripotent cells do not reflect remuscularization. pluripotent mouse embryonic stem cells; vascular smooth muscle; endothelial cells doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00172.2009
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- 2009
19. Role of Erk1/2, p70s6K, and eNOS in isofluraneinduced cardioprotection during early reperfusionin vivo
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Krolikowski, John G., Weihrauch, Dorothee, Bienengraeber, Martin, Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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- 2006
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20. Isoflurane preconditioning uncouples mitochondria and protects against hypoxia-reoxygenation
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Ljubkovic, Marko, Mio, Yasushi, Marinovic, Jasna, Stadnicka, Anna, Warltier, David C., Bosnjak, Zeljko J., and Bienengraeber, Martin
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Heart cells -- Research ,Heart cells -- Physiological aspects ,Myocardial ischemia -- Research ,Myocardial ischemia -- Physiological aspects ,Isoflurane -- Research ,Isoflurane -- Physiological aspects ,Physiological research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Ischemic cardiac injury can be substantially alleviated by exposing the heart to pharmacological agents such as volatile anesthetics before occurrence of ischemia-reperfusion. A hallmark of this preconditioning phenomenon is its memory, when cardioprotective effects persist even after removal of preconditioning stimulus. Since numerous studies pinpoint mitochondria as crucial players in protective pathways of preconditioning, the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of preconditioning agent isoflurane on the mitochondrial bioenergetic phenotype. Endogenous flavoprotein fluorescence, an indicator of mitochondrial redox state, was elevated to 195 [+ or -] 16% of baseline upon isoflurane application in intact cardiomyocytes, indicating more oxidized state of mitochondria. Isoflurane treatment also elicited partial dissipation of mitochondrial transmembrane potential, which remained depolarized even after anesthetic withdrawal (tetramethyl-rhodamine fluorescence intensity declined to 83 [+ or -] 3 and 81 [+ or -] 7% of baseline during isoflurane exposure and washout, respectively). Mild uncoupling, with preserved ATP synthesis, was also detected in mitochondria that were isolated from animals that had been previously preconditioned by isoflurane in vivo, revealing its memory nature. These mitochondria, after exposure to hypoxia and reoxygenation, exhibited better preserved respiration and ATP synthesis compared with mitochondria from nonpreconditioned animals. Partial mitochondrial depolarization was paralleled by a diminished [Ca.sup.2+] uptake into isoflurane-treated mitochondria, as indicated by the reduced increment in rhod-2 fluorescence when mitochondria were challenged with increased [Ca.sup.2+] (180 [+ or -] 24 vs. 258 [+ or -] 14% for the control). In conclusion, isoflurane preconditioning elicits partial mitochondrial uncoupling and reduces mitochondrial [Ca.sup.2+] uptake. These effects are likely to reduce the extent of the mitochondrial damage after the hypoxic stress. cardioprotection; uncoupling doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.00221.2006.
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- 2007
21. Positive inotropic drugs
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Pagel, Paul S., primary and Warltier, David C., additional
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- 2013
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22. Alterations in wall shear stress predict sites of neointimal hyperplasia after stent implantation in rabbit iliac arteries
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LaDisa, John F., Jr., Olson, Lars. E., Molthen, Robert C., Hettrick, Douglas A., Pratt, Phillip F., Hardel, Michael D., Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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Stent (Surgery) -- Research ,Arteries -- Research ,Heart -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Restenosis resulting from neointimal hyperplasia (NH) limits the effectiveness of intravascular stents. Rates of restenosis vary with stent geometry, but whether stents affect spatial and temporal distributions of wall shear stress (WSS) in vivo is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that alterations in spatial WSS after stent implantation predict sites of NH in rabbit iliac arteries. Antegrade iliac artery stent implantation was performed under angiography, and blood flow was measured before casting 14 or 21 days after implantation. Iliac artery blood flow domains were obtained from three-dimensional microfocal X-ray computed tomography imaging and reconstruction of the arterial casts. Indexes of WSS were determined using three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics. Vascular histology was unchanged proximal and distal to the stent. Time-dependent NH was localized within the stented region and was greatest in regions exposed to low WSS and acute elevations in spatial WSS gradients. The lowest values of WSS spatially localized to the stented area of a theoretical artery progressively increased after 14 and 21 days as NH occurred within these regions. This NH abolished spatial disparity in distributions of WSS. The results suggest that stents may introduce spatial alterations in WSS that modulate NH in vivo. computational fluid dynamics; restenosis; computational modeling; computed tomography; image reconstruction; wall shear stress
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- 2005
23. Three-Dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics Modeling of Alterations in Coronary Wall Shear Stress Produced by Stent Implantation
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LaDisa, Jr., John F., Guler, Ismail, Olson, Lars E., Hettrick, Douglas A., Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
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- 2003
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24. Cardioprotection by glucose-insulin-potassium: dependence on [K.sub.ATP] channel opening and blood glucose concentration before ischemia
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LaDisa, John F., Jr., Krolikowski, John G., Pagel, Paul S., Warltier, David C., and Kersten, Judy R.
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Hyperglycemia -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK)-induced protection against myocardial infarction depends on ATP-dependent [K.sup.+] ([K.sub.ATP]) channel activation and is abolished by hyperglycemia before the ischemia. Dogs were subjected to a 60-min coronary artery occlusion and 3-h reperfusion in the absence or presence of GIK (25% dextrose; 50 IU insulin/l; 80 mM/l KCl infused at 1.5 ml*[kg.sup.-1]*[h.sup.-1]) beginning 75 min before coronary artery occlusion or 5 min before reperfusion. The role of [K.sub.ATP] channels was evaluated by pretreatment with glyburide (0.1 mg/kg). The efficacy of GIK was investigated with increases in blood glucose (BG) concentrations to 300 or 600 mg/dl or experimental diabetes (alloxan/streptozotocin). Infarct size (IS) was 29 [+ or -] 2% of the area at risk in control experiments. GIK decreased (P < 0.05) IS when administered beginning 5 min before reperfusion. This protective action was independent of BG (13 [+ or -] 2 and 12 [+ or -] 2% of area at risk; BG = 80 or 600 mg/dl, respectively) but was abolished in dogs receiving glyburide (30 [+ or -] 4%), hyperglycemia before ischemia (27 [+ or -] 4%), or diabetes (25 [+ or -] 3%). IS was unchanged by GIK when administered before ischemia independent of BG (31 [+ or -] 3, 27 [+ or -] 2, and 35 [+ or -] 3%; BG = 80, 300, and 600 mg/dl, respectively). The insulin component of GIK promotes cardioprotection by [K.sub.ATP] channel activation. However, glucose decreases [K.sub.ATP] channel activity, and this effect predominates when hyperglycemia is present before ischemia. diabetes; hyperglycemia; myocardial infarction
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- 2004
25. Cardiac pharmacological preconditioning with volatile anesthetics: from bench to bedside?
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Riess, Matthias L., Stowe, David F., and Warltier, David C.
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Diabetes -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
A steadily increasing number of investigations demonstrate that preconditioning with volatile anesthetics attenuates the deleterious effects of myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury by an ischemic preconditioning-like mechanism. Thus volatile anesthetics may represent the best choice for anesthesia of patients at risk for myocardial ischemia. However, factors such as old age, coexisting conditions such as diabetes mellitus and the use of oral hypoglycemic drugs or cyclooxygenase inhibitors, timing and duration of myocardial ischemia, and possible constraints of a complicated preconditioning protocol may limit the benefits of this powerful tool under clinical conditions. The purpose of this minireview is to provide a brief overview of the results of basic and clinical research on cardioprotection by volatile anesthetics. age; clinical; diabetes; duration; ischemia-reperfusion injury
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- 2004
26. Dobutamine
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Warltier, David C., primary
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- 2011
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27. Contributors
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Adhikary, Sanjib, primary, Aguilar, Jorge, additional, Ahere, Charles, additional, Ahmed, Moustafa, additional, Ahn, Jane C., additional, Akhtar, Shamsuddin, additional, Albert, David B., additional, Aldawoodi, Nasrin N., additional, Algren, John T., additional, Almeida-Chen, Gracie, additional, Amar, David, additional, Anastasian, Zirka H., additional, Aniskevich, Stephen, additional, Aronson, Solomon, additional, Arora, Harendra, additional, Asopa, Amit, additional, Atkins, Joshua H., additional, Augoustides, John G., additional, Azam, Mohammad Fareed, additional, Bachman, Catherine R., additional, Bacon, Douglas R., additional, Badley, Andrew D., additional, Baird, Emily, additional, Baldwin, Alethia, additional, Ball, Ryan, additional, Baluch, Amir, additional, Bandola, David, additional, Banks, Shawn, additional, Barash, Paul G., additional, Barrett, Kathleen E., additional, Beaman, Shawn T., additional, Beathe, Jonathan C., additional, Beatie, Christopher D., additional, Beattie, W. Scott, additional, Bechtle, Perry S., additional, Benzinger, G. Richard, additional, Berkow, Lauren, additional, Berman, Jeffrey M., additional, Bernstein, Wendy K., additional, Berry, Arnold J., additional, Berry, Frederic, additional, Berth, Ulrike, additional, Bethune, Walter, additional, Bhambhani, Sumita, additional, Bharadwaj, Shobana, additional, Bhatt, Neil, additional, Billings, Frederic T., additional, Binstock, Wendy B., additional, Birnbach, David J., additional, Bishop, Michael, additional, Black, Stephanie, additional, Blanchette, Mary A., additional, Blum, James M., additional, Boddu, Krishna, additional, Bonasera, Lara, additional, Boortz-Marx, Richard L., additional, Borel, Cecil O., additional, Botz, Gregory H., additional, Boucek, Charles D., additional, Bradford, William, additional, Brainard, Jason C., additional, Braunfeld, Michelle, additional, Braveman, Ferne R., additional, Bravo-Fernandez, Caridad, additional, Breen, Peter H., additional, Brennan, Marjorie, additional, Brentjens, Tricia, additional, Brockel, Megan A., additional, Brodsky, Jay B., additional, Bromberg, Todd A., additional, Broussard, Adam J., additional, Broussard, Chris, additional, Labrie-Brown, Carmen, additional, Brown, Robert H., additional, Brudney, Charles S., additional, Brull, Sorin J., additional, Brunson, Claude, additional, Bryson, Trent, additional, Buchowski, Jacob M., additional, Budac, Stefan, additional, Bush, Zachary D., additional, Butterworth, John, additional, Calo, Lisbeysi, additional, Canlas, Christopher, additional, Cannon, Ayana, additional, Cantie, Shawn M., additional, Caplan, Lisa, additional, Caruso, Marco, additional, Cattano, Davide, additional, Cauldwell, Charles B., additional, Cavallone, Laura, additional, Cereda, Maurizio, additional, Chalifoux, Thomas M., additional, Chan, Susan, additional, Cheek, Theodore G., additional, Chen, Alexander, additional, Cherry, Samuel A., additional, Cheung, Albert T., additional, Chien, Grace L., additional, Choi, Peter T., additional, Ciarallo, Christopher, additional, Cladis, Franklyn, additional, Clapcich, Anthony J., additional, Clark, Richard B., additional, Cohen, Mindy, additional, Cohen, Neal H., additional, Cohen, Robert I., additional, Cohn, Stephan J., additional, Conran, Aisling, additional, Cook, Richard I., additional, Coombs, Randall F., additional, Corda, David M., additional, Cormican, Daniel, additional, Cousin, Darren, additional, Cowell, Vincent S., additional, Cox, Lyndsey, additional, Craigo, Paula A., additional, Cross, Richard C., additional, Cucchiara, Roy F., additional, Daily, William H., additional, Dalal, Gaurang, additional, Dalal, Priti, additional, Danekas, Michael, additional, Darwish, Ahmed M., additional, Darwish, Ribal, additional, Daves, Suanne M., additional, Davis, Kathleen, additional, Davis, Peter J., additional, De Witt, Bracken J., additional, Delphin, Ellise, additional, Deshpande, Seema, additional, Desiderio, Dawn P., additional, Desvarieux, Tricia, additional, Diaz, Laura K., additional, Diez, Christian, additional, Dixit, Sanjay, additional, Dogra, Meenakshi, additional, Domino, Karen B., additional, Dorhauer, Kathryn, additional, Dorman, Todd, additional, Doussan, Don D., additional, Duke, James, additional, Duncan, Ann C., additional, Dupont, Frank W., additional, Dziewit, Andrew, additional, Easdown, L. Jane, additional, Easley, R. Blaine, additional, Ebert, Thomas J., additional, Eckmann, David M., additional, Egan, Talmage D., additional, Eisdorfer, Seth, additional, Elkassabany, Nabil M., additional, Ellender, Ryan P., additional, Emory, Logan S., additional, Espinosa, Monique, additional, Everett, Lucinda L., additional, Faraday, Nauder, additional, Fehr, James J., additional, Feld, James M., additional, Fenton, Lynn A., additional, Ferguson, Laura H., additional, Fiegel, Matthew, additional, Fields, Aaron M., additional, Finlayson, Gordon N., additional, Finley, Alan, additional, Fischer, Gregory W., additional, Fiskum, Gary, additional, Fitzpatrick, Molly, additional, Flatto, Russell, additional, Fleisher, Lee A., additional, Flower, Ronda, additional, Folgueras, Annette G., additional, Forte, Patrick J., additional, Foss, Joseph F., additional, Fox, Charles J., additional, Furman, William R., additional, Gaiser, Robert, additional, Gambling, David R., additional, Gardiner, Scott, additional, Garvey, Matthew L., additional, Gaupp, Abraham C., additional, Gayer, Steven, additional, Geiduschek, Jeremy M., additional, Gencorelli, Frank, additional, Gewirtz, Eric, additional, Ghani, Ghaleb A., additional, Gibbs, Charles P., additional, Gibson, Jeremy L., additional, Gilbert, Lori, additional, Gingrich, Kevin J., additional, Ginsburg, Gregory, additional, Giordano, Christopher, additional, Goepfert, Christine E., additional, Gomez, Hernando, additional, Gomez, Santiago, additional, Goodman, Alanna E., additional, Goodman, Stephanie R., additional, Gottlieb, Alexandru, additional, Gottlieb, Ori, additional, Gottschalk, Allan, additional, Goudra, Basavana Gouda, additional, Gould, Harry J., additional, Gravenstein, Nikolaus, additional, Graybill, Megan, additional, Greeley, William J., additional, Guffey, Patrick, additional, Haddadin, Ala Sami, additional, Hagen, John G., additional, Hakim, Karim Abdel, additional, Hall, Michael, additional, Halliday, N. James, additional, Hannallah, Raafat S., additional, Hansen, Jeremy, additional, Hanson, C. William, additional, Hantler, Charles B., additional, Harris, Andrew P., additional, Hastie, Jonathan, additional, Hawney, Henry A., additional, Heard, Stephen O., additional, Heavner, James E., additional, Hecker, James G., additional, Hein, Elizabeth A., additional, Heitmiller, Eugenie, additional, Helfaer, Mark, additional, Heller, Lori B., additional, Hemphill, Andrew, additional, Hendrickse, Adrian, additional, Hensley, Frederick A., additional, Herrick, Ian A., additional, Hester, Douglas, additional, Heyer, Eric J., additional, Higgins, Michael S., additional, Hines, Roberta, additional, Hogue, Charles W., additional, Holroyd, Kenneth J., additional, Holt, Natalie F., additional, Howell, Simon J., additional, Huda, Faisal, additional, Hude, Keith E., additional, Hughes, Hayden R., additional, Hunter, James M., additional, Hymel, Brad J., additional, Ibinson, James W., additional, Iles, Karen E., additional, Insoft, Robert M., additional, Isono, Shiroh, additional, Ivashkov, Yulia, additional, Jachna, Bozena R., additional, Jankowska, Anna, additional, Janosy, Norah, additional, Jayaraman, Arun L., additional, Jimenez, Nathalia, additional, Johnson, Judy G., additional, Jones, Lyndia, additional, Jooste, Edmund H., additional, Kain, Zeev N., additional, Kalangie, Maudy, additional, Kalarickal, Philip L., additional, Kamel, Ihab, additional, Kang, Mia, additional, Kangrga, Ivan, additional, Kapoor, Ravish, additional, Karl, Helen W., additional, Karsanac, Christopher, additional, Karthik, Swaminathan, additional, Katz, Jeffrey A., additional, Kaye, Alan, additional, Kaye, Adam M., additional, Kaynar, A. Murat, additional, Kenepp, Nancy B., additional, Kertai, Miklos D., additional, Keyes, Mary A., additional, Khan, Sarah, additional, Khoche, Swapnil, additional, Kim, David Y., additional, Kim, Jerry H., additional, King, Kimberly M., additional, Kirsch, Jeffrey, additional, Klopman, Matthew A., additional, Knight, Paul R., additional, Koblin, Donald D., additional, Kofke, W. Andrew, additional, Kopp, Vincent J., additional, Koveleskie, Joseph R., additional, Kowalczyk, Courtney, additional, Kozmenko, Valeriy V., additional, Krummen, Kaylyn, additional, Kudchadkar, Sapna R., additional, Kudrick, Nathan, additional, Kung, Adrienne, additional, Kurth, C. Dean, additional, Kyle, Robert, additional, LaFleur, J. Lance, additional, Lai, Jason G., additional, Lalwani, Kirk, additional, Lanier, William L., additional, Larson, Dawn M., additional, Layman, Richard M., additional, Lee, Chris C., additional, Lema, Mark J., additional, Lenox, W. Casey, additional, Leung, Jacqueline M., additional, Levitt, Roy C., additional, Levy, Jerrold H., additional, Lichtor, J. Lance, additional, Lin, Charles, additional, Lin, Sharon L., additional, Lindeman, Karen S., additional, Lirette, Lesley, additional, Litman, Ronald S., additional, Liu, Qianjin, additional, Liu, Renyu, additional, Liu, Wen-Shin, additional, Lockman, Justin, additional, Loftness, Stanley L., additional, London, Martin J., additional, Lumb, Philip D., additional, Lupa, M. Concetta, additional, Lynn, Anne Marie, additional, Mahendran, Devi, additional, Mako, Jeffrey, additional, Malhotra, Anuj, additional, Malhotra, Vinod, additional, Malinow, Andrew M., additional, Mandabach, Mark G., additional, Mangano, Dennis T., additional, Mansoor, Sobia, additional, Maranets, Inna, additional, Mark, Jonathan B., additional, Markovic, Sinisa, additional, Marsh, H. Michael, additional, Martin, Choendal, additional, Martin, Nicole D., additional, Martz, Douglas, additional, Matei, Veronica A., additional, Mathews, Letha, additional, Maxwell, Lynne G., additional, McArdle, Philip, additional, McCarren, John P., additional, McClain, Brenda C., additional, McClure, Brian, additional, McDade, William A., additional, McGoldrick, Kathryn E., additional, McGrath, Brian J., additional, McHugh, Gregory L., additional, McIlroy, David, additional, McKeown, Jason, additional, McLoughlin, Thomas M., additional, McRae, R. Yan, additional, Meadow, William L., additional, Menda, Sameer, additional, Merritt, William T., additional, Metro, David G., additional, Mets, Berend, additional, Mikhaeil, Hosni, additional, Miller, David W., additional, Miller, Jessica, additional, Minhaj, Mohammed, additional, Mirski, Marek A., additional, Mitter, Nanhi, additional, Mittnacht, Alexander J.C., additional, Modak, Raj K., additional, Moine, Pierre, additional, Monitto, Constance L., additional, Month, Richard C., additional, Moon, Richard E., additional, Moore, Laurel E., additional, Moore, Roger A., additional, Moore, Thomas A., additional, Morrison, Debra E., additional, Moss, Jonathan, additional, Moyers, John R., additional, Muir, Jesse J., additional, Munson-Young, Adam J., additional, Muravchick, Stanley, additional, Murkin, John M., additional, Nagele, Peter, additional, Nagi, Peter A., additional, Nahrwold, Daniel A., additional, Nahrwold, Michael L., additional, Naik, Madhavi, additional, Navaratnam, Manchula, additional, Nebbia, Stephan P., additional, Nelson, Priscilla, additional, Nguyen, Thai T., additional, Nguyen, Viet, additional, Nikolaidis, Stavroula, additional, Nisnevitch, Zoulfira, additional, Njoku, Dolores B., additional, Njoku, Mary J., additional, Norris, Edward J., additional, Nwokolo, Omonele O., additional, Nyhan, Daniel, additional, O'Byrne, William T., additional, Ochroch, Edward A., additional, Oken, Andrew, additional, Orgain, Nathan, additional, Oriol, Nancy E., additional, Orozco, Pedro, additional, Ostermeier, Andreas M., additional, Ovassapian, Andranik, additional, Ozcan, Mehmet S., additional, Padnos, Ira, additional, Pai, Sheela S., additional, Pal, Nirvik, additional, Palaniappan, Dhamodaran, additional, Palmer, Susan K., additional, Palte, Howard D., additional, Pan, Wei, additional, Panzer, Oliver, additional, Pappachan, Sibi, additional, Passannante, Anthony, additional, Patel, Dennis A., additional, Patel, Dilipkumar K., additional, Patel, Kirit M., additional, Patel, Samir, additional, Patel, Shalin, additional, Pathak, Sanup, additional, Patt, Minda L., additional, Pauldine, Ronald W., additional, Pawelek, Olga, additional, Pawelek, Tim, additional, Paydar, Kiarash, additional, Pearl, Ronald G., additional, Peeters-Asdourian, Christine, additional, Perela, Padmavathi R., additional, Petrovitch, Charise T., additional, Petrozza, Patricia H., additional, Phillips, Dennis, additional, Phillips, Mark C., additional, Piefer, Christine, additional, Pierre, Edgar J., additional, Pinson, S. William, additional, Pivalizza, Evan G., additional, Planinsic, Raymond M., additional, Poldermans, Don, additional, Pomerantz, Joel M., additional, Pope, Jason E., additional, Popescu, Wanda M., additional, Porche, Vivian H., additional, Porhomayon, Jahan, additional, Portnoy, Dmitry, additional, Postle, Corinne K., additional, Primeaux, Paul J., additional, Prough, Donald S., additional, Puskas, Ferenc, additional, Puyo, Carlos A., additional, Quiggle, Forrest, additional, Rabb, Mary, additional, Rae, Bronwyn R., additional, Rafique, Muhammad B., additional, Raiten, Jesse M., additional, Rajagopal, Arvind, additional, Rajagopal, Srinivasan, additional, Rajpal, Gaurav, additional, Ramamoorthy, Chandra, additional, Rampil, Ira J., additional, Ramsay, James G., additional, Ramsey, James A., additional, Rao, Vidya N., additional, Ratsiu, Joana, additional, Read, Selina, additional, Reddy, Ronjeet, additional, Reduque, Leila L., additional, Reich, David L., additional, Ricketts, Karene, additional, Ricks, Cameron, additional, Riedel, Bernhard, additional, Rimal, Jyotsna, additional, Rinehart, Joseph, additional, Riopelle, James M., additional, Rizza, Stacey A., additional, Robertson, Amy C., additional, Robinson, Stephen, additional, Rock, Peter, additional, Rodriguez-Blanco, Yillam F., additional, Roizen, Michael F., additional, Roke, Daniel M., additional, Romeo, Ryan, additional, Rosa, Joseph, additional, Rosen, David A., additional, Rosen, Kathleen, additional, Rosenbaum, Stanley H., additional, Rosenberg, Andrew D., additional, Rosenberg, Andrew L., additional, Rosenberg, Henry, additional, Rosenblatt, Meg A., additional, Roth, Steven, additional, Rothman, Brian, additional, Rountree, Justin L., additional, Rowan, Matthew J., additional, Rozner, Marc, additional, Rubin, Ryan, additional, Rupp, Stephen M., additional, Russell, W. John, additional, Russo, Thomas A., additional, Sabartinelli, Alecia L., additional, Sakai, Tetsuro, additional, Salinas, Orlando J., additional, Samm, Paul L., additional, Samuel, Jibin, additional, Sandven, Tor, additional, Sanford, Ted J., additional, Sappenfield, Joshua W., additional, Saravanan, Ponnusamy, additional, Sathishkumar, Subramanian, additional, Schlichter, R. Alexander, additional, Schnell, Eric, additional, Schreibman, David L., additional, Schubert, Armin, additional, Schulman, Peter, additional, Schultz, Todd A., additional, Schwartz, Alan Jay, additional, Schwartz, Jamie McElrath, additional, Schwartz, Jeffrey J., additional, Scott, Benjamin K., additional, Seltzer, Joseph L., additional, Seres, Tamas, additional, Sessler, Daniel I., additional, Sethna, Navil F., additional, Setty, Amar, additional, Shabaz, Paul W., additional, Shah, Pranav, additional, Shah, Saroj Mukesh, additional, Sharifpour, Milad, additional, Shay, Joanne, additional, Shepherd, Jay, additional, Shiffrin, Jeffrey S., additional, Shindell, Marina, additional, Siker, Daniel, additional, Silverman, Richard, additional, Simon, Brett A., additional, Singh, Nina, additional, Sinha, Ashish C., additional, Sladen, Robert N., additional, Slevin, Kieran A., additional, Sloan, Tod B., additional, Smith, Kathleen, additional, Smith, Timothy E., additional, Smoot, Victoria, additional, Snegovskikh, Denis, additional, Soifer, Betsy Ellen, additional, Solorzano, Molly, additional, Sonner, James M., additional, Sophocles, Aris, additional, Sparrow, James A., additional, Spiegel, Joan, additional, Spiess, Bruce D., additional, Sripada, Ramprasad, additional, Stead, Stanley W., additional, Stearns, Joshua D., additional, Stees, Kelly, additional, Steffey, Clinton, additional, Stemland, Christopher, additional, Stene, John, additional, Stephens, Christopher T., additional, Stierer, Tracey L., additional, Stokes, O. Jameson, additional, Stolp, Bryant W., additional, Stowe, David F., additional, Strickland, Ted, additional, Strom, Suzanne, additional, Sullivan, Erin A., additional, Sumler, Michele, additional, Sun, Dajin, additional, Sun, Lena, additional, Sung, Esther, additional, Swanson, Veronica C., additional, Szolnoki, Judit, additional, Talarico, Joe, additional, Tan, Gee Mei, additional, Tang, Darryl T., additional, Tarasi, Paul, additional, Tempelhoff, René, additional, Tetzlaff, John E., additional, Thorne, Alisa C., additional, Thung, Arlyne, additional, Tilak, Vasanti, additional, Tobin, Kate, additional, Tobin, Joseph R., additional, Tobin, Michael J., additional, Todd, R. David, additional, Tomlinson, Matthew, additional, Toung, Thomas J., additional, Tran, Lien B., additional, Tran, Minh Chau Joe, additional, Tremper, Kevin K., additional, Tsai, Sanyo, additional, Tseng, George S., additional, Tuman, Kenneth J., additional, Tung, Avery, additional, Tung, Cynthia, additional, Twersky, Rebecca, additional, Twite, Mark, additional, Ulatowski, John A., additional, Urban, Michael, additional, Vallejo, Manuel C., additional, Vannucci, Andrea, additional, Varon, Albert J., additional, Vasudevan, Anasuya, additional, Viswanathan, Susheela, additional, Vitin, Alexander A., additional, Voelckel, Wolfgang, additional, Walia, Ann, additional, Wall, Russell T., additional, Wallace, Terrence, additional, Wang, Shu-Ming, additional, Warltier, David C., additional, Waskell, Lucy, additional, Watkins, Scott, additional, Wedel, Denise, additional, Weiss, Stuart J., additional, Weissman, Charles, additional, Weitzel, Nathaen, additional, Weller, Gregory, additional, Whitney, Gina, additional, Whittington, Robert A., additional, Wilkerson, Danny, additional, Wilkes, Nancy C., additional, Williams, Michael, additional, Windsor, Jimmy, additional, Wittels, Bernard, additional, Wolff, Gregory A., additional, Wong, Andrew K., additional, Woods, Stacie N., additional, Wright, A.J., additional, Xie, Zheng, additional, Young, Christopher C., additional, Yuan, Ian, additional, Yudkowitz, Francine S., additional, Zaidan, James R., additional, Zanaboni, Paul, additional, Zapol, Warren M., additional, Zimmerman, Angela, additional, and Zwass, Maurice S., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Reactive oxygen species are critical mediators of coronary collateral development in a canine model
- Author
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Gu, Weidong, Weihrauch, Dorothee, Tanaka, Katsuya, Tessmer, John P., Pagel, Paul S., Kersten, Judy R., Chilian, William M., and Warltier, David C.
- Subjects
Neovascularization -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that reactive oxygen species (ROS) promote proliferation and migration of vascular smooth muscle (VSMC) and endothelial cells (EC). We tested the hypothesis that ROS serve as crucial messengers during coronary collateral development. Dogs were subjected to brief (2 min), repetitive coronary artery occlusions (1/h, 8/day, 21 day duration) in the absence (occlusion, n = 8) or presence of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) (occlusion + NAC, n = 8). A sham group (n = 8) was instrumented identically but received no occlusions. In separate experiments, ROS generation after a single 2-min coronary artery occlusion was assessed with dihydroethidium fluorescence. Coronary collateral blood flow (expressed as a percentage of normal zone flow) was significantly increased (71 [+ or -] 7%) in occlusion dogs after 21 days but remained unchanged (13 [+ or -] 3%) in sham dogs. Treatment with NAC attenuated increases in collateral blood flow (28 [+ or -] 8%). Brief coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion caused ROS production (256 [+ or -] 33% of baseline values), which was abolished with NAC (104 [+ or -] 12%). Myocardial interstitial fluid produced tube formation and proliferation of VSMC and EC in occlusion but not in NAC-treated or sham dogs. The results indicate that ROS are critical for the development of the coronary collateral circulation. angiogenesis; collateral circulation; free radicals; growth substances
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- 2003
29. Expression of VEGF and angiopoietins-1 and -2 during ischemia-induced coronary angiogenesis
- Author
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Matsunaga, Toshiro, Warltier, David C., Tessmer, John, Weihrauch, Dorothee, Simons, Michael, and Chilian, William M.
- Subjects
Ischemia -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
The mechanisms underlying coronary capillary growth in response to ischemia are undefined. We hypothesized that the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and angiopoietin (Ang)/Tie-2 were involved in capillary growth as an adaptation to ischemia. To test this hypothesis we measured capillary density, and the expressions of VEGF, Ang-1, Ang-2, and the Tie-2 receptor and its phosphorylation state during repetitive episodes of myocardial ischemia in chronically instrumented canines. Repetitive episodes of ischemia were induced by multiple (once/hour; 8/day), brief (2 min) occlusions of the left anterior descending coronary artery for 1, 7, 14, or 21 days. A sham group received the same instrumentation as the experimental groups but not the occlusion protocol. Collateral blood flow (microspheres) progressively increased from 9 [+ or -] 3 to 83 [+ or -] 10 ml*[min.sup.-1]*100 [g.sup.-1] on day 21. Capillary density increased at day 7 from 2,378 [+ or -] 53 (sham) to 2,962 [+ or -] 60/[mm.sup.2], but it decreased to 2,594 [+ or -] 39/[mm.sup.2] at day 21. Both VEGF and Ang-2 expression in myocardial interstitial fluid (Western analyses) peaked at day 3 of the repetitive occlusions but waned thereafter. In contrast the expression of Ang-1 remained relatively constant at all times in the occlusion groups. In shams, the expression of VEGF and Ang-2 was low and constant at all times. Tie-2 phosphorylation myocardial decreased decreased at day 7 but increased at 21 days of occlusions (P < 0.05). Our results indicate that capillary density was augmented by myocardial ischemia, but after development of collaterals and restoration of flow to the ischemic zone, capillary density returned to control levels. The change in capillary density paralleled with VEGF and Ang-2 expression but was inversely related to Tie-2 phosphorylation. We speculate the coronary angiogenesis is a coordinated event involving the expression of both VEGF and Ang-2 and that therapeutic angiogenic strategies may ultimately require treatment with more than a single factor. coronary collateral; vascular endothelial growth factor; Tie-2
- Published
- 2003
30. Reactive oxygen species modulate coronary wall shear stress and endothelial function during hyperglycemia
- Author
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Gross, Eric R., LaDisa, John F., Jr., Weihrauch, Dorothee, Olson, Lars E., Kress, Tobias T., Hettrick, Douglas A., Pagel, Paul S., Warltier, David C., and Kersten, Judy R.
- Subjects
Hyperglycemia -- Physiological aspects ,Coronary heart disease -- Physiological aspects ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Hyperglycemia is associated with generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and this action may contribute to accelerated atherogenesis. We tested the hypothesis that hyperglycemia produces alterations in left anterior descendlng coronary artery (LAD) wall shear stress concomitant with endothelial dysfunction and ROS production in dogs (n = 12) instrumented for measurement of LAD blood flow, velocity, and diameter. Dogs were randomly assigned to receive vehicle (0.9% saline) or the superoxide dismutase mimetic 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (tempo]) and were administered intravenous infusions of v-glucose to achieve target blood glucose concentrations of 350 and 600 mg/dl (moderate and severe hyperglycemia, respectively). Endothelial function and ROS generation were assessed by coronary blood flow responses to acetylcholine (10, 30, and 100 ng/kg) and dihydroethidium fluorescence of myocardial biopsies, respectively. Indexes of wall shear stress were calculated with conventional fluid dynamics theory. Hyperglycemia produced dose-related endothelial dysfunction, increases in ROS production, and reductions in oscillatory shear stress that were normalized by tempo]. The results suggest a direct association between hyperglycemia-induced ROS production, endothelial dysfunction, and decreases in oscillatory shear stress in vivo. coronary artery disease; diabetes; oscillatory shear stress; oxidant stress
- Published
- 2003
31. Contributors
- Author
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Abel, Ted G., primary, Afonin, Olga N., additional, Allen, Paul D., additional, Andrews, J. Jeffrey, additional, Ang-Lee, Michael, additional, Apfel, Christian C., additional, Arnold, William P., additional, Aronson, Solomon, additional, Bader, Angela M., additional, Baker, David, additional, Baraka, Anis, additional, Barbeito, Atilio, additional, Barker, Steven J., additional, Bar-Yosef, Shahar, additional, Berde, Charles B., additional, Berkowitz, Darryl H., additional, Birnbach, David J., additional, Bogod, David, additional, Brockwell, Russell C., additional, Brown, David L., additional, Browne, Ingrid M., additional, Cahalan, Michael K., additional, Camporesi, Enrico M., additional, Campos, Javier H., additional, Cassorla, Lydia, additional, Coté, Charles J., additional, Dalens, Bernard J., additional, Deutschman, Clifford S., additional, Dieckmann, Peter, additional, Diwan, Sudhir, additional, Drummond, John C., additional, Dutton, Richard P., additional, Eckmann, David M., additional, Eger, Edmond I., additional, Eich, Christoph, additional, Eng, Matthew R., additional, Eriksson, Lars I., additional, Eskaros, Stephen M., additional, Farber, Neil E., additional, Feldman, Marc Allan, additional, Fischer, Stephen P., additional, Fleisher, Lee A., additional, Flood, Pamela, additional, Fukuda, Kazuhiko, additional, Gaba, David M., additional, Ganter, Michael T., additional, Gelb, Adrian W., additional, Gelman, Simon, additional, Glass, Peter S.A., additional, Glick, David B., additional, Goodnough, Lawrence T., additional, Goswami, Sumeet, additional, Grasso, Salvatore, additional, Gray, Andrew T., additional, Greeley, William J., additional, Gregory, George A., additional, Grigore, Alina M., additional, Grissom, Thomas E., additional, Gropper, Michael A., additional, Haddad, Fouad Salim, additional, Hanson, C. William, additional, Hauser, Michael C., additional, Hedenstierna, Göran, additional, Heitmiller, Eugenie S., additional, Hemmings, Hugh C., additional, Henderson, John, additional, Hillel, Zak, additional, Hofer, Christoph K., additional, Horlocker, Terese T., additional, Howard, Steven K., additional, Huang, Yuguang, additional, Hüpfl, Michael, additional, Hurley, Robert W., additional, Ichinose, Fumito, additional, Irefin, Samuel A., additional, Johnson, Ken B., additional, Joris, Jean L., additional, Kaye, Alan D., additional, Kelz, Max B., additional, Kindscher, James D., additional, Kohl, Benjamin A., additional, Kopf, Andreas, additional, Lachmann, Burkhard, additional, Lam, Arthur M., additional, Landesberg, Giora, additional, Larson, Merlin D., additional, Lee, Jae-Woo, additional, Lema, Guillermo, additional, Leslie, Kate, additional, Lien, Cynthia A., additional, Litt, Lawrence, additional, Liu, Linda, additional, Lubarsky, David A., additional, Mahla, Michael E., additional, Malhotra, Vinod, additional, Mark, Jonathan B., additional, Martin, Jackie L., additional, Martinez, Elizabeth A., additional, Martinez-Ruiz, Ricardo, additional, Jeevendra Martyn, J.A., additional, Mascia, Luciana, additional, Mashour, George A., additional, Maze, Mervyn, additional, McCunn, Maureen, additional, McEvoy, Matthew D., additional, McGlinch, Brian P., additional, Mets, Berend, additional, Miller, Ronald D., additional, Monk, Terri G., additional, Moon, Richard E., additional, Mori, Kenjiro, additional, Moss, Jonathan, additional, Mushlin, Phillip S., additional, Nagele, Peter, additional, Naguib, Mohamed, additional, Nakao, Shinichi, additional, Namiki, Akiyoshi, additional, Nathan, Aruna T., additional, Neligan, Patrick J., additional, Newman, Stanton P., additional, Nicholau, Dorre, additional, Niemann, Claus U., additional, Nishanian, Ervant, additional, Norris, Edward J., additional, Nuevo, Florian R., additional, Nussmeier, Nancy A., additional, O'Connor, Christopher J., additional, O'Hara, Jerome, additional, Pagel, Paul S., additional, Papadakos, Peter J., additional, Patel, Anil, additional, Patel, Piyush M., additional, Pauldine, Ronald, additional, Pearce, Robert A., additional, Perouansky, Misha, additional, Pessah, Isaac N., additional, Pittet, Jean-François, additional, Pratt, Phillip F., additional, Pronovost, Peter J., additional, Rall, Marcus, additional, Rampil, Ira J., additional, Ranieri, V. Marco, additional, Rasmussen, Lars, additional, Reves, J.G., additional, Ricci, Zaccaria, additional, Riopelle, James M., additional, Rockford, Melissa, additional, Roizen, Michael F., additional, Ronco, Claudio, additional, Rosenbaum, Stanley H., additional, Roth, Steven, additional, Rothenberg, David M., additional, Rozner, Marc A., additional, Sarwar, Muhammad F., additional, Schroeder, Rebecca A., additional, Schwartz, Allan Jay, additional, Schwartz, Andrew, additional, Schwarzenberger, Johanna C., additional, Schwinn, Debra A., additional, Searles, Bruce E., additional, Sessler, Daniel I., additional, Seubert, Christoph N., additional, Shafer, Steven L., additional, Shaw, Andrew, additional, Shingu, Koh, additional, Sieber, Frederick E., additional, Simpson, Sir Peter, additional, Sinha, Ashish C., additional, Sladen, Robert N., additional, Slaughter, Thomas F., additional, Slinger, Peter D., additional, Souter, Michael J., additional, Stafford-Smith, Mark, additional, Stanski, Donald R., additional, Stein, Christoph, additional, Stensrud, Paul E., additional, Strichartz, Gary R., additional, Stygall, Jan, additional, Sudheendra, Vijayendra, additional, Sun, Lena S., additional, Sweitzer, BobbieJean, additional, Szocik, James, additional, Tempe, Deepak K., additional, Tremper, Kevin K., additional, Tuman, Kenneth J., additional, Urban, Michael K., additional, Van Norman, Gail A., additional, Vezina, Daniel P., additional, Viby-Mogensen, Jørgen, additional, Waisel, David B., additional, Warltier, David C., additional, Wedel, Denise J., additional, Weissman, Charles, additional, White, Paul F., additional, White, Roger D., additional, Wiener-Kronish, Jeanine P., additional, Wu, Christopher L., additional, Yamakage, Michiaki, additional, Yost, C. Spencer, additional, Young, William L., additional, Yuan, Chun-Su, additional, Zapol, Warren M., additional, Zhou, Jie, additional, and Zwass, Maurice S., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Pulmonary Pharmacology
- Author
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Farber, Neil E., primary, Pagel, Paul S., additional, and Warltier, David C., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cardiovascular Pharmacology
- Author
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Pagel, Paul S., primary, Farber, Neil E., additional, Pratt, Phillip F., additional, and Warltier, David C., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Isoflurane-induced preconditioning is attenuated by diabetes
- Author
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Tanaka, Katsuya, Kehl, Franz, Gu, Weidong, Krolikowski, John G., Pagel, Paul S., Warltier, David C., and Kersten, Judy R.
- Subjects
Physiology -- Research ,Hyperglycemia -- Research ,Heart attack -- Research ,Diabetes -- Complications ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Volatile anesthetics stimulate, but hyperglycemia attenuates, the activity of mitochondrial ATP-regulated [K.sup.+] channels. We tested the hypothesis that diabetes mellitus interferes with isoflurane-induced preconditioning. Acutely instrumented, barbiturate-anesthetized dogs were randomly assigned to receive 0, 0.32, or 0.64% end-tidal concentrations of isoflurane in the absence or presence of diabetes (3 wk after administration of alloxan and streptozotocin) in six experimental groups. All dogs were subjected to a 60-min left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion followed by 3 h of reperfusion. Myocardial infarct size (triphenyltetrazolium staining) was 29 [+ or -] 3% (n = 8) of the left ventricular area at risk in control experiments. Isoflurane reduced infarct size (15 [+ or ] 2 and 13 [+ or -] 1% during 0.32 and 0.64% concentrations; n = 8 .and 7 dogs, respectively). Diabetes alone did not alter infarct size (30 [+ or -] 3%; n = 8) but blocked the protective effects of 0.32% (27 [+ or -] 2%; n = 7) and not 0.64% isoflurane (18 [+ or -] 3%; n = 7). Infarct size was directly related to blood glucose concentrations in diabetic dogs, but this relationship was abolished by higher concentrations of isoflurane. The results indicate that blood glucose and end-tidal isoflurane concentrations are important determinants of infarct size during anesthetic-induced preconditioning. hyperglycemia; myocardial infarction; volatile anesthetics
- Published
- 2002
35. Changes in Passive But Not Active Mechanical Properties Predict Recovery of Function of Stunned Myocardium
- Author
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Schmeling, Todd J., Hettrick, Douglas A., Kersten, Judy R., Pagel, Paul S., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cardiac-specific overexpression of GTP cyclohydrolase 1 restores ischaemic preconditioning during hyperglycaemia
- Author
-
Ge, Zhi-Dong, Ionova, Irina A., Vladic, Nikolina, Pravdic, Danijel, Hirata, Naoyuki, Vásquez-Vivar, Jeannette, Pratt, Phillip F., Jr, Warltier, David C., Pieper, Galen M., and Kersten, Judy R.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Propofol, but not thiopentone or etomidate, enhances isoflurane-induced coronary vasodilatation in dogs
- Author
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Pagel, Paul S., Hettrick, Douglas A., Kersten, Judy R., Lowe, Dermot, and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. In Vivo Measurement of Real-Time Aortic Segmental Volume Using the Conductance Catheter
- Author
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Hettrick, Douglas A., Battocletti, Joseph, Ackmann, James, Linehan, John, and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Cardioprotection by volatile anesthetics
- Author
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Bienengraeber, Martin W., Weihrauch, Dorothee, Kersten, Judy R., Pagel, Paul S., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Antegrade iliac artery stent implantation for the temporal and spatial examination of stent-induced neointimal hyperplasia and alterations in regional fluid dynamics
- Author
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LaDisa, John F., Jr., Meier, Heidi T., Olson, Lars E., Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Microfocal X-ray computed tomography post-processing operations for optimizing reconstruction volumes of stented arteries during 3D computational fluid dynamics modeling
- Author
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LaDisa, John F., Jr., Olson, Lars E., Ropella, Kristina M., Molthen, Robert C., Haworth, Steven T., Kersten, Judy R., Warltier, David C., and Pagel, Paul S.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Effects of physical parameters on the cylindrical model for volume measurement by conductance
- Author
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Hettrick, Douglas A., Battocletti, Joseph H., Ackmann, James J., Linehan, John H., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. In Vitro and finite-element model investigation of the conductance technique for measurement of aortic segmental volume
- Author
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Hettrick, Douglas A., Battocletti, Joseph H., Ackmann, James J., Linehan, John H., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN OLDER DIABETIC SUBJECTS WITH A HISTORY OF ALCOHOL ABUSE1
- Author
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HUDETZ, JUDITH A. and WARLTIER, DAVID C.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Acute hyperglycemia abolishes ischemic preconditioning in vivo
- Author
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Kersten, Judy R., Schmeling, Todd J., Orth, Karl G., Pagel, Paul S., and Warltier, David C.
- Subjects
Reperfusion injury -- Research ,Ischemia -- Research ,Hyperglycemia -- Research ,Dogs -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Research was conducted to test the hypothesis that acute hyperglycemia changes the protection generated by ischemic preconditioning. Acutely instrumented dogs were exposed to a prolonged coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion and ischemic preconditioning was induced by occlusion-reperfusion periods. Results indicate that acute hyperglycemia adversely regulates myocardial injury in reaction to ischemia in vivo.
- Published
- 1998
46. Cardioprotection by volatile anesthetics: new applications for old drugs?
- Author
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Pratt, Phillip F, Jr, Wang, Chen, Weihrauch, Dorothee, Bienengraeber, Martin W, Kersten, Judy R, Pagel, Paul S, and Warltier, David C
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Mechanisms of myocardial protection produced by chronic ethanol consumption
- Author
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Pagel, Paul S., Kersten, Judy R., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Influence of desflurane, isoflurane and halothane on regional tissue perfusion in dogs
- Author
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Hartman, J. Craig, Pagel, Paul S., Proctor, Lester T., Kampine, John P., Schmeling, William T., and Warltier, David C.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Protamine inhibits coronary collateral development in a canine model of repetitive coronary occlusion
- Author
-
Kersten, Judy R., Pagel, Paul S., and Warltier, David C.
- Subjects
Coronary arteries -- Obstruction ,Heart -- Contraction ,Regional blood flow -- Analysis ,Biological sciences - Abstract
A study of the suppression of coronary collateral development due to chronic myocardial ischemia in dogs by protamine in saline- and protamine-treated dogs that are subjected to left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) occlusions confirms the inhibition by protamine. Control dogs exhibit a time-dependent enhancement in collateral blood flow due to ischemic myocardium, consecutive lowering of flow debt payment and progressive normalization of myocardial contractile function during LAD occlusion, indicating coronary collateral development. Protamine-treated dogs retain regional contractile dysfunction and postocclusive reactive hyperemic responses.
- Published
- 1995
50. RSR13, A Synthetic Allosteric Modifier of Hemoglobin, Enhances Recovery of Stunned Myocardium in Dogs
- Author
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Pagel, Paul S., primary, Hettrick, Douglas A., additional, Montgomery, Matthew W., additional, Kersten, Judy R., additional, and Warltier, David C., additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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