Circulation
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Current spectrum of cardiogenic shock and effect of early revascularization on mortality. Results of an International Registry. SHOCK Registry Investigators.
Cardiogenic shock remains the leading cause of death of patients hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction (MI). This study was conducted to examine (1) the current spectrum of cardiogenic shock, (2) the proportion of patients who are potential candidates for a trial of early revascularization, and (3) the apparent impact of early revascularization on mortality. ⋯ Patients diagnosed with cardiogenic shock complicating acute MI are a heterogeneous group. Those eligible for a trial of early revascularization tended to have lower mortality. Patients selected to undergo cardiac catheterization had lower mortality whether or not they were revascularized. Emergent PTCA and CABG are promising treatment modalities for cardiogenic shock, but biased case selection for treatment may confound the data. Whether PTCA and CABG reduce mortality and which patient subgroups benefit most remain to be determined in a randomized clinical trial.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Role of cardiac beta 2-receptors in cardiac responses to exercise in cardiac transplant patients.
In healthy human hearts, beta 2-receptor-mediated chronotropic and inotropic responses contribute to the cardiac responses to beta-agonists. A (patho)physiological relevance for beta 2-receptor-mediated responses has so far not been demonstrated, in part because beta 1-receptor-mediated responses to cardiac neuronally released norepinephrine can mask beta 2-receptor-mediated responses. ⋯ The present study shows that cardiac beta 2-receptors contribute to a clear extent to the heart rate responses to endogenous circulating catecholamines in the absence of cardiac neuronally released norepinephrine. Nonselective beta-blockade probably is less well tolerated in cardiac transplant patients compared with beta 1-selective blockade.