Amnon Merdler
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1990
Ruth Hardoff; Arie Shefer; Sarah Gips; Amnon Merdler; Moshe Y. Flugelman; David A. Halon; Basil S. Lewis
To examine whether late coronary restenosis may be predicted by abnormalities of myocardial perfusion in the early hours after successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and to study in greater detail the mechanisms involved in the development of late coronary restenosis after angioplasty, a prospective study was undertaken in 90 consecutive patients. Thallium-201 scintigrams were recorded at rest and during the stress of atrial pacing, 12 to 24 h after angioplasty, and the results were related to the findings at angiography in 70 patients undergoing late cardiac catheterization. A reversible thallium-201 perfusion defect was found in 39 (38%) of 104 myocardial regions supplied by the dilated coronary vessel and identified a subset of patients at high risk of late (6 to 12 months) angiographic restenosis (sensitivity 77%, specificity 67%). In contrast, late coronary restenosis developed in only 7 (11%) of 65 vessels and in 5 (14%) of 37 patients with a nonischemic thallium-201 scintigram on day 1 (p less than 0.005). Multivariate logistic regression analysis of 14 possible preangioplasty and periangioplasty clinical and angiographic variables selected reversible perfusion defect on the thallium-201 scintigram on day 1 (p = 0.016) and immediate postangioplasty residual coronary narrowing (p = 0.004) as significant independent predictors of late restenosis, with younger patient age as an additional less powerful predictor (p less than 0.05). The findings have important implications regarding the pathogenesis of late coronary restenosis in patients undergoing successful angioplasty and they imply that in the majority of these patients pathophysiologic events in the early minutes and hours after angioplasty may determine the development of late restenosis.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1990
Nader Dakak; Nabeel Makhoul; Moshe Y. Flugelman; Amnon Merdler; Habib Shehadeh; Adam Schneeweiss; David A. Halon; Basil S. Lewis
The possible role of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in preventing or minimizing tolerance to intravenous nitroglycerin in severe congestive heart failure (CHF) was studied by quantitating the degree of tolerance in 12 patients receiving nitroglycerin (group 1) and in 9 patients (group 2) receiving nitroglycerin and concurrent treatment with captopril (60 +/- 29 mg/day). At peak effect, nitroglycerin produced almost identical hemodynamic changes in both groups, with significant decreases in right atrial and pulmonary arterial wedge pressure, systolic blood pressure and systemic and pulmonary vascular resistances. Cardiac index increased. The extent of nitrate tolerance was calculated for each hemodynamic parameter as the percentage loss of the peak effect achieved by the drug. At 24 hours, 98 +/- 80% of the benefit achieved with respect to right atrial pressure was lost in group 1 and 61 +/- 74% in group 2 (group 1 vs 2, difference not significant). For pulmonary arterial wedge pressure, 51 +/- 31% (group 1) and 85 +/- 53% (group 2) (difference not significant) of the effect was lost, and for cardiac index, 53 +/- 58% (group 1) and 54 +/- 44% (group 2) (difference not significant). Tolerance was also almost identical regarding systolic blood pressure and systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance. Thus, the extent of tolerance to high-dose intravenous nitroglycerin in CHF was unaltered by administration of captopril, indicating that in clinical dosage, counter-regulatory neurohumoral mechanisms involving the renin-angiotensin system appear to be unimportant in its development.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1989
David A. Halon; Amnon Merdler; Arie Shefer; Moshe Y. Flugelman; Basil S. Lewis
To study the determinants of late restenosis after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) performed in patients with unstable angina pectoris, a prospective study was undertaken in 90 patients. Primary PTCA success was achieved in 84 (93%) patients, dilating 116 of 118 coronary narrowings (1.4/patient), while major complications during PTCA occurred in only 1 patient (1 death). Eighty-two patients (114 dilated arteries) were followed for 25 +/- 11 months: 68 (83%) were in New York Heart Association functional class I or II, 11 (13%) in class III, and there were 3 deaths. Late restenosis was found in 16 (25%) of 65 lesions (29% of 49 patients) studied by angiography 9 +/- 7 months after PTCA. Restenosis was more frequent in left anterior descending coronary artery lesions (p = 0.07) and in those which at the time of PTCA had multiple irregularities (67 vs 14%, odds ratio 12.5, p = 0.002), decreased coronary perfusion (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction grade less than 3) (50 vs 15%, odds ratio 5.7, p = 0.02) or intraluminal thrombus (67 vs 19%, odds ratio 8.7, difference not significant). Multiple irregularities (p = 0.003) and decreased flow (p = 0.02) remained independent predictors of restenosis (goodness of fit 0.88) after adjustment for 12 pre- and peri-PTCA clinical and angiographic variables by logistic regression analysis. These data underline the feasibility of early revascularization by PTCA in patients with unstable angina pectoris. Careful follow-up should be instituted in patients with multiple irregular lesions, decreased coronary perfusion or intraluminal thrombus at the time of PTCA. In such patients, late restenosis may be the rule rather than the exception.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1999
Yochai Adir; Amnon Merdler; S Ben Haim; Avi Front; R Harduf; Haim Bitterman
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of exposure to low concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO), as commonly measured in atmospheric urban air pollution and certain occupational environments, on exercise performance and myocardial perfusion in young healthy men, and the possible need for tighter restrictions on ambient concentrations of CO. METHODS: 15 young, healthy non-smoking men, 18-35 years old, were exposed blindly and randomly to air or to a mixture of CO and air, followed by an exercise treadmill test with thallium heart scintigraphy. Blood was drawn for determination of carboxyhaemoglobin before and at the end of the exposure, and for lactic and pyruvic acid at the beginning and the end of the exercise test. The main outcome measures include the duration of the exercise test, the maximal effort expressed in metabolic equivalent units (METs), the mean plasma lactic to pyruvic acid ratio at the end of the ergometry, ECG changes in the exercise test, and perfusion deficits in thallium heart scintigraphy. RESULTS: At the end of exposure to CO, the mean (SD) blood carboxyhaemoglobin concentration rose from 0.59% (0.08%) to 5.12% (0.65%) (p < 0.0001). At the end of the exercise period, the mean (SD) plasma lactate/pyruvate ratio, which reflects the level of anaerobic metabolism (69.9 (5.9) after air and 75.9 (7.0) after CO), was not significantly different between the two experimental groups. Exercise induced electrocardiographic changes were noted in only one subject after exposure to CO. No arrhythmias were detected in any of the subjects. Significant differences were found in the mean duration of the exercise test (p = 0.0012) and the METs (p = 0.0001). The mean adjusted difference of exercise duration between exposure to air and CO was 1.52 minutes 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.73 to 2.32 minutes. The mean adjusted difference of METs between exposure to air and CO was 2.04 95% CI 1.33 to 2.76. The models for duration of exercise and METs showed no significant sequence and period effects. Thallium myocardial perfusion imaging disclosed normal perfusion in all regions of the heart, with no significant differences in perfusion between the two exercise tests (after air or CO). CONCLUSION: Acute exposure to a low concentration of CO which produces blood carboxyhaemoglobin concentrations of 4%-6% significantly decreases exercise performance in young healthy men. No ischaemic electrocardiographic changes or disturbances in myocardial perfusion were found by graded exercise with thallium scintigraphy. Our findings suggest that pollution of atmospheric air by CO at concentrations which are commonly found in urban and industrial environments may exert an adverse effect on skeletal muscles, manifesting as decreased exercise performance.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1999
Basil S. Lewis; Eyal Porat; David A. Halon; Rony Ammar; Moshe Y. Flugelman; Nader Khader; Amnon Merdler; Giora Weisz; Gideon Uretzky
Integrated myocardial revascularization combines the advantages of angioplasty, stenting, and minimally invasive surgery to revascularize patients with multivessel coronary artery disease without cardiopulmonary bypass. This pilot study showed that a new same-day management strategy, consisting of percutaneous coronary intervention followed immediately by minimally invasive surgery, was feasible and provided complete all-arterial revascularization with minimal surgical trauma, short hospital stay, and excellent early therapeutic result in 14 patients with multivessel coronary disease.
The Cardiology | 1997
Avinoam Shiran; Sarah Kornfeld; Suzan Zur; Arie Laor; Yafa Karelitz; Arie Militianu; Amnon Merdler; Basil S. Lewis
In order to identify patients who benefit most from a cardiac rehabilitation program, we studied retrospectively all patients who completed a 3-month comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation program during a 2-year period. Questionnaires regarding physical exercise habits were sent to 122 patients and returned by 117 (96%) of them (53 post-acute myocardial infarction, 50 post-coronary artery bypass surgery, 14 post-infarction and surgery, 2 post-angioplasty). Exercise capacity (subset of 66 patients) improved by 19% after rehabilitation (7.8 +/- 3.1 to 9.3 +/- 2.7 METs, p < 0.0001). Univariate and multivariate analysis identified initial exercise capacity as the only independent variable predicting improvement in exercise performance (inverse relationship) (r2 = 0.24, p < 0.0001). The improvement was not related to age, sex, left ventricular function or time from cardiac event to rehabilitation. Patients recovering from both infarction and coronary artery bypass surgery showed a greater improvement (delta exercise capacity 2.8 +/- 1.4 METs) than patients after myocardial infarction alone (delta exercise capacity 0.8 +/- 2 METs, p < 0.02). Improvement was sustained for up to 2 years after completion of the program.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2000
David A. Halon; Amnon Merdler; Moshe Y. Flugelman; Hedy S. Rennert; Giora Weisz; Johnny Shahla; Basil S. Lewis
The adverse long-term prognosis following myocardial revascularization in diabetic patients has been ascribed to accelerated coronary disease, a higher incidence of late coronary restenosis after revascularization, and myocardial dysfunction. To examine the development of heart failure and its prognostic implications in diabetic patients, we analyzed the long-term (13-year) follow-up data of 363 patients-193 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasties and 170 coronary artery bypass operations-revascularized in a single cardiovascular center from 1984 to 1986. Baseline characteristics (age, previous infarction, baseline ventricular function) were similar in the 80 diabetic and 283 nondiabetic patients; multivessel disease and hypertension were marginally more common in diabetics (p = NS). Cumulative incidence of hospitalization for heart failure was high in the diabetic cohort (25% vs 11%, p = 0.001), with a rapidly increasing incidence after 5 years. Survival after first hospitalization for heart failure was markedly reduced in diabetics (11 of 20 [55%] vs 25 of 31 [81%] at 3 years; p = 0.04), as was survival free of further hospitalization for heart failure (5 of 20 [25%] vs 20 of 30 [63%]; p <0.005). Long-term 13-year survival (43% vs 78%, p <0.0001) and survival free of heart failure (33% vs 71%, p <0.0001) were decreased in diabetics, especially those with reduced ventricular function at baseline (17% vs 42%, p = 0.07). Multivariate analysis showed diabetes to be the strongest independent predictor of decreased survival (odds ratio 3. 6, 95% confidence interval 2.0 to 6.2; p <0.0001) and survival free of heart failure (odds ratio 4.0, 95% confidence interval 2.2 to 7. 1; p <0.0001) in patients undergoing revascularization. In summary, late-onset heart failure was frequent in diabetic patients after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty or coronary artery bypass grafting, and once present heralded an unrelenting progressive downhill clinical course.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998
DavidA Halon; MosheY Flugelman; Amnon Merdler; Hedy S. Rennert; Johnny Shahla; BasilS Lewis
OBJECTIVES We sought to examine completed 10-year survival and event-free survival in patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris treated by coronary balloon angioplasty. BACKGROUND Patients with unstable angina are at increased risk for recurrent acute coronary events. METHODS The study included 208 consecutive patients (133 with stable and 75 with unstable angina pectoris) undergoing angioplasty from 1984 to 1986. The balloon crossed the lesion in 185 patients (121 with stable and 64 with unstable angina pectoris). Angioplasty was performed in patients with unstable angina pectoris 12+/-15 days (median 8) after symptom onset. Patients with unstable angina pectoris were classified retrospectively into Braunwald class I (n=3), class II (n=20), class III (n=28), class B (n=52) and class C (n=12). Follow-up data were obtained from hospital charts, telephone interview and official death certificates where applicable. The study had >80% power to detect a clinically significant 20% difference in survival and a 20% difference in event-free survival between the stable and unstable patient groups. RESULTS Despite similar baseline characteristics, early (40-day) mortality was slightly higher in patients with unstable angina (4.7% [3 of 64 patients] vs. 0.8% [1 of 121 patients], p=NS). Long-term outcome was not different, because survival curves were parallel thereafter (10-year survival was 83% for those with stable and 77% for those with unstable angina, p=NS). Survival free of myocardial infarction or coronary artery bypass graft surgery at 10 years was 53% in patients with stable and 47% in patients with unstable angina (p=NS), and survival free of infarction, bypass surgery or repeat angioplasty was 32% for both groups at 10 years. In patients with Braunwald class III unstable angina, 10-year survival was 80%, as compared with 85% in other patients with unstable angina, due to the early hazard (p=NS). Survival and event-free survival were similar in patients who had had a recent myocardial infarction (Braunwald class C) and in patients with acute electrocardiographic changes. Repeat hospital admissions were not more frequent in patients with unstable angina (3.1+/-3.5 vs. 3.0+/-2.6, p=NS). CONCLUSIONS Ten-year survival and event-free survival were similar in patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris treated by coronary balloon angioplasty, with no evidence of an increased rate of recurrent cardiovascular events in the unstable group.
European Journal of Heart Failure | 2001
Rita Yuval; Klari Uziel; Nomi Gordon; Amnon Merdler; Nader Khader; Basheer Karkabi; Moshe Y. Flugelman; David A. Halon; Basil S. Lewis
Clinical trials, the gold standard for the evaluation of new therapeutic strategies, may prove a drug to be beneficial, harmful or neutral according to its effect on the end‐point(s) under study.
American Heart Journal | 1988
Basil S. Lewis; Arie Shefer; Amnon Merdler; Moshe Y. Flugelman; Ruth Hardoff; David A. Halon
We studied the acute effects of nisoldipine, a new second-generation calcium channel-blocking drug, on cardiac hemodynamics and left ventricular (LV) contractility in 10 patients with grade 2 to 4 cardiac failure. Pressures were measured from an arterial line and a flow-guided catheter in the pulmonary artery, cardiac output by thermodilution, and LV ejection fraction simultaneously by radionuclide ventriculography. Ventricular loading conditions were altered by sublingual nitroglycerin to facilitate construction of LV end-systolic pressure (radial stress)-volume and stress-shortening curves. Nisoldipine, given by continuous intravenous infusion (0.12 micrograms/kg/min), reduced mean arterial pressure (p = 0.001), systemic vascular resistance (p less than 0.05), and the double product, a measurement of myocardial oxygen demand (p less than 0.01). Cardiac index, stroke index, and LV ejection fraction increased in 8 of the 10 patients. LV contractility was initially greatly reduced and was unchanged or slightly decreased during the administration of nisoldipine. Emax, the slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume curve, was unaltered in half of the patients and decreased in the others (NS), whereas the end-systolic stress-shortening curve did not change. In summary, nisoldipine has a potentially useful acute hemodynamic profile in patients with cardiac failure; it increases forward blood flow in most patients, decreases the determinants of myocardial oxygen demand, and produces little measurable changes in the inotropic state of the left ventricle.