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Dive into the research topics where Caroline Lucas is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline Lucas.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Neurohormonal activation rapidly decreases after intravenous therapy withdiuretics and vasodilators for class IV heart failure

Wendy Johnson; Torbjørn Omland; Christian Hall; Caroline Lucas; Ole L Myking; Caroline M. Collins; Marc A. Pfeffer; Jean-Lucien Rouleau; Lynne Warner Stevenson

OBJECTIVES This study was designed to determine whether therapy with vasodilators and diuretics, designed to normalize loading conditions in decompensated heart failure (HF), reduces neurohormonal activation in the short term. BACKGROUND; Elevated vasoactive neurohormone levels in chronic HF have adverse prognostic impact and may be targeted by specific therapies. METHODS Endothelin-1, catecholamines, renin, aldosterone, angiotensin and atrial natriuretic peptides (ANP, N-ANP and BNP) were measured in 34 patients with advanced HF before and after hemodynamically guided therapy with vasodilators and diuretics. The therapy was designed to reduce filling pressures and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) without inotropic therapy. Blood was drawn before therapy (A), after initial diuretic and nitroprusside therapy to optimize hemodynamics (B, mean 1.4 days) and after transition to an oral regimen designed to maintain improved hemodynamics (C, mean 3.4 days). RESULTS Mean pulmonary wedge pressure fell from 31 to 18 mm Hg, right atrial pressure from 15 to 8 mm Hg, and SVR from 1,780 to 1,109 dynes/s/cm(-5). Cardiac index increased from 1.7 to 2.6 l/min/m(2) without intravenous inotropic agents (all p < or = 0.05). Average endothelin levels declined by 30%, from 7.7 to 5.5 pg/ml, and remained low at time point C, 5.2 pg/ml (p < 0.01). Norepinephrine was 858 at time A, 817 at time B, and fell by time C to 608 pg/ml (p < or = 0.05). The mean plasma BNP level fell by 26% after only 1.4 days and by 53% at time C (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Neurohormonal activation rapidly decreases after short-term therapy tailored to decrease severely elevated filling pressures and SVR without inotropic agents. Therapy designed to address neurohormonal activation should include therapy to improve severe resting hemodynamic compromise.


American Heart Journal | 1999

The 6-min walk and peak oxygen consumption in advanced heart failure: aerobic capacity and survival.

Caroline Lucas; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Wendy Johnson; Howard Hartley; Michele A. Hamilton; Julie A. Walden; Virginia Lem; Elizabeth Eagen-Bengsten

BACKGROUND This study sought to determine to what extent the 6-min walk (6MW) distance in advanced heart failure predicts aerobic capacity and provides comparable information regarding survival. Peak oxygen uptake ( VO(2)) and the 6MW both describe function and predict outcome over a wide range of heart failure, but their determinants and implications may differ within a narrower clinical spectrum. This study compared 6MW with aerobic capacity both at peak exercise and during low-level cycling. METHODS AND RESULTS Both the 6MW and symptom-limited cycle ergometry were performed by 307 patients of whom 264 patients additionally performed 6 min of 20-W cycling to estimate aerobic capacity during sustained low-level activity. In the first 198 patients, multivariate analysis of survival was performed with the 6MW and peak VO (2). Patients achieved the 6MW of 393 +/- 104 m and peak VO (2) of 14 +/- 5 mL/kg per minute. Although low peak VO (2) was more likely with the shorter 6MW, the relation was weak within peak VO (2) range of 10 to 20 mL/kg per minute (n = 213, 69% of patients, r = 0.28). During 20-W exercise, VO (2) was 9.2 +/- 2.0 mL/kg per minute, with respiratory exchange ratio poorly correlated with the 6MW. In contrast to peak VO (2), the 6MW in meters did not predict survival. Division into short, medium, and long walks, however, supplemented simple clinical description. CONCLUSIONS Although helpful in broader populations for identification of patients with obvious clinical compromise, the 6MW distance is not a surrogate for peak VO (2) in assessing aerobic capacity or prognosis for individuals with advanced heart failure.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Long-term follow-up (12 to 35 weeks) after dynamic cardiomyoplasty

Caroline Lucas; Frederik H. van der Veen; Emile C. Cheriex; Roberto Lorusso; Michael Havenith; Olaf C. Penn; Hein J.J. Wellens

OBJECTIVES To obtain information on the long-term effects of dynamic cardiomyoplasty on hemodynamics and muscle histology, this surgical method was evaluated in goats. BACKGROUND Dynamic cardiomyoplasty has been introduced as a new method to treat patients with severe cardiac failure. METHODS In 24 goats, the left latissimus dorsi muscle was wrapped around the heart. The muscle was then subjected to progressive electrical stimulation. In 16 goats, invasive transesophageal Doppler echocardiographic measurements and histologic evaluation of the latissimus dorsi muscle were performed at > or = 12 weeks after the wrapping. RESULTS Only two goats showed an increase in aortic and left and right ventricular pressures concomitant with increased aortic flow during latissimus dorsi muscle stimulation both before and after induction of cardiac failure using imipramine. This was accompanied by a preserved latissimus dorsi muscle structure and nearly complete transformation to type I muscle fibers. The remaining 14 goats showed extensive lipomatosis in the latissimus dorsi muscle, with severe intimal hyperplasia and proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the walls of the thoracodorsal artery and its branches. An increase in endoneural and endomysial connective tissue was observed, with some goats showing destroyed nerve branches near the electrodes. These findings differed from those observed after long-term electrical stimulation of goat latissimus dorsi muscle in situ. CONCLUSIONS Dynamic cardiomyoplasty is of use in the treatment of severe heart failure if the histologic structure of the wrapped latissimus dorsi muscle remains intact. Long-term results in goats suggest that the current approach used in dynamic cardiomyoplasty may lead to deterioration of the wrapped muscle.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Exhaled nitric oxide: a marker of pulmonary hemodynamics in heart failure.

Joshua M. Hare; Geoffrey C. Nguyen; Anthony F. Massaro; Jeffrey M. Drazen; Lynne W. Stevenson; Wilson S. Colucci; James C. Fang; Wendy Johnson; Michael M. Givertz; Caroline Lucas

OBJECTIVES We sought to test the hypothesis that patients with decompensated heart failure (HF) lose a compensatory process whereby nitric oxide (NO) maintains pulmonary vascular tone. BACKGROUND Exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) partially reflects vascular endothelial NO release. Levels of eNO are elevated in patients with compensated HF and correlate inversely with pulmonary artery pressures (PAP), reflecting pulmonary vasodilatory activity. METHODS We measured the mean mixed expired NO content of a vital-capacity breath using chemiluminescence in patients with compensated HF (n = 30), decompensated HF (n = 7) and in normal control subjects (n = 90). Pulmonary artery pressures were also measured in patients with HF. The eNO and PAP were determined sequentially during therapy with intravenous vasodilators in patients with decompensated HF (n = 7) and in an additional group of patients with HF (n = 13) before and during administration of milrinone. RESULTS The eNO was higher in patients with HF than in control subjects (9.9 +/- 1.1 ppb vs. 6.2 +/- 0.4 ppb, p = 0.002) and inversely correlated with PAP (r = -0.81, p < 0.00001). In marked contrast, patients with decompensated HF exhibited even higher levels of eNO (20.4 +/- 6.2 ppb) and PAP, but there was a loss of the inverse relationship between these two variables. During therapy (7.3 +/- 6 days) with sodium nitroprusside and diuresis, hemodynamics improved, eNO concentrations fell (11.2 +/- 1.2 ppb vs. before treatment, p < 0.05), and the relationship between eNO and PAP was restored. After milrinone, eNO rose proportionally with decreased PAP (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Elevated eNO may reflect a compensatory circulatory mechanism in HF that is lost in patients with clinically decompensated HF. The eNO may be an easily obtainable and quantifiable measure of the response to therapy in advanced HF.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1992

The Importance of Muscle Relaxation in Dynamic Cardiomyoplasty

Caroline Lucas; Frederik H. Veen; Emile C. Cheriex; Vincent van Ommen; Olaf C. Penn; Hein J.J. Wellens

During the last decade dynamic Cardiomyoplasty has been introduced as a new method to treat patients with severe heart failure. This procedure consists of the wrapping of the latissimus dorsi (LD) muscle around the heart with electrical stimulation of the muscle synchronous to cardiac contraction. The optima] pacing mode of the muscle, during the conditioning and working period of the LD muscle, is still unclear. The pace protocol, currently used worldwide, has a maximal number of muscle tetanic contractions of 100 per minute. Data are presented on the LD muscle contraction characteristics using that protocol. Both force measurements from six in situ stimulated goat LD muscles and x‐ray evaluation of the movement of metallic clips on wrapped LD muscles in two patients were used. Results demonstrate that LD muscle force is well maintained at the maximal rate of 100 contractions per minute but relaxation is severely hampered. This may lead to diminished support of the failing heart and damage of the wrapped muscle. A pacing protocol is proposed using a lower maximal stimulation rate.


American Heart Journal | 2000

Freedom from congestion predicts good survival despite previous class IV symptoms of heart failure

Caroline Lucas; Wendy Johnson; Michele A. Hamilton; Gregg C. Fonarow; Mary A. Woo; Carol M. Flavell; Julie A. Creaser; Lynne Warner Stevenson


Cardiovascular Research | 1992

Imipramine induced heart failure in the dog: a model to study the effect of cardiac assist devices

Caroline Lucas; Emile C. Cheriex; Frederik H. van der Veen; Jo Habets; Theo van der Nagel; Olaf C. Penn; Hein J.J. Wellens


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 1996

Altered Cardiorespiratory Control in Patients with Severe Congestive Heart Failure: A Transfer Function Analysis Approach

Jamil Sobh; Caroline Lucas; Lynne Warner Stevenson; J. Philip Saul


Circulation | 2006

Abstract 3954: Exercise Training Increases Oxygen Uptake Efficiency in Heart Failure

Maaike G. J. Gademan; Cees A. Swenne; Harriete F Verwey; Hedde van de Vooren; Henk J. van Exel; Caroline Lucas; Ger V.J. Cleuren; Martin J. Schalij; Ernst E. van der Wall


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2004

1165-104 Somatosensory stimulation as an alternative for exercise to enhance the arterial baroreflex

Cees A. Swenne; Yiping Sun; Liming Han; Martin J. Schalij; Henk J. van Exel; Caroline Lucas; Arie C. Maan; Harriette F. Verwey; Hedde van de Vooren; Ernst E. van der Wall

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Wendy Johnson

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Roberto Lorusso

Maastricht University Medical Centre

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Cees A. Swenne

Leiden University Medical Center

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