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Dive into the research topics where Edgar Haber is active.

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Featured researches published by Edgar Haber.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1969

Determination of Therapeutic and Toxic Serum Digoxin Concentrations by Radioimmunoassay

Thomas W. Smith; Vincent P. Butler; Edgar Haber

Abstract A sensitive (0.2 ng per milliliter), precise (standard deviation 3 to 4 per cent), and specific radioimmunoassay for serum digoxin concentration has been developed. Levels are determined by measurement of the extent to which digoxin in the patients serum competes with tritium-labeled digoxin, added in vitro, for digoxin-specific antibody binding sites. Mean values in nontoxic patients with normal renal function receiving 0.25 or 0.50 mg per day were 1.1 and 1.4 ng per milliliter respectively; the ranges fell within relatively narrow limits. Patients with cardiac arrhythmias attributed to digoxin toxicity had a mean level of 3.3 ng per milliliter, and little overlap with the nontoxic group (p less than 0.001). A determination can be completed in one hour, and may provide useful information to the clinician faced with the difficult problem of evaluating his patients state of digitalization.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982

Heart failure in outpatients: a randomized trial of digoxin versus placebo.

Daniel Chia-Sen Lee; Robert Arnold Johnson; John B. Bingham; Marianne Leahy; Robert E. Dinsmore; Allan H. Goroll; John B. Newell; H. William Strauss; Edgar Haber

The view that digitalis clinically benefits patients with heart failure and sinus rhythm lacks support from a well-controlled study. Using a randomized, double-blind, crossover protocol, we compared the effects of oral digoxin and placebo on the clinical courses of 25 outpatients without atrial fibrillation. According to a clinicoradiographic scoring system, the severity of heart failure was reduced by digoxin in 14 patients; in nine of these 14, improvement was confirmed by repeated trials (five patients) or right-heart catheterization (four patients). The other 11 patients had no detectable improvement from digoxin. Patients who responded to digoxin had more chronic and more severe heart failure, greater left ventricular dilation and ejection-fraction depression, and a third heart sound. Multivariate analysis showed that the third heart sound was the strongest correlate of the response to digoxin (P less than 0.0001). These data suggest that long-term digoxin therapy is clinically beneficial in patients with heart failure unaccompanied by atrial fibrillation whose failure persists despite diuretic treatment and who have a third heart sound.


Circulation | 1990

Treatment of 150 cases of life-threatening digitalis intoxication with digoxin-specific Fab antibody fragments. Final report of a multicenter study.

Elliott M. Antman; T. Wenger; V. P. Butler; Edgar Haber; Thomas W. Smith

One hundred fifty patients with potentially life-threatening digitalis toxicity were treated with digoxin-specific antibody fragments (Fab) purified from immunoglobulin G produced in sheep. The dose of Fab fragments was equal to the amount of digoxin or digitoxin in the patients body as estimated from medical histories or determinations of serum digoxin or digitoxin concentrations. The youngest patient received Fab fragments within several hours of birth, and the oldest patient was 94 years old. Seventy-five patients (50%) were receiving long-term digitalis therapy, 15 (10%) had taken a large overdose of digitalis accidentally, and 59 (39%) had ingested an overdose of digitalis with suicidal intent. The clinical response to Fab was unspecified in two cases, leaving 148 patients who could be evaluated. One hundred nineteen patients (80%) had resolution of all signs and symptoms of digitalis toxicity, 14 (10%) improved, and 15 (10%) showed no response. After termination of the Fab infusion, the median time to initial response was 19 minutes, and 75% of the patients had some evidence of a response by 60 minutes. There were only 14 patients with adverse events considered to possibly or probably have been caused by Fab; the most common events were rapid development of hypokalemia and exacerbation of congestive heart failure. No allergic reactions were identified in response to Fab treatment. Of patients who experienced cardiac arrest as a manifestation of digitalis toxicity, 54% survived hospitalization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1976

Reversal of advanced digoxin intoxication with Fab fragments of digoxin-specific antibodies.

Thomas W. Smith; Edgar Haber; Lawrence A. Yeatman; Vincent P. Butler

Purified Fab fragments of ovine digoxin-specific antibodies reversed severe digoxin intoxication in a patient who had taken 22.5 mg of the drug with suicidal intent. Atrioventricular block with extreme bradycardia was temporarily managed by pacing, but progressive, intractable hyperkalemia (serum potassium of 8.7 meq per liter) with increasing pacing threshold and progressive intraventricular conduction delay was controlled only after infusion of 1100 mg of Fab. Sinus rhythm returned 10 minutes after completion of Fab infusion. Within five hours, the serum potassium concentration fell to 4.0 meq per liter. Free digoxin concentrations in serum fell sharply to undetectable levels, whereas total serum digoxin concentration concomitantly increased 12-fold. Renal excretion of digoxin bound to Fab was documented. Reversal of toxicity was not accompanied by hemodynamic instability, and antibodies to sheep Fab fragments were not detected in the patients serum after treatment. Thus, purified digoxin-specific Fab fragments are capable of rapid reversal of advanced digoxin toxicity.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1974

The Renin-Angiotensin System

Suzanne Oparil; Edgar Haber

TIGERSTEDT and Bergman established a role for the kidney in blood-pressure regulation at the close of the 19th century. In a classic experiment, they produced hypertension in dogs by injecting a cr...


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1970

Digoxin intoxication: the relationship of clinical presentation to serum digoxin concentration

Thomas W. Smith; Edgar Haber

A radioimmunoassay for serum digoxin concentration has been used to study the interrelationships of circulating levels of the drug and various factors in the clinical setting in 48 hospitalized patients with cardiac rhythm disturbances due to digoxin intoxication. 131 patients on maintenance doses of digoxin without toxicity and 48 patients with equivocal evidence of digoxin excess were also studied and compared with the toxic group. Patients with cardiac rhythm disturbances due to digoxin intoxication tended to be older and to have diminished renal function compared with the nontoxic group; body weight, serum potassium concentration, underlying cardiac rhythm, and nature of cardiac disease were not significantly different for the groups as a whole. Despite comparable mean daily digoxin dosages, digoxin intoxicated patients had a mean serum digoxin concentration of 3.7 +/-1.0 (SD) ng/ml, while nontoxic patients had a mean level of 1.4 +/-0.7 ng/ml (P < 0.001), 90% of patients without evidence of toxicity had serum digoxin concentrations of 2.0 ng/ml or less, while 87% of the toxic group had levels above 2.0; the range of overlap between the two groups extended from 1.6 to 3.0 ng/ml. Patients with atrioventricular block as their principal toxic manifestation had a significantly lower mean serum digoxin concentration than those in whom ectopic impulse formation was the chief rhythm disturbance. Patients with equivocal evidence of digoxin excess had received comparable daily maintenance doses of digoxin but had a mean serum concentration of 1.9 +/-0.8 ng/ml, intermediate between those of the nontoxic (P < 0.005) and toxic (P < 0.001) groups. Renal function as judged by mean blood urea nitrogen concentration was also intermediate. The data indicate that knowledge of the serum digoxin concentration, weighed in the clinical context, is useful in the management of patients receiving this drug.


Methods in Enzymology | 1991

Protein engineering of single-chain Fv analogs and fusion proteins.

James S. Huston; Meredith Mudgett-Hunter; Mei-Sheng Tai; John E. McCartney; Frederick Warren; Edgar Haber; Hermann Oppermann

Publisher Summary This chapter describes the minimal antibody binding site through the protein engineering of single-chain Fv analog and fusion proteins. In this approach, the genes encoding VH and VL domains of a given monoclonal antibody are connected at the DNA level by an appropriate oligonucleotide, and on translation, this gene forms a single polypeptide chain with a linker peptide bridging the two variable domains. This offers economy of design, wherein a single-chain Fv (sFv) gene encodes a single Mr 26,000 protein that forms the entire antibody combining site. The chapter focuses on sFv analogs and fusion proteins giving insight into their design, production, and properties. The sFv is well suited to applications in immunotargeting, because a given sFv gene may be fused to a particular effector protein gene to yield a bifunctional sFv fusion protein. The fusion of effector domains to either chain terminus of the sFv appears to be practical without perturbation of the antigen combining site.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Inhibition of growth and p21ras methylation in vascular endothelial cells by homocysteine but not cysteine.

Hong Wang; Masao Yoshizumi; Kaihua Lai; Jer-Chia Tsai; Mark A. Perrella; Edgar Haber; Mu En Lee

Although hyperhomocysteinemia has been recognized recently as a prevalent risk factor for myocardial infarction and stroke, the mechanisms by which it accelerates arteriosclerosis have not been elucidated, mostly because the biological effects of homocysteine can only be demonstrated at very high concentrations and can be mimicked by cysteine, which indicates a lack of specificity. We found that 10–50 μm of homocysteine (a range that overlaps levels observed clinically) but not cysteine inhibited DNA synthesis in vascular endothelial cells (VEC) and arrested their growth at the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Homocysteine in this same range had no effect on the growth of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) or fibroblasts. Homocysteine decreased carboxyl methylation of p21 ras (a G1 regulator whose activity is regulated by prenylation and methylation in addition to GTP-GDP exchange) by 50% in VEC but not VSMC, a difference that may be explained by the ability of homocysteine to dramatically increase levels ofS-adenosylhomocysteine, a potent inhibitor of methyltransferase, in VEC but not VSMC. Moreover, homocysteine-induced hypomethylation in VEC was associated with a 66% reduction in membrane-associated p21 ras and a 67% reduction in extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, which is a member of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family. Because the MAP kinases have been implicated in cell growth, the p21 ras -MAP kinase pathway may represent one of the mechanisms that mediates homocysteine’s effect on VEC growth. VEC damage is a hallmark of arteriosclerosis. Homocysteine-induced inhibition of VEC growth may play an important role in this disease process.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982

Treatment of life-threatening digitalis intoxication with digoxin-specific Fab antibody fragments: experience in 26 cases

Thomas W. Smith; Vincent P. Butler; Edgar Haber; H. Fozzard; Frank I. Marcus; W. F. Bremner; I. C. Schulman; A. Phillips

Purified Fab fragments of digoxin-specific antibodies obtained from sheep were used to treat 26 patients with advanced, life-threatening digoxin (23 cases) or digitoxin (3 cases) toxicity. These patients had advanced cardiac arrhythmias, and in some cases hyperkalemia, which were resistant to conventional treatment. All patients had an initial favorable response to doses of Fab fragments calculated (in most cases) to be equivalent, on a molar basis, to the amount of cardiac glycoside in the patients body. In four patients treated after prolonged hypotension and low cardiac output, death ensued from cerebral or myocardial hypoperfusion. In one case the available Fab fragment supply was inadequate to reverse a massive suicidal ingestion of digoxin, and the patient died after recurrent ventricular arrhythmias. In the remaining 21 patients, cardiac rhythm disturbances and hyperkalemia were rapidly reversed, and full recovery ensued. There were no adverse reactions to the treatment. We conclude that the use of purified digoxin-specific Fab fragments is a safe and effective means to reverse advanced, life-threatening digitalis intoxication.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1976

The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in congestive failure in conscious dogs.

L Watkins; J Burton; Edgar Haber; J R Cant; F W Smith; A C Barger

The role of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in the development of congestive failure has been assessed in the conscious dog by use of the nonapeptide converting enzyme inhibitor. Constriction of the pulmonary artery or thoracic inferior vena cava was maintained for 2 wk while daily measurements were made of plasma renin activity, plasma aldosterone, plasma volume, hematocrit, serum sodium and potassium concentrations, sodium and water balance, body weight, and arterial, caval, and atrial pressures. The initial response to constriction was a reduction in blood pressure, a rise in plasma renin activity, plasma aldosterone, and water intake, and nearly complete sodium retention. In the days after moderate constriction plasma volume and body weight increased (with development of ascites and edema); blood pressure, sodium excretion, plasma renin acvitity, and plasma aldosterone returned to normal. In animals in which blood pressure was not restored, plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone remained elevated throughout the period of constriction. Single injections of converting enzyme inhibitor reduced blood pressure when plasma renin activity was elevated. Chronic infusion of the inhibitor in dogs with thoracic inferior vena caval constriction prevented the restoration of blood pressure and suppressed the rise in plasma aldosterone; sodium retention and volume expansion were less than in control experiments. Thus the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system plays an essential role in the maintenance of blood pressure during the genesis of congestive failure. Initially, the restoration of blood pressure is dependent upon circulating angiotensin II; in the later stages, blood pressure is dependent upon the increase in plasma volume.

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Ban-An Khaw

Northeastern University

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Marschall S. Runge

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Mark A. Perrella

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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John T. Fallon

New York Medical College

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