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Featured researches published by Erik Rydberg.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Effects on quality of life, symptoms and daily activity 6 months after termination of an exercise training programme in heart failure patients

Ronnie Willenheimer; Erik Rydberg; Charles Cline; Kristian Broms; Birgitta Hillberger; Lena Öberg; Leif Rw Erhardt

BACKGROUND Exercise training in heart failure patients improves exercise capacity, physical function, and quality-of-life. Prior studies indicate a rapid loss of these effects following termination of the training. We wanted to assess any sustained post-training effects on patients global assessment of change in quality-of-life (PGACQoL) and physical function. METHODS Fifty-four stable heart failure patients were randomised to exercise or control. The 4-month exercise programme consisted of bicycle training at 80% of maximal intensity three times/week, and 49 patients completed the active study period. At 10 months (6 months post training) 37 patients were assessed regarding PGACQoL, habitual physical activity, and dyspnea-fatigue-index. RESULTS Both post-training patients (n=17) and controls (n=20) deteriorated PGACQoL during the 6-month extended follow-up, although insignificantly. However, post-training patients improved PGACQoL slightly but significantly from baseline to 10 months (P=0.006), differing significantly (P=0.023) from controls who were unchanged. Regarding dyspnea-fatigue-index, post-training patients were largely unchanged and controls deteriorated insignificantly, during the extended follow-up as well as from baseline to 10 months. Both groups decreased physical activity insignificantly during the extended follow-up, and from baseline to 10 months post-training patients tended to decrease whereas controls significantly (P=0.007) decreased physical activity. CONCLUSION There was no important sustained benefit 6 months after termination of an exercise training programme in heart failure patients. A small, probably clinically insignificant sustained improvement in PGACQoL was seen in post-training patients. Controls significantly decreased the habitual physical activity over 10 months and post-training patients showed a similar trend. Exercise training obviously has to be continuing to result in sustained benefit.


Coronary Artery Disease | 1997

Prognostic significance of changes in left ventricular systolic function in elderly patients with congestive heart failure

Ronnie Willenheimer; Leif Rw Erhardt; Charles Cline; Erik Rydberg; Bo Israelsson

Background and designThe prognostic significance of changes in left ventricular systolic function over time is unknown in elderly patients with heart failure We prospectively examined the relation between 1 -year changes in left ventricular systolic function by echocardiographic determination of atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD), and subsequent 2-year mortality and morbidity in elderly patients with heart failure. AVPD determination allows for left ventricular function to be adequately assessed even when image quality is poor, as IS common in the elderly MethodsAVPD was measured at baseline and 1 year in 123 patients with heart failure (age 76.0 ± 5.4 years). An AVPD change of 1 mm or more (corresponding to an ejection fraction change of 0.05) was considered significant. ResultsAVPD decreased in 26 patients (21%), increased in 46 (37%), and was unchanged in 51 (42%) During a 2-year follow-up (from the 1 -year examination) mortality. total hospitalizations, and hospitalizations for heart failure (35% of all hospitalizations) did not differ significantly between the three groups. Patients (n =80) with AVPD of 8.2 mm or less (corresponding to left ventricular ejection fraction of 0.40 or less) at the 1 -year examination demonstrated a higher mortality than patients with AVPD greater than 8.2 mm (43.8 versus 23.3%, P= 0.031), and also had more hospitalizations and days in hospital due to heart failure (1.0 ± 1.5 versus 0.4 ± 0.8, P= 0.020 and 10.4 ± 15.6 versus 4.6 ± 10.6, P =0.033, respectively). ConclusionsLeft ventricular function was readily assessed in all patients by determination of AVPD. Our results indicate that single but not serial assessment of left ventricular systolic function by determination of AVPD is of value in assessing the prognosis in elderly patients with heart failure.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2002

Prognostication and risk stratification by assessment of left atrioventricular plane displacement in patients with myocardial infarction.

Björn Brand; Erik Rydberg; Gerd Ericsson; Petri Gudmundsson; Ronnie Willenheimer

BACKGROUND Mean left atrioventricular plane displacement is strongly related to prognosis in patients with heart failure. We aimed to examine its value for prognostication and risk stratification in patients hospitalised for acute myocardial infarction. METHODS AND RESULTS Left atrioventricular plane displacement was assessed by echocardiography in 271 consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction. Mean prospective follow-up was 628 days. Atrioventricular plane displacement was readily assessed in all patients and was significantly lower in patients who died (n=41, 15.1%) compared to the survivors: 8.2(5.6) v. 10.0(5.5) mm, P<0.0001. Overall mortality was 31.3% in the lowest quartile with regard to atrioventricular plane displacement (<8.00 mm) and 10.1% in the combined upper three quartiles. Thus, the hazard ratio for an atrioventricular plane displacement <8.0 mm compared to 8 mm or more was 3.1, P=0.0001. The combined mortality/heart failure hospitalisation incidence was 43.8% in the lowest and 14.6% in the combined upper three quartiles: Risk ratio 3.0, P<0.0001. In multivariate analysis, including age and history of atrial fibrillation, left atrioventricular plane displacement was an independent prognostic marker. CONCLUSION In post-myocardial infarction patients, echocardiographic assessment of atrioventricular plane displacement showed a strong, independent prognostic value. Determination of left atrioventricular plane displacement can be readily performed in virtually all patients, and may in clinical practice facilitate identification of high-risk patients.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2010

Effect of successful parathyroidectomy on 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism

Erik Rydberg; Mats Birgander; Anne-Greth Bondeson; Lennart Bondeson; Ronnie Willenheimer

OBJECTIVE The pathogenesis of hypertension in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is unclear, and the prevailing opinion is that parathyroidectomy does not affect the blood pressure (BP). Most previous studies have been based on BP measurements at rest in a clinical setting. The aim of this study was to get additional information by 24-hour ambulatory measurements. DESIGN AND PATIENTS Forty-nine consecutive patients with PHPT (age 63+/-12 years, 44 women) were examined before and 6 months after curative parathyroid surgery. MEASUREMENTS Serum concentrations of calcium and PTH, and 24-hour ambulatory mean, minimum, and maximum systolic (S) and diastolic BP, and mean arterial BP. RESULTS On average, the patients showed no BP change after parathyroidectomy. However, those with a history of hypertension (n=20) showed generally increased BP values after parathyroidectomy, with significantly increased minimum and average SBP (P=0.02 and P=0.04, respectively), whereas patients without a history of hypertension (n=29) showed unchanged or slightly reduced BP values after parathyroidectomy, with significantly decreased maximum SBP (P=0.04). Serum concentrations of PTH and calcium were not significantly related to any of the BP variables measured. CONCLUSIONS The novel finding that patients with both PHPT and hypertension may show increased BP after parathyroidectomy warrants intensified BP control postoperatively in these patients, and motivates early treatment of PHPT in order to prevent the development of complicating hypertension.


Heart | 2004

Left atrioventricular plane displacement but not left ventricular ejection fraction is influenced by the degree of aortic stenosis

Erik Rydberg; Petri Gudmundsson; Linn M.A. Kennedy; Leif Rw Erhardt; Ronnie Willenheimer

Aims: To examine how left atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD), a widely used measure of left ventricular (LV) function, is related to presence and degree of aortic stenosis. Methods and results: Cardiac dimensions, LV filling, left AVPD, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), and valve function were assessed by echocardiography/Doppler in 182 patients with various cardiac diseases (mean (SD) age 69 (12) years, 36% women), 49 consecutive with and 133 consecutive without aortic stenosis. In an analysis of covariance, neither left AVPD nor LVEF was independently correlated with the presence of aortic stenosis. However, looking separately at patients with aortic stenosis, left AVPD (p  =  0.03) but not LVEF correlated independently with degree of aortic stenosis in multiple linear regression analysis. In patients with aortic stenosis, an abnormal left AVPD had 94% sensitivity and 90% negative predictive value with regard to severe aortic stenosis, compared with 56% and 62%, respectively, for LVEF. Conclusion: In patients with cardiac disease, neither left AVPD nor LVEF correlated independently with presence of aortic stenosis. However, in patients with aortic stenosis, left AVPD but not LVEF correlated with the degree of aortic valve obstruction and left AVPD but not LVEF had high sensitivity and negative predictive value with regard to severe aortic stenosis. Compared with LVEF, left AVPD is an earlier and more sensitive marker of LV haemodynamic load in patients with aortic stenosis.


Coronary Artery Disease | 2002

The prevalence of impaired left ventricular diastolic filling is related to the extent of coronary atherosclerosis in patients with stable coronary artery disease.

Erik Rydberg; Ronnie Willenheimer; Leif Rw Erhardt

AimsThe relation between abnormal left ventricular (LV) diastolic filling and the extent of coronary atherosclerosis per se has not been described. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of impaired LV diastolic filling in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) and its relationship to the number and location of coronary lesions visualized at coronary angiography. Methods and resultsIn 170 consecutive patients with stable CAD and an abnormal coronary angiogram we assessed LV diastolic filling by Doppler evaluation of the transmitral early to atrial peak flow velocity (E/A) and the systolic to diastolic ratio of the pulmonary venous peak inflow to the left atrium (S/D). Abnormal diastolic filling was defined as E/A ≤0.75, or E/A >1.0 combined with S/D ≤1.0, and was present in 41% of the patients. In patients with one-, two- and three-vessel disease the prevalence of impaired diastolic filling was 27, 30 and 49%, respectively (P  = 0.026). In multiple logistic regression analysis diastolic filling was independently correlated with the number of stenotic coronary vessel areas. ConclusionIn patients with stable angiographically verified CAD, the prevalence of impaired diastolic filling was 41%. The prevalence increased with an increasing number of stenotic coronary artery areas independent of other variables tested, including prior myocardial infarction, LV systolic function and mitral regurgitation.


International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging | 2002

Echocardiographic assessment of left atrioventricular plane displacement as a complement to left ventricular regional wall motion evaluation in the detection of myocardial dysfunction.

Ronnie Willenheimer; Erik Rydberg; Martin Stagmo; Petri Gudmundsson; Gerd Ericsson; Leif Rw Erhardt

Aim: We aimed to find out if abnormal left atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) is a sign of myocardial dysfunction, even in patients with normal left ventricular (LV) regional wall motion (RWM). Methods: We prospectively performed echocardiography in 1350 consecutive patients referred to our echocardiography laboratory. Left AVPD and LV RWM were evaluated in all patients. We prospectively selected all patients with normal LV RWM but impaired left AVPD for further analysis of clinical parameters. Results: Eighty-eight of the 1350 patients had completely normal LV RWM but impaired left AVPD (≤10 mm) in at least one region (septal, lateral, posterior, anterior). Of these, 60.2% had prior and/or acute myocardial infarction, predominantly non-Q-wave, whereas 33.0% had angina without infarction and 2.3% had hypertension. In 49 (55.7%) patients coronary angiography was performed. All were abnormal. In 4.5% (n = 4) of the patients no obvious reason for the AVPD decrease was found, but was not precluded. Conclusion: Almost all patients with abnormal left AVPD and completely normal LV RWM had clinical cardiac disease. Thus, decreased AVPD despite normal LV RWM seems to be a true sign of myocardial dysfunction, predominantly indicating subendocardial dysfunction. In screening for patients with myocardial dysfunction assessment of left AVPD may be useful as a complement to LV RWM evaluation. The prognosis in such patients is currently being evaluated.


Blood Pressure | 2009

Natriuretic peptides as indicators of cardiac remodeling in hypertensive patients

Martin Magnusson; Stefan Jovinge; Erik Rydberg; Björn Dahlöf; Christian Hall; Olav Wendelboe Nielsen; Anders Grubb; Ronnie Willenheimer

Abstract Aims. This study was performed to evaluate the relationship between three different natriuretic peptides and left ventricular mass, function and diameter, and kidney function in patients with hypertension. Methods. One hundred and thirty-nine patients with moderate hypertension were consecutively included. N-terminal brain natriuretic peptide (Nt-BNP), brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and N-terminal pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (Nt-ANP) were analyzed. Cardiac remodeling was assessed by echocardiography (UCG) and glomerular filtration was estimated by cystatin C. Results. Patients were stratified into four groups with regard to the extent of cardiac remodeling: (1) no remodeling; (2) one of left ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricular dysfunction or left ventricular dilatation; (3) two of above and (4) all three parameters. All peptides differed significantly between the groups (all p<0.001), with a continuous stepwise increase from groups 1 through 4. Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed equal diagnostic performances for the detection of any cardiac abnormalities for Nt-BNP [area under curve, AUC=0.63 (0.52–0.75), p=0.026] and BNP [AUC=0.64 (0.53–0.76), p=0.019], both, however superior to Nt-ANP [AUC=0.59 (0.47–0.70), p=0.139]. In multivariable linear regression analysis, all three indicators of cardiac remodeling were independently correlated with ln Nt-BNP and ln BNP, whereas only left ventricular diameter was independently correlated with ln Nt-ANP. Conclusions. Natriuretic peptide levels increased with increasing number of markers of cardiac remodeling. Nt-BNP and BNP are useful to discriminate between patients with regard to cardiac remodeling and might be considered a screening tool in order select patients eligible for further examination with UCG examination.


European Heart Journal | 1998

Exercise training in heart failure improves quality of life and exercise capacity

Ronnie Willenheimer; Leif Rw Erhardt; Charles Cline; Erik Rydberg; Bo Israelsson


European Heart Journal | 1999

Left atrioventricular plane displacement is related to both systolic and diastolic left ventricular performance in patients with chronic heart failure

Ronnie Willenheimer; Bo Israelsson; Charles Cline; Erik Rydberg; Kristian Broms; Leif Rw Erhardt

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