Kaj Lindvall
Karolinska Institutet
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Featured researches published by Kaj Lindvall.
Journal of Hypertension | 1989
Elof Dimenäs; I. K. Wiklund; Carl Dahlöf; Kaj Lindvall; B. K. Olofsson; U. de Faire
In this study, previously untreated subjects were randomly recruited from a blood pressure screening programme. After repeated measurement of blood pressure levels, the subjects were divided into three major groups: normotensives (n = 95), borderline hypertensives (n = 69) and hypertensives (n = 30). Three self-administered standardized questionnaires were used to measure different aspects of subjective well-being and symptoms: the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), the Subjective Symptoms Assessment Profile (SSAP) and the Minor Symptoms Evaluation Profile (MSEP). The results indicate gradual differences between the three groups, the most pronounced symptoms being seen among the hypertensives. Statistically significant differences were found for cardiac and gastrointestinal symptoms as well as for emotional reactions, home life, social life, sex life and sleep. The differences in well-being and subjective symptoms noted between the groups are important in the evaluation of new antihypertensive agents. Self-administered questionnaires of the type used in this study could also be valuable in identifying symptoms and disturbances in subjective well-being related to the antihypertensive medication per se.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1993
Aman M. Amanullah; Sture Bevegård; Kaj Lindvall; Mikael Aasa
Myocardial perfusion and regional wall motion during adenosine-induced coronary vasodilation were assessed in 40 patients with angina pectoris by technetium-99m sestamibi single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and simultaneous 2-dimensional echocardiography. Adenosine was infused intravenously at a dose of 140 micrograms/kg body weight per minute for 6 minutes, and technetium-99m sestamibi was injected at 3 minutes. Adenosine caused a significant decrease in systolic and diastolic blood pressure and a significant increase in heart rate and the heart rate-blood pressure product. Adverse effects were mild and transient and no patient required aminophylline. Completely or partially reversible defects on SPECT were present in 28 patients, a fixed defect was seen in 4 patients, and no defect was seen in 8 patients. Two-dimensional echocardiography revealed a new or worsening wall motion abnormality in 21 patients, a fixed abnormality in 4 patients and no abnormality in 15. Transient perfusion defects were associated with transient wall motion abnormalities in 71% of cases. The overall sensitivity, specificity and predictive accuracy of adenosine echocardiography in detecting significant coronary artery disease (> 50% diameter stenosis) were 74, 100 and 78%, respectively, whereas those of adenosine SPECT were 94, 100 and 95%, respectively (p < 0.05, NS, and < 0.05, respectively). Thus adenosine technetium-99m sestamibi SPECT has a higher sensitivity and predictive accuracy than adenosine echocardiography, suggesting that adenosine-induced perfusion defects are not always associated with wall motion abnormality.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997
Anastasia Georgiades; Carola Lemne; U. de Faire; Kaj Lindvall; Mats Fredrikson
Exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity has been implicated in the development of left ventricular hypertrophy. The aim of the present study was to investigate the predictive value of casual clinic, 24‐h ambulatory blood pressure and stress‐induced blood pressure measurements in the laboratory for left ventricular structures over a 3‐year period in a group of middle‐aged borderline hypertensive men. The stress test included a pretask resting period and two tasks, mental arithmetic and isometric muscle contraction. Left ventricular wall thickness was assessed by M‐mode echocardiography. All stress‐induced blood pressure levels and reactivity measures as well as ambulatory systolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure levels were significantly correlated with left ventricular mass index (LVMI) 3 years later (r = 0.31–0.50), whereas there were no significant correlations between casual clinic or resting BP measurement and LVMI. A stepwise multiple regression analysis with LVMI at the 3‐year follow‐up as the dependent variable was applied. Baseline LVMI was entered as a forced variable and explained 24% of the variance in LVMI. Mean arterial blood pressure reactivity in the laboratory was the strongest additional independent variable, and added 15% to the prediction of LVMI 3 years later. Using a median split approach, the borderline hypertensive group was divided into high and low BP reactors. High and low BP reactors did not differ at initial baseline, but at the 3‐year follow‐up the high reactive group had significantly larger LVMI than the low reactive group. Results from the present study suggest that stress‐induced BP reactivity measurements predict the development of LVMI better than casual or resting BP measurements. Thus, measuring BP during standardized stress tests could be a method used to identify borderline hypertensive individuals at increased risk of developing left ventricular hypertrophy.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1995
Miguel Quintana; Kaj Lindvall; Lars Rydén; Fredrik Brolund
A predischarge exercise test was performed by 70 patients 7 +/- 4 days (mean +/- SD) after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) to determine the short- and long-term prognostic value of predischarge exercise stress echocardiography (Ex-Echo) compared with exercise stress electrocardiography (Ex-ECG). Two-dimensional echocardiograms were obtained at rest and immediately after exercise; a wall motion score index was obtained both at rest and immediately after exercise. Results of the Ex-Echo were positive in 27 patients (39%), whereas those of Ex-ECG were positive in 34 (49%). The wall motion index after exercise was lower in patients who died during follow-up (85 vs 98, p = 0.01) and in those with cardiac events, defined as death, nonfatal reinfarction, or revascularization (88 vs 98, p = 0.005). More patients with a positive Ex-Echo result had short-term cardiac events (within 2 weeks) than patients with a negative Ex-Echo (6 [22%] vs 2 [5%], p = 0.04). The same was true for long-term mortality (12 [44%] vs 3 [7%], p = 0.0002), reinfarctions (10 [37%] vs 4 [9%], p = 0.01), revascularization procedures (11 [41%] vs 7 [16%], p = 0.023), and cardiac events (22 [81%] vs 12 [28%], p < 0.0001). Survival time was shorter in patients with positive compared with negative Ex-Echo results (34% difference between groups, 95% confidence interval [CI] 10% to 58%, p = 0.002). The same applied for cumulative survival free from cardiac events (43%, p = 0.001, 95% CI 9% to 77%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Cardiology | 1993
Aman M. Amanullah; Kaj Lindvall
The prevalence and clinical significance of transient myocardial ischemia was evaluated prospectively in 43 patients with a clinical diagnosis of unstable angina. Continuous 2-channel Holter electrocardiographic monitoring was begun < 24 hours after admission. In 3,558 hours of recordings (mean 83 +/- 20 hours/patient), there were 1,671 episodes of transient ischemia; > 90% were asymptomatic. All patients but 1 had at least 1 episode of transient ischemia. Twenty-two patients (group 1) had a total ischemic duration of > or = 30 minutes/day, whereas 21 patients (group 2) had a total ischemic duration of < 30 minutes/day. A predischarge symptom-limited exercise test was performed in 40 of these patients after medical stabilization and 39 patients underwent exercise thallium-201 imaging, an average of 3 days after the exercise test. During a follow-up period of 39.9 +/- 9 months (range 28 to 49), 4 patients developed myocardial infarction and 22 required revascularization because of medically refractory angina. There were significantly more patients with total cardiac events (myocardial infarction or a need for revascularization) in group 1 than in group 2 (p < 0.05). Among patients undergoing an exercise test and exercise thallium-201 imaging, a positive exercise electrocardiogram and the presence of a reversible thallium-201 perfusion defect were also significant predictors of subsequent cardiac events (p < 0.05 and p < 0.001, respectively). The results of the Holter recordings did not add significantly more prognostic information.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hypertension | 1996
Anastasia Georgiades; Carola Lemne; Ulf de Faire; Kaj Lindvall; Mats Fredrikson
Our primary aim in the present study was to investigate the association between blood pressure measured in the laboratory and in the ambulatory state in a group of middle-aged borderline hypertensive men and age-matched normotensive control subjects. In addition, we examined the relation between stress-induced blood pressure measurements and left ventricular mass. Blood pressure and heart rate were measured noninvasively during a standardized laboratory stress protocol and four times per hour throughout 24 hours. Borderline hypertensive subjects had significantly higher systolic and diastolic pressures than normotensive subjects during both the daytime (systolic pressure, 141.1 +/- 9.7 versus 130.9 +/- 8.6 mm Hg; diastolic pressure, 88.8 +/- 7.0 versus 79.4 +/- 6.2 mm Hg, P < .001) and nighttime (systolic pressure, 114.0 +/- 9.9 versus 107.1 +/- 8.3 mm Hg; diastolic pressure, 71.5 +/- 7.5 versus 64.6 +/- 7.2 mm Hg, P < .001). The borderline hypertensive group also displayed increased systolic pressure reactivity in the laboratory compared with the normotensive group. The groups did not differ significantly in left ventricular mass (index). In both borderline hypertensive and normotensive individuals, blood pressure levels during stress testing were closely related to ambulatory blood pressure levels (r = .51 to .82). Furthermore, stress-induced blood pressure levels were significantly correlated to left ventricular mass in borderline hypertensive (r = .33 to .40) but not normotensive subjects. Since stress-induced blood pressure levels were significantly associated with both ambulatory blood pressure levels and left ventricular mass in borderline hypertensive subjects, the addition of standardized stress testing to casual blood pressure measurements may improve risk estimation.
Journal of Internal Medicine | 1995
Carola Lemne; Kaj Lindvall; Anastasia Georgiades; Mats Fredrikson; Ulf de Faire
Abstract. Objectives. To investigate left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in relation to 24‐h ambulatory blood pressure (24‐ABPM) and insulin levels in borderline hypertension.
International Journal of Cardiology | 1993
Aman M. Amanullah; Kaj Lindvall; Sture Bevegård
The prognostic value of thallium-201 imaging in patients with unstable angina is not well established. Forty consecutive patients with unstable angina who had responded to medical therapy underwent predischarge symptom-limited exercise testing and 39 of them underwent exercise thallium-201 imaging, on average 3 days after the exercise test. Exercise echocardiography was performed in 36 of these patients in conjunction with the predischarge exercise test. Patients with previous myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization, left bundle branch block and dilated cardiomyopathy were not included in the study. An echocardiographic wall-motion score index was derived by analyzing left ventricular regional wall motion. During a follow-up period of 30 +/- 6.4 months, 3 patients had a non-fatal myocardial infarction and 20 required revascularization because of a recurrence of severe medically refractory angina. Univariate predictors of cardiac events (non-fatal myocardial infarction or a need for revascularization) during follow-up included ST-depression during exercise, positive exercise echocardiography, a low exercise wall-motion score index, the presence of thallium-201 redistribution and the number of myocardial segments with thallium-201 redistribution. However, stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed that the presence of thallium-201 redistribution was the only significant non-invasive predictor (P < 0.005) of a cardiac event among patients who underwent predischarge exercise testing and exercise thallium-201 imaging. Among patients undergoing exercise echocardiography and exercise thallium-201 imaging, the number of segments with thallium-201 redistribution was the only significant predictor (P < 0.0005) of future cardiac events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Heart | 1995
S. V. Eriksson; Kenneth Caidahl; Anders Hamsten; U. de Faire; N. Rehnqvist; Kaj Lindvall
OBJECTIVE--To evaluate the power of measurements of left ventricular size and function for predicting long term (82 month) mortality by performing echocardiography in 97 men who had survived an acute myocardial infarction. SETTING--University hospital specialising in cardiology. PARTICIPANTS--97 consecutive male patients who had survived a myocardial infarction. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--The additive prognostic value of functional measurements to that provided by primary risk factors (smoking habits and lipoprotein levels), radiological heart size, exercise capacity, and number of major coronary arteries with haemodynamically significant stenoses was evaluated. An echo index was calculated from three echocardiographic variables (yielding one score point each if: left ventricular diameter at the end of diastole (LVDD) > or = 5.7 cm, left ventricular fractional shortening < or = 24%, and E point-separation (EPSS) > or = 10 mm). MAIN OUTCOME--17 cardiac deaths occurred during follow up. RESULTS--Univariate analysis showed that treatment with loop diuretics for heart failure (P < 0.01), LVDD (P < 0.01), left ventricular diameter at the end of systole (LVDS) (P < 0.001), left atrial diameter (P < 0.001), fractional shortening (P < 0.05), and echo index (P < 0.001) were all associated with cardiac death. Angiographically determined regional wall motion disturbances (P < 0.005) and angiographic ejection fraction (P < 0.001) were also associated with cardiac death, as was the number of major coronary arteries with significant stenosis (P < 0.05). When all significant echocardiographic variables from univariate analysis were entered into Cox proportional hazards survival analysis, LVDS and left atrial diameter contributed independently to the prediction of cardiac death. If angiographic data were also entered into the model, the echo index made an independent contribution to the prediction of cardiac death. CONCLUSIONS--Among young male patients with a previous myocardial infarction, a simple M mode echocardiographic examination can identify high and low risk patients and improve the prediction of cardiac death made from clinical information, exercise test, chest x ray and angiographically determined ejection fraction.
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1990
Elof Dimenäs; Jan Östergren; Kaj Lindvall; Carl Dahlöf; Gudrun Westergren; Ulf de Faire
The present study evaluated and compared subjective symptoms in hypertensive patients (N = 83) at therapeutically comparable dosages of a new controlled release (CR/ZOK) formulation of metoprolol (100 mg od) and atenolol (50 mg od). The trial was a 4‐week randomized double‐blind study preceded by a placebo run‐in period. Blood pressure (BP) was recorded 24 hours after intake of last dose. In subpopulations, 24‐hour ambulatory BP was recorded and exercise tests performed. Subjective symptoms were evaluated with a previously documented questionnaire (MSE‐profile) which has been shown to be sensitive in detecting CNS‐related symptoms caused by beta blockers. The MSE‐profile includes three dimensions: Contentment, Vitality and Sleep.