Patricia Huss
Ohio State University
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Circulation | 1978
Carl V. Leier; Paul T. Heban; Patricia Huss; Charles A. Bush; Richard P. Lewis
SUMMARY Thirteen patients with severe cardiac failure underwent a single crossover study of dopamine and dobutamine in order to compare the systemic and regional hemodynamic effects of the two drugs. The dose-response data demonstrated that dobutamine (2.5-10 μg/kg/min) progressively and predictably increases cardiac output by increasing stroke volume, while simultaneously decreasing systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. There was no change in heart rate or premature ventricular contractions (PVCs)/min at this dose range. Dopamine (2-8 μg/kg/min) increased the stroke volume and cardiac output at 4, g/kg/min. Dopamine at > 4, Ag/kg/min provided little additional increase in cardiac output and increased the pulmonary wedge pressure and the number of PVCs/min. At > 6 Ag/kg/min, dopamine increased heart rate. During the 24-hour maintenance-dose infusion of each drug (dopamine 3.7-4, dobutamine 7.3-7.7 μg/kg/min), only dobutamine maintained a significant increase of stroke volume, cardiac output, urine flow, urine sodium concentration, creatinine clearance and peripheral blood flow. Renal and hepatic blood flow were not significantly altered by the maintenance dose of either drug. Systemic and regional hemodynamic data suggest that dobutamine has many advantages over dopamine when infused in patients with cardiac failure.
Circulation | 1983
Carl V. Leier; Patricia Huss; Raymond D. Magorien; Donald V. Unverferth
We studied 30 patients with moderate-to-severe congestive heart failure in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to determine the acute and long-term effects of isosorbide dinitrate on clinical status and on resting and exercise hemodynamics. Seventeen patients received placebo and 13 isosorbide dinitrate. First-dose isosorbide dinitrate (40 mg orally) decreased resting and exercise pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, pulmonic and systemic arterial pressures and pulmonic and systemic vascular resistances without augmenting exercise capacity. Compared with placebo, chronic therapy with isosorbide dinitrate (40 mg orally every 6 hours for 12 weeks) significantly improved clinical status and exercise capacity. Resting and exercise systemic blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance returned to baseline values during chronic isosorbide dinitrate therapy, but pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance remained improved. In patients with congestive heart failure, 12 weeks of oral isosorbide dinitrate therapy improves resting and exercise hemodynamics, exercise capacity, and clinical status; tolerance develops to the systemic arterial vascular effects without attenuation of the venous and pulmonary vascular effects.
Circulation | 1982
Carl V. Leier; Patricia Huss; Richard P. Lewis; Donald V. Unverferth
Continuous 72-hour infusions of dobutamine reportedly effect sustained clinical improvement in patients with congestive heart failure. This study was designed to determine if shorter, more frequent infusions, delivered in an outpatient setting, elicit a similar response. Twenty-six patients with moderately severe congestive heart failure were randomized, 11 into a control group and 15 into a dobutamine treatment group. Baseline data were collected for 4 weeks in each group. Thereafter, the dobutamine treatment group received 4-hour infusions of dobutamine weekly for 24 weeks. Systolic time intervals, echocardiography, cardiac index and treadmill exercise tolerance were used to follow the progress of the control and dobutamine treatment groups. The ratio of preejection period to left ventricular ejection time and the cardiac index did not change significantly in either group. The velocity of circumferential fiber shortening and the percent change in the minor axis of the left ventricle during systole improved modestly (p less than 0.05) above baseline in the dobutamine group after 14 weeks of treatment and above the corresponding control values (p less than 0.05) after 22 weeks. Exercise tolerance (duration) improved 25--51% (all p less than 0.05) above baseline in the dobutamine group compared with 10--17% (all p greater than 0.05 vs baseline) in the control group. Heart rate at maximal exercise did not change significantly from baseline for either group and did not differ significantly between the two groups. Functional classification improved in 12 of 15 dobutamine treatment patients and in only two of 11 control patients (p less than 0.05). In our patients with congestive heart failure, weekly 4-hour dobutamine infusions did not elicit a major change in resting left ventricular function; however, exercise performance and clinical status improved considerably.
Circulation | 1983
Carl V. Leier; D Bambach; S Nelson; James B. Hermiller; Patricia Huss; Raymond D. Magorien; Donald V. Unverferth
Seven women with primary pulmonary hypertension underwent hemodynamic evaluation, at rest and during exercise, before and after the oral administration of captopril. Dose-response curves were generated for the 25-, 50- and 100-mg doses. Captopril significantly reduced systemic blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance; these effects persisted at submaximal levels of exercise. Captopril did not alter pulmonary artery pressure or resistance, cardiac output or stroke volume at rest or during exercise. Exercise tolerance did not improve. Four of the patients also received captopril chronically for 12 weeks at doses of 75 and 100 mg every 8 hours. Resting and exercise hemodynamic evaluation was repeated at the end of the 12-week period. Except for a persistent reduction in mean systemic blood pressure at rest, chronic captopril administration did not elicit hemodynamic changes. Measured exercise duration did not change during continuous captopril treatment, although one patient reported mild subjective improvement in activity tolerance. In primary pulmonary hypertension, captopril exerts its major effect on systemic vasculature, with little or no effect on the pulmonary circuit. While an occasional patient may experience some clinical improvement with captopril therapy, the majority of adult patients with severe primary pulmonary hypertension will not benefit from its chronic administration.
American Heart Journal | 1984
Carl V. Leier; Teressa J. Patrick; James B. Hermiller; Karen Dalpiaz Pacht; Patricia Huss; Raymond D. Magorien; Donald V. Unverferth
Ten patients with moderate to severe congestive heart failure (CHF) underwent central and regional hemodynamic measurements at rest and central hemodynamic measurements during exercise before and after the oral administration of nifedipine (0.2 mg/kg). Nifedipine significantly decreased systemic blood pressure, systemic vascular resistance, pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. Stroke volume and cardiac output increased after nifedipine. The measured parameters of left ventricular inotropy did not change significantly for this calcium channel blocker. While blood flow to renal, hepatic, and limb vascular beds increased (p less than 0.05 for renal and limb) after nifedipine, only limb blood flow increased in proportion to the increase in cardiac output, suggesting preferential dilatation of limb vasculature. Although initial-dose nifedipine did not increase exercise duration, it elicited an improvement in exercise hemodynamics by reducing systemic vascular resistance and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and increasing stroke volume and cardiac output. The calcium channel blocker, nifedipine, can be administered safely in the setting of ventricular failure and appears to favorably alter resting and exercise hemodynamics. A select number of patients with CHF may benefit from its long-term administration.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1982
James B. Hermiller; Dennis Bambach; Michael J. Thompson; Patricia Huss; Mary E. Fontana; Raymond D. Magorien; Donald V. Unverferth; Carl V. Leier
Ten women with primary pulmonary hypertension had resting hemodynamic measurements taken before and after the nonparenteral administration of various vasodilators and prostaglandin inhibitors. Only sublingual isoproterenol, alone or combined with sublingual isosorbide dinitrate, effected a substantial (greater than 20%) drop in pulmonary vascular resistance; this decrease was accompanied by little change in pulmonary artery pressure. Isosorbide dinitrate was the only drug that elicited any reduction in pulmonary artery pressure; pulmonary vascular resistance decreased modestly. The oral administration of diazoxide, hydralazine, phentolamine, and tolazoline elicited little change in pulmonary artery pressure or resistance. Except for tolazoline, all these agents significantly decreased systemic blood pressure and resistance. Prostaglandin inhibition by indomethacin (acute and chronic dosing) increased pulmonary and systemic vascular resistances and reduced cardiac output. Aspirin combined with dipyridamole elicited no changes. The vasodilators and prostaglandin inhibitors studied evoked little improvement in resting pulmonary hemodynamic abnormalities in primary pulmonary hypertension.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1983
Carl V. Leier; Karen Dalpiaz; Patricia Huss; James B. Hermiller; Raymond D. Magorien; Thomas M. Bashore; Donald V. Unverferth
Amrinone, 100 mg orally every 8 hours, was administered to 13 patients with moderate-to-severe congestive heart failure (CHF) for 1 month on an outpatient basis to determine the beneficial and undesirable effects of this new cardioactive agent in this clinical setting. These subjects received conventional CHF medications during the course of study. Ten patients who received conventional CHF medications alone served as a control group. Changes in functional classification were not significantly different between the 2 treatment groups. Amrinone augmented exercise capacity 37% above baseline compared with a 12% improvement for the control group. Noninvasive indexes of resting left ventricular function (echocardiography and systolic time intervals) did not change significantly for either group, nor was there a significant change in the exercise ejection fraction. All patients treated with amrinone had greater than or equal to 1 symptom-related or laboratory-detected adverse effect. An increase in the frequency of ventricular ectopic beats was noted at rest in 4 and with exercise in 6 patients (salvos of nonsustained ventricular tachycardia in 2). Six subjects treated with amrinone had gastrointestinal symptoms and 8 developed a viral-like illness. Other adverse effects noted in the amrinone-treated group included near-syncope, headaches, marked anxiety, chest pain, palpitations, maculopapular rash, hypokalemia, and elevation of serum transaminase levels. The control patients had significantly fewer adverse effects. Although individual patients with CHF may benefit from long-term amrinone therapy, the low benefit-to-risk-adverse effect ratio does not warrant widespread application of this drug in the outpatient management of CHF and requires caution when prescribing.
The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 1986
Carl V. Leier; Sean E. Patterson; Patricia Huss; Diane Parrish; Donald V. Unverferth
To determine the hemodynamic effects of a new α blocker, terazosin, in congestive heart failure, six patients with this condition underwent hemodynamic testing (at rest and during exercise) before and after dosing Doses of 2, 5, and 10 mg were examined in sequence over 3 days to define dose-response characteristics. Terazosin, in these doses, decreased pulmonary and systemic vascular resistances and right atrial and pulmonary capilary wedge pressures. Terazosin increased stroke volume and cardiac output, presumably through afterload-reduction, without altering heart rate. These aforementioned responses were apparent both at rest and during exercise. While a direct relationship existed between dose and plasma concentration, a similar relationship was not observed for dose (or plasma concentration) and hemodynamic response; no differences were noted between the hemodynamic responses to the three doses. Improvement in hemodynamics persisted and the clinical status and exercise capacity improved in the four patients chronically treated (over 2 months) with terazosin. Treating the heightened tone of the sympathetic nervous systems in congestive heart failure with the α blocker, terazosin, may be of benefit to some patients afflicted with this disorder.
Pharmacotherapy | 1986
Carl V. Leier; Jiang Hua Ren; Patricia Huss; Donald V. Unverferth
Ten patients with congestive heart failure underwent noninvasive and invasive hemodynamic testing before and sequentially after the administration of ibopamine to determine the cardiovascular effects of this oral dopamine congener. Single doses of 200, 400 and 600 mg were administered to all patients and 5 repeated doses of 200 or 400 mg were studied in 8. Hemodynamic effects occurred as early as 30 minutes and lasted up to 4 hours after dosing. In general, ibopamine elicited statistically significant dose‐related increases in cardiac output and reductions in the derived resistance of the systemic and pulmonary circulations. A biphasic response in central and peripheral pressures was observed; up to 1 hour after administration, ibopamine elevated mean right and left atrial pressures and pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures with a significant reduction of these measurements beyond 1 hour. It did not alter heart rate. Repeated doses qualitatively affected hemodynamics similar to the initial dose and did not appear to be accompanied by short‐term tolerance. While oral ibopamine elicits some favorable hemodynamic effects in humans with cardiac failure, the biphasic hemodynamic response is generally undesirable in the majority of these patients.
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 1986
Carl V. Leier; Patricia Huss; Diane Parrish; Philip F. Binkley; Donald V. Unverferth
Twenty-one patients with congestive heart failure (New York Heart Association functional class III) underwent a double-blind, parallel, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of indoramin (average dose of 50 mg every 12 h in 11 patients) versus placebo (n = 10). The study lasted 2 months and was initiated and terminated with the measurement of resting and exercise hemodynamics. Compared with baseline values, chronic administration of indoramin caused a mild reduction in resting mean systemic blood pressure (mean change of – 10 mm Hg), and postdosing results included a drop in systemic and pulmonary vascular resistances and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and a mild increase in stroke volume. Compared with baseline responses, chronic indoramin administration (postdosing) elicited a mild reduction in systemic and pulmonary vascular resistances and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during submaximal exercise. At this dose, chronic indoramin administration did not alter hemodynamics at maximal exercise or exercise duration to maximal exercise. While certain individual patients experienced clinical improvement on chronic indoramin therapy, the overall clinical status (symptoms, signs, diuretic requirements) of the indoramin-treated group did not change significantly when compared with that of the placebo control group.