Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Susan Ziesche is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Susan Ziesche.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

A Comparison of Enalapril with Hydralazine–Isosorbide Dinitrate in the Treatment of Chronic Congestive Heart Failure

Jay N. Cohn; Gary R. Johnson; Susan Ziesche; Frederick R. Cobb; Gary S. Francis; Felix E. Tristani; Raphael F. Smith; W. Bruce Dunkman; Henry S. Loeb; Maylene Wong; Geetha Bhat; Steven Goldman; Ross D. Fletcher; James E. Doherty; C. Vincent Hughes; Peter E. Carson; Guillermo Cintron; Ralph Shabetai; Clair Haakenson

BACKGROUND To define better the efficacy of vasodilator therapy in the treatment of chronic congestive heart failure, we compared the effects of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate with those of enalapril in 804 men receiving digoxin and diuretic therapy for heart failure. The patients were randomly assigned in a double-blind manner to receive 20 mg of enalapril daily or 300 mg of hydralazine plus 160 mg of isosorbide dinitrate daily. The latter regimen was identical to that used with a similar patient population in the effective-treatment arm of our previous Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trial. RESULTS Mortality after two years was significantly lower in the enalapril arm (18 percent) than in the hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate arm (25 percent) (P = 0.016; reduction in mortality, 28.0 percent), and overall mortality tended to be lower (P = 0.08). The lower mortality in the enalapril arm was attributable to a reduction in the incidence of sudden death, and this beneficial effect was more prominent in patients with less severe symptoms (New York Heart Association class I or II). In contrast, body oxygen consumption at peak exercise was increased only by hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate treatment (P less than 0.05), and left ventricular ejection fraction, which increased with both regimens during the 2 years after randomization, increased more (P less than 0.05) during the first 13 weeks in the hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate group. CONCLUSIONS The similar two-year mortality in the hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate arms in our previous Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trial (26 percent) and in the present trial (25 percent), as compared with that in the placebo arm in the previous trial, (34 percent) and the further survival benefit with enalapril in the present trial (18 percent) strengthen the conclusion that vasodilator therapy should be included in the standard treatment for heart failure. The different effects of the two regimens (enalapril and hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate) on mortality and physiologic end points suggest that the profile of effects might be enhanced if the regimens were used in combination.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Effect of Vasodilator Therapy on Mortality in Chronic Congestive Heart Failure

Jay N. Cohn; Donald G. Archibald; Susan Ziesche; Joseph A. Franciosa; W. Eugene Harston; Felix E. Tristani; W. Bruce Dunkman; William R. Jacobs; Gary S. Francis; Kathleen H. Flohr; Steven Goldman; Frederick R. Cobb; Pravin M. Shah; Robert Saunders; Ross D. Fletcher; Henry S. Loeb; Vincent Hughes; Bonnie J. Baker

To evaluate the effects of vasodilator therapy on mortality among patients with chronic congestive heart failure, we randomly assigned 642 men with impaired cardiac function and reduced exercise tolerance who were taking digoxin and a diuretic to receive additional double-blind treatment with placebo, prazosin (20 mg per day), or the combination of hydralazine (300 mg per day) and isosorbide dinitrate (160 mg per day). Follow-up averaged 2.3 years (range, 6 months to 5.7 years). Mortality over the entire follow-up period was lower in the group that received hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate than in the placebo group. This difference was of borderline statistical significance. For mortality by two years, a major end point specified in the protocol, the risk reduction among patients treated with both hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate was 34 percent (P less than 0.028). The cumulative mortality rates at two years were 25.6 percent in the hydralazine--isosorbide dinitrate group and 34.3 percent in the placebo group; at three years, the mortality rate was 36.2 percent versus 46.9 percent. The mortality-risk reduction in the group treated with hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate was 36 percent by three years. The mortality in the prazosin group was similar to that in the placebo group. Left ventricular ejection fraction (measured sequentially) rose significantly at eight weeks and at one year in the group treated with hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate but not in the placebo or prazosin groups. Our data suggest that the addition of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate to the therapeutic regimen of digoxin and diuretics in patients with chronic congestive heart failure can have a favorable effect on left ventricular function and mortality.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1983

Survival in men with severe chronic left ventricular failure due to either coronary heart disease or idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy

Joseph A. Franciosa; Mary M. Wilen; Susan Ziesche; Jay N. Cohn

Congestive heart failure (CHF) is known to be highly fatal, but to better assess efficacy of therapeutic interventions a greater understanding of its course is required. Previous studies of survival are limited by heterogeneity of patient populations and diverse criteria for diagnosing CHF. We followed up 182 patients with chronic left ventricular failure who were symptomatic despite therapy. The length of the follow-up period averaged 12 ± 10 (mean ± standard deviation [SD]) months (range 1 to 41). The cause of CHF was coronary artery disease in 95 patients and idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy in 87. A total of 88 deaths occurred, of which 40 (45%) were sudden; the incidence of sudden death was similar in patients with coronary artery disease and idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The overall mortality rate was 34% at 1 year, 59% at 2 years, and 76% at 3 years. The mortality rate in patients with coronary artery disease was 46 and 69% at 1 and 2 years, compared with 23 and 48% at 1 and 2 years in those with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (p 2 ), and stroke work (35 ± 19 versus 56 ± 33 g-m) than did the survivors (all p


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 1999

Racial differences in response to therapy for heart failure: Analysis of the Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trials

Peter E. Carson; Susan Ziesche; Gary R. Johnson; Jay N. Cohn

BACKGROUND Heart failure in blacks has been associated with a poorer prognosis than in whites. In such diseases as hypertension, blacks show pathophysiological differences and respond differently to some therapies than whites. The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical characteristics and response to therapy of black compared with white patients with heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS In the first Vasodilator-Heart Failure Trial (V-HeFT I), 180 black male patients were compared with 450 white male patients for baseline characteristics, prognosis, and response to therapy. In V-HeFT II, the same comparisons were made for 215 black and 574 white male patients, including an analysis stratified by the presence or absence of a history of hypertension. In both trials, black patients had a lower incidence of coronary artery disease, greater incidence of previous hypertension, and a greater cardiothoracic ratio (P < .05) than white patients. In V-HeFT II, plasma norepinephrine levels were significantly less in blacks; plasma renin activity was less only in blacks with a history of hypertension. Overall mortality or hospitalization for congestive heart failure did not differ between blacks and whites in the placebo group in V-HeFT I. However, the mortality of black patients receiving hydralazine plus isosorbide dinitrate (H-I) was reduced (P = .04) in V-HeFT I, whereas white patients showed no difference from placebo. In V-HeFT II, only white patients showed a mortality reduction from enalapril therapy compared with H-I therapy (P = .02). Whites also showed evidence of greater blood pressure reduction and enhanced regression of cardiac size in response to enalapril. When stratified by history of hypertension in V-HeFT II, only whites with a history of hypertension, who had greater renin levels, showed significant mortality reduction with enalapril compared with H-I therapy. Hospitalization rates did not differ between treatment groups in either study. CONCLUSION Whites and blacks showed differences in cause, neurohormonal stimulation, and pharmacological response in heart failure. This retrospective analysis suggests angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors are particularly effective in whites, and the H-I combination can be equally effective in blacks. Prospective trials involving large numbers of black patients are needed to further clarify their response to therapy.


Circulation | 1997

Effect of the Calcium Antagonist Felodipine as Supplementary Vasodilator Therapy in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure Treated With Enalapril V-HeFT III

Jay N. Cohn; Susan Ziesche; Raphael F. Smith; Inder S. Anand; W. Bruce Dunkman; Henry S. Loeb; Guillermo Cintron; William E. Boden; Lawrence Baruch; Peter Rochin; Larrye Loss

BACKGROUND Despite therapy with diuretics, ACE inhibitors and digoxin morbidity and mortality in heart failure remain high and might respond favorably to an additional vasodilator. METHODS AND RESULTS Male patients (n=450) with chronic heart failure (cardiac dysfunction and impaired exercise performance) on optimal current therapy (97% enalapril, 89% diuretics) were randomly assigned to double-blind treatment with felodipine extended release (5 mg BID) or placebo for 3 to 39 months (average, 18 months). Felodipine significantly reduced blood pressure and, at 3 months, increased ejection fraction (2.1% versus -0.1% units in the placebo group, P=.001) and reduced plasma atrial natriuretic peptide levels (-2.9 versus 26.9 pg/mL in the placebo group, P=.01) but did not improve exercise tolerance, quality of life, or the need for hospitalization. During long-term follow-up, the favorable effects on ejection fraction and atrial peptide did not persist, but felodipine prevented worsening exercise tolerance and quality of life. In the felodipine and placebo groups, mortality (13.8% versus 12.8%, respectively) and hospitalization (43% versus 42%) rates were similar, and a higher incidence of peripheral edema was the only apparent side effect of felodipine therapy. CONCLUSIONS Felodipine exerts a well-tolerated additional sustained vasodilator effect in patients with heart failure treated with enalapril, but the only possible long-term benefit was a trend for better exercise tolerance and less depression of quality of life in the second year of treatment. The drug appears to be safe but not clearly efficacious in patients with heart failure.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1979

Functional capacity of patients with chronic left ventricular failure: Relationship of bicycle exercise performance to clinical and hemodynamic characterization

Joseph A. Franciosa; Susan Ziesche; R.N. Mary Wilen

Abstract Severity of congestive heart failure is usually graded by clinical and resting hemodynamic criteria, although patients are most often symptomatic during exertion. Upright bicycle exercise to symptomatic maximum and anaerobic threshold was performed by 44 male patients with clinical class II to IV chronic congestive heart failure, and in 16 similarly aged normal male volunteer subjects. Patients achieved a maximal oxygen consumption of 13.3 ± 0.8 (SEM) ml/kg/min compared to 21.9 ± 1.2 ml/kg/min in normal subjects (p 20, II=14–20, III=10–13, IV=


Circulation | 1999

Augmented Short- and Long-Term Hemodynamic and Hormonal Effects of an Angiotensin Receptor Blocker Added to Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitor Therapy in Patients With Heart Failure

Lawrence Baruch; Inder S. Anand; Ira S. Cohen; Susan Ziesche; Dianne Judd; Jay N. Cohn

BACKGROUND ACE inhibitors may not adequately suppress deleterious levels of angiotensin II in patients with heart failure. An angiotensin receptor blocker added to an ACE inhibitor may exert additional beneficial effects. METHODS AND RESULTS Eighty-three symptomatic stable patients with chronic heart failure receiving long-term ACE inhibitor therapy were randomly assigned to double-blind treatment with valsartan 80 mg BID, valsartan 160 mg BID, or placebo while receiving their usual ACE inhibitor therapy. Studies were performed before and after the first dose of the test drug and again after 4 weeks of therapy. A single dose of lisinopril was administered during study days to ensure sustained ACE inhibition. Compared with placebo, the first dose of valsartan 160 mg resulted in a significantly greater reduction in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure at 3, 4, and 8 hours and during the prespecified 4- to 8-hour interval after the dose and in systolic blood pressure at 2, 3, 6, 8, and 12 hours and 4 to 8 hours after the dose. A pressure reduction from valsartan 80 mg did not achieve statistical significance. After 4 weeks of therapy, net reductions in 0-hour trough pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (-4.3 mm Hg; P=0. 16), pulmonary artery diastolic pressure (-4.7 mm Hg; P=0.013), and systolic blood pressure (-6.8 mm Hg; P=0.013) were observed in the valsartan 160 mg group compared with placebo. After 4 weeks of therapy, plasma aldosterone was reduced by valsartan 80 mg BID (-52. 1 pg/mL; P=0.001) and 160 mg BID (-47.8 pg/mL; P<0.001) compared with placebo, and there was a trend for a reduction in plasma norepinephrine (-97 pg/mL; P=0.10). Seventy-four of the 83 patients completed the trial. CONCLUSIONS Physiologically active levels of angiotensin II persist during standard long-term ACE inhibitor therapy.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1982

Response of plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine to dynamic exercise in patients with congestive heart failure

Gary S. Francis; Steven R. Goldsmith; Susan Ziesche; Jay N. Cohn

The activity of the sympathetic nervous system is increased at rest in patients with congestive heart failure. To determine whether this augmentation is carried over during dynamic upright exercise, 14 patients with congestive heart failure were stressed maximally during upright bicycle ergometry. Plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine levels were measured in the basal upright (sitting) posture before and during maximal exercise. The results were compared with those in six healthy control subjects before and during maximal exercise. Plasma norepinephrine increased during exercise from a mean (+/- standard error of the mean) of 650 +/- 95 to 1,721 +/- pg/ml in the group with heart failure. This increase was significantly less (p less than 0.001) than that in the control group (from 318 +/- 36 to 3,230 +/- 418 pg/ml). However, for equivalent levels of total body oxygen consumption (VO2), the group with heart failure had higher levels of plasma norepinephrine than the control group. Plasma epinephrine was similar in the two groups in the basal upright position (92 +/- 18 and 92 +/- 26 pg/ml), but it increased more during exercise in the normal subjects (743 +/- 210 pg/ml) than in the group with heart failure (167 +/- 67 pg/ml) (p less than 0.001). The percent increase in norepinephrine correlated with the percent change in VO2 in the group with heart failure (r = 0.62, p less than 0.02), but the percent change in epinephrine did not. There is, therefore, a disturbance in the sympathetic nervous system during exercise in patients with congestive heart failure. Although norepinephrine increases in such patients to a greater extent than in normal subjects at lower levels of exercise, the extremely high levels of norepinephrine and epinephrine generated by normal subjects during maximal upright exercise do not occur in patients with heart failure.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1985

Relative Attenuation of Sympathetic Drive During Exercise in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure

Gary S. Francis; Steven R. Goldsmith; Susan Ziesche; Hisayoshi Nakajima; Jay N. Cohn

Patients with congestive heart failure have been considered to have augmented sympathetic drive both at rest and during dynamic exercise. The augmentation observed during exercise may be related to the state of near exhaustion experienced by patients with heart failure at relatively low work loads. To compare the response of the sympathetic nervous system to exercise in normal subjects and patients with heart failure when they are working in a comparable physiologic frame of reference, the data for both groups can be expressed as percent peak oxygen consumption achieved (percent peak VO2) rather than as a function of absolute oxygen consumption (VO2). Ten healthy control subjects and 31 patients with chronic clinical class II and III heart failure were studied during upright maximal bicycle exercise. Eighteen of the 31 patients had primary cardiomyopathy and 13 had ischemic cardiomyopathy. The average ejection fraction at rest was 24 +/- 10% (+/- SD) in the group with heart failure. Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, VO2 and plasma norepinephrine levels were measured at rest and throughout exercise. When the data were expressed as a function of percent peak VO2 achieved, patients with heart failure demonstrated a flatter slope (p = 0.004) than normal in the response of plasma norepinephrine to exercise, indicating a relative blunting of sympathetic drive. This was accompanied by attenuated heart rate (p = 0.001) and blood pressure (p less than 0.001) responses. These differences were not apparent when the data are expressed as a function of absolute VO2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation | 2007

Early and Sustained Benefit on Event-Free Survival and Heart Failure Hospitalization From Fixed-Dose Combination of Isosorbide Dinitrate/Hydralazine Consistency Across Subgroups in the African-American Heart Failure Trial

Anne L. Taylor; Susan Ziesche; Clyde W. Yancy; Peter E. Carson; Keith C. Ferdinand; Malcolm Taylor; Kirkwood F. Adams; Adeoye Y. Olukotun; Elizabeth Ofili; S. William Tam; Michael L. Sabolinski; Manuel Worcel; Jay N. Cohn

Background— We previously reported that the fixed-dose combination of isosorbide dinitrate and hydralazine hydrochloride (FDC I/H) significantly decreased the risk of all-cause death and first hospitalization for heart failure (HF) and improved quality of life in patients with New York Heart Association class III or IV heart failure in the African-American Heart Failure Trial (A-HeFT). The current analyses further define the effect of FDC I/H on the timing of event-free survival (mortality or first hospitalization for HF) and time to first hospitalization for HF, as well as effects by subgroups and effects on cause-specific mortality. Methods and Results— Kaplan-Meier analyses of the 1050 A-HeFT patients on standard neurohormonal blockade demonstrated that FDC I/H produced a 37% improvement in event-free survival (P<0.001) and a 39% reduction in the risk for first hospitalization for HF (P<0.001). These benefits appeared to emerge early (at ≈50 days of treatment) and were sustained through the duration of the trial. Subgroup analyses of treatment effect by age, sex, baseline blood pressure, history of chronic renal insufficiency, presence of diabetes mellitus, cause of HF, and baseline medication usage demonstrated consistent beneficial effect of FDC I/H on the primary composite score and event-free survival across all subgroups. Mortality from pump failure was reduced by 75% (P=0.012). Conclusions— FDC I/H treatment of black patients with moderate to severe HF who were taking neurohormonal blockers produced early and sustained significant improvement in event-free survival and hospitalization for HF in the A-HeFT cohort, with significant reduction in mortality from cardiovascular and pump failure deaths. The treatment effects on the primary composite end point and event-free survival were consistent across subgroups.

Collaboration


Dive into the Susan Ziesche's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jay N. Cohn

University of Minnesota

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuel Worcel

University of Pittsburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Felix E. Tristani

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elizabeth Ofili

Morehouse School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge