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Dive into the research topics where Theodore D. Fraker is active.

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Featured researches published by Theodore D. Fraker.


Circulation | 1990

Mechanism of cocaine-induced myocardial depression in dogs.

Theodore D. Fraker; Peter Temesy-Armos; Pamela Brewster; R D Wilkerson

Cocaine causes pronounced depression of left ventricular function in conscious dogs immediately after intravenous administration. To examine this effect, 14 mongrel dogs were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (32 mg/kg) and instrumented with arterial and venous catheters and a Doppler blood flow transducer on the left circumflex coronary artery. Two weeks later, heart rate, blood pressure, coronary blood flow, and regional left ventricular ejection fraction (by two-dimensional echocardiography) were measured before and 1, 2, 5, and 10 minutes after cocaine (4 mg/kg i.v.), while the animals were fully conscious. Heart rate, blood pressure, and coronary blood flow were increased significantly at each time after cocaine. Regional ejection fraction, however, was depressed by 50 +/- 7%, 35 +/- 4%, and 21 +/- 4% at 1, 2, and 5 minutes after cocaine treatment, respectively. Ten minutes after cocaine treatment, regional ejection fraction had recovered to a level not significantly different from baseline. Because the observed myocardial depression after cocaine was accompanied by a large increase in the rate-pressure product, and presumably, myocardial oxygen consumption, this depression could have been secondary to increased myocardial oxygen demand not appropriately matched by an increase in coronary blood flow. To minimize the effects of cocaine on myocardial oxygen demand, a subset of six dogs received cocaine (4 mg/kg i.v.) while sedated with pentobarbital (25 mg/kg). In these dogs, cocaine did not significantly alter heart rate or blood pressure; however, regional ejection fraction was significantly depressed by 44 +/- 5% and 36 +/- 6% at 1 and 2 minutes after cocaine treatment, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Angiology | 1994

Two-Vessel Coronary Artery Dissection in the Peripartum Period Case Report and Literature Review

Ernest C. Madu; Daniel Kosinski; William R. Wilson; Mark W. Burket; Theodore D. Fraker; Gary M. Ansel

The authors report a case of early peripartum myocardial infarction resulting from spontaneous dissection of the left anterior descending coronary artery and right coronary artery in a twenty-four-year-old woman. This is the first report of double-vessel coronary dissection involving both the left and right coronary arteries diagnosed antemortem and successfully treated.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Relation of effectiveness of intracoronary thrombolysis in acute myocardial infarction to systemic thrombolytic state

Mark W. Burket; Mary R. Smith; Thomas E. Walsh; Pamela Brewster; Theodore D. Fraker

Twenty-nine patients received intracoronary thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction 3.5 +/- 1.4 hours (mean +/- standard deviation) after the onset of pain. Ten patients received urokinase (UK) and 19 patients received streptokinase (SK). Laboratory variables of the coagulation system were measured before and immediately after therapy. When comparing patients in whom coronary artery recanalization occurred vs those in whom the artery remained occluded, those in whom recanalization was achieved had greater alterations in fibrinogen, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products and plasminogen by thrombolytic therapy than did those in whom recanalization was not achieved (p less than 0.05 for all variables). Euglobulin lysis time showed a similar but nonsignificant trend (p = 0.114). Patients who received SK showed markedly greater alterations in coagulation parameters than did patients treated with UK (p less than 0.05 for 5 of 6 variables measured) and had a much higher incidence of successful thrombolysis (74% for SK, 20% for UK). These data indicate that the development of a systemic fibrinolytic state contributes to success when using intracoronary thrombolytic agents in acute myocardial infarction. Rather than being considered an adverse effect of therapy, a systemic lytic state may serve as a reasonable clinical goal in attempting to produce thrombolysis.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1984

Altered acoustic reflectance on two-dimensional echocardiography as an early predictor of myocardial infarct size

Theodore D. Fraker; A.Dennis Nelson; Julie Arthur; R.Douglas Wilkerson

P6 area of increased acoustic reflectance was readily observed by 2-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) in the acutely ischemic canine myocardium. Fifteen mongrel dogs subjected to closed-chest coronary artery occlusion were used to test the hypothesis that these areas of altered acoustic reflectance were predictors of subsequent myocardial infarction (MI). Each dog was studied by 2-D echo in short-axis views of the left ventricle at 4 levels before and after coronary artery occlusion. The dogs were killed after 48 hours and heart sections were stained with triphenyltetrazolium chloride to identify the areas of necrosis. Four sections were then selected, approximating the same location within the left ventricle as the short-axis views taken for 2-D echocardiographic analysis. The in vivo 2-D echocardiographic examination revealed alteration of acoustic reflectance immediately after coronary occlusion, which detected the presence of MI with a sensitivity of 92% and a specificity of 90%. The extent of altered acoustic reflectance seen by echo correlated closely (r = 0.81) with the extent of MI detected by triphenyltetrazolium staining of the excised heart. Altered acoustic reflectance seen by 2-D echo immediately after coronary artery occlusion reflects acute ischemic changes and may be an early predictor of MI size.


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 1996

The Effects of Antihypertensive Agents on Serum Lipids

Ernest C. Madu; Raju C. Reddy; A. Madu; Chinyere Anyaogu; Tammara Harris; Theodore D. Fraker

Because various antihypertensive drugs adversely affect lipid metabolism, these drugs may increase associated risks for coronary artery disease and thus offset some of the beneficial effects of blood pressure reduction. In this paper the current literature regarding the effects of antihypertensive agents on serum lipids is reviewed. Differing effects of various classes of antihypertensives are assessed to further our understanding of this very important subject.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1987

Comparison of thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction in rural and urban settings

Coleen A. McNamara; Mark W. Burket; Pamela Brewster; Richard F. Leighton; Theodore D. Fraker

In this study, a tertiary care hospital served as a registry and information source to rural hospitals in northwestern Ohio where thrombolytic therapy had not previously been used. The study was designed to compare the safety and efficacy of intravenous thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction in the two settings. Fifty-five patients in eight rural hospitals and 36 patients in the urban tertiary care center received intravenous streptokinase. Of the 87 patients whose symptoms first occurred out of the hospital, 63 percent were treated within three hours. There were no significant differences in rates of clinically determined coronary artery recanalization (63 percent versus 69 percent for rural and tertiary hospitals, respectively), in-hospital mortality (5.4 percent versus 11 percent), bleeding complications (3.6 percent versus 5.5 percent), or time from the onset of pain to infusion of streptokinase (3.4 hours versus 2.9 hours). There were also no differences in the completeness of collection of serial coagulation data and cardiac enzyme values, or in the documentation of chest pain onset and cessation. Major differences between rural centers and the tertiary care center involved the use of serial electrocardiography (58 percent versus 89 percent, respectively), subsequent cardiac catheterization (49 percent versus 86 percent), and the timing of catheterization, when performed (30.4 days versus 4.6 days) (p less than 0.005 for all values). Thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction can be administered quickly, safely, and effectively in rural hospital settings even by physicians previously unfamiliar with this form of treatment.


American Heart Journal | 1984

Hyponatremia in patients treated with lorcainide, a new antiarrhythmic drug

Pitambar Somani; Peter Temesy-Armos; Richard F. Leighton; Lucy S. Goodenday; Theodore D. Fraker

The effects of lorcainide, a new antiarrhythmic drug, on serum electrolytes and osmolality are described in a series of 33 patients with organic heart disease and complex ventricular arrhythmias treated with lorcainide. In eight patients, a mean decrease in serum Na+ of 8.25 +/- 3.2 mEq/L was observed after a single 200 mg intravenous dose of lorcainide. Sixteen of 33 patients developed significant hyponatremia and hypoosmolality during oral treatment with lorcainide. In all except two patients, serum Na+ returned to normal values within 3 to 12 months of continued lorcainide therapy. Low serum Na+ and hypoosmolality in the absence of volume depletion, clinically manifest edema, and unaltered renal, adrenal, cardiac, or thyroid function suggest that this antiarrhythmic drug produced the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). SIADH appeared to be transient and asymptomatic in our patients. One patient developed severe hyponatremia with serum Na+ of 108 mEq/L when hydrochlorothiazide was given to control hypertension. It is concluded that SIADH is an important side effect of lorcainide therapy. We recommend that serum Na+ be carefully monitored in patients started on lorcainide therapy, and extreme caution should be exercised in prescribing diuretics to patients with persistent hyponatremia.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 1989

Automatic detection of inter-frame motion in echocardiographic images.

Joseph W. Klingler; Michael S. Begeman; Theodore D. Fraker; Lee T. Andrews

Signal averaging of echocardiographic frames acquired over multiple cardiac cycles has been used to improve image quality. However, misalignment of frames from respiration, transducer or patient movement, and irregular cardiac contraction affects the quality of the resultant averaged image. A motion detection system has been developed using inter-frame subtraction and statistical pattern recognition techniques. Automatic selection of frames exhibiting significant motion in a canine cardiac model compare favorably to manual selection by cardiologists (phi = 0.94) in a test set of 103 images. This method, combined with signal averaging, has resulted in an improvement in image quality.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1985

Current Status of Valve Prostheses

Richard J. Morgan; J. Terrance Davis; Theodore D. Fraker

The deterioration in cardiac function caused by a valvular lesion frequently can be halted or reversed by timely surgery. This article discusses the principles used to decide when surgery is beneficial and briefly reviews current indications for operation in the more common acquired and congenital valve lesions. The factors influencing the choice of a valve prosthesis are also discussed.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1984

Who is normal

Richard F. Leighton; Theodore D. Fraker

Excerpt In this issue Rozanski and colleagues (1) discuss a problem common to all studies that attempt to establish sensitivity and specificity of medical tests: the definition of normal in the com...

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Richard F. Leighton

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Ernest C. Madu

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Peter Temesy-Armos

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Mark W. Burket

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Pitambar Somani

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Joseph W. Klingler

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Julie Arthur

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Lee T. Andrews

University of Toledo Medical Center

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Mary R. Smith

University of Toledo Medical Center

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