Cardiac size, function and rhythm were examined in 11 patients with anorexia nervosa. Mean left ventricular, left atrial and aortic dimensions on echocardiogram were below normal adult values at baseline. In addition to decreased cardiac dimensions--ventricular ectopy, relative hypotension, bradycardia and blunted heart rate--response to exercise were noted. Left ventricular systolic function, however, was unimpaired as indicated by normal echocardiographic fractional shortening, and by normal exercise augmentation of ejection fraction determined by radionuclide cineangiography. Eight of the patients responded to treatment with a mean weight gain of 32%. In these eight, cardiac dimensions increased toward normal: left ventricular dimension increased by 13%; left atrial dimension by 20%; aortic dimension by 15% and estimated left ventricular mass by 20%. We conclude that abnormalities of heart size and rhythm occur in patients with anorexia nervosa. However, cardiac dimensions, including left ventricular mass, may increase following nutritional rehabilitation, accompanied by an increase in heart rate and blood pressure.
To determine prospectively whether the severity of reversible left ventricular ischemia provides prognostic information in mildly symptomatic patients with coronary-artery disease and preserved left ventricular function at rest (ejection fraction greater than 40 per cent), we studied 117 patients by means of exercise electrocardiography and radionuclide angiography. No patient had stenosis of the left main coronary artery. Mortality during subsequent medical therapy was significantly associated (by univariate life-table analysis) with three-vessel coronary-artery disease and the magnitude of the ejection fraction during exercise. In patients with three-vessel disease who had both ST-segment depression of 1 mm or more and a decrease in ejection fraction during exercise, in association with an exercise tolerance of 120 W or less, the probability of survival at four years was only 71 +/- 11 per cent (S.E.). All deaths occurred in this subgroup. Thus, objective evidence of left ventricular ischemia during exercise and exercise capacity identify one subgroup of minimally symptomatic patients with three-vessel disease with an excellent prognosis and another subgroup at relatively high risk of dying during subsequent medical therapy.
The hemodynamic effects of intravenous verapamil administration were examined in 27 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Increasing doses of verapamil produced small increases in heart rate and cardiac output and a significant decrease in systolic blood pressure, but had no significance effect on mean pulmonary artery wedge pressure or left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. The highest dose of verapamil increased heart rate from 72 +/- 3 to 81 +/- 6 beats/min and reduced systolic blood pressure from 118 +/- 8 to 99 +/- 5 mm Hg (p less than 0.005). This dose decreased the basal left ventricular outflow tract gradient from 94 +/- 14 to 49 +/- 14 mm Hg and the average left ventricular outflow tract gradient during the Valsalva maneuver from 76 +/- 5 to 63 +/- 13 mm Hg, during amyl nitrite inhalation from 69 +/- 15 to 39 +/- 13 mm Hg, and during isoproterenol infusion from 108 +/- 29 to 70 +/- 21 mm Hg (p less than 0.01). These results indicate that verapamil can significantly decrease left ventricular outflow obstruction in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and thus may provide an important new therapeutic agent in the treatment of this disorder.
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