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The Human Coronary Collateral Circulation, Its Extracardiac Anastomoses and Their Therapeutic Promotion [PDF]
Cardiovascular disease remains the leading global cause of death, and the number of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and exhausted therapeutic options (i.e., percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and ...
Marius Reto Bigler, Seiler Christian
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Cardiopulmonary receptors and coronary circulation
Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1990Coronary blood flow has long been regarded as being regulated primarily by the metabolic demand of the myocardium [1,2]. Experimental and clinical reports [3-9], however, indicate that such coronary regulation can be overridden by the adrenergic drive to the heart.
Bruno Trimarco +6 more
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Coronary Circulation and Interventional Cardiology
Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 2005Cardiovascular disease has long been the leading cause of death in developed countries and it is rapidly becoming the number one killer in developing countries. Sudden heart attacks remain the primary cause of death in the United States: over 1.4 million attacks are suffered every year, more than half of which prove fatal.
Van Herck, P.l. +2 more
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Autoregulation of the coronary circulation
Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 1987Coronary autoregulation appears to be closely coupled to myocardial oxidative metabolism. Recent data suggest that coronary autoregulation depends on the prevailing balance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand. It seems likely that pO2 within a critical range may be the initial metabolic stimulus for coronary autoregulation.
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Heterogeneity in the Coronary Circulation
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1985The blood flow to the subendocardial layers of the left ventricle is approximately 10% higher than that to the outer layers. The larger subendocardial blood flow reserve results from a higher vascular density within that layer. The systolic coronary inflow is the result of the net forward flow and a concealed backflow.
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1927
Experimental ligation of the coronary arteries 1 and observations on man following the occlusion of these vessels 2 have demonstrated that the heart is extremely sensitive to a reduction in its blood supply. It would seem that a knowledge of the factors concerned in the regulation of the coronary circulation is important for a better understanding of ...
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Experimental ligation of the coronary arteries 1 and observations on man following the occlusion of these vessels 2 have demonstrated that the heart is extremely sensitive to a reduction in its blood supply. It would seem that a knowledge of the factors concerned in the regulation of the coronary circulation is important for a better understanding of ...
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Isoflurane and the Coronary Circulation
Anesthesiology, 1988B, Bollen, A, Ross
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