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Spongy Myocardium

Cardiology, 1997
Spongy myocardium is a rare congenital anomaly. We report a 35-year-old patient in whom diagnosis of spongy myocardium had been made by angiocardiography 20 years before. The disorder eventually resulted in progressive right and left heart failure.
K, Reynen, K, Bachmann, H, Singer
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A Depressed Myocardium

Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 2000
Venlafaxine is a potent neuronal serotonin and noradrenaline re-uptake inhibitor, and to a lesser extent an inhibitor of dopamine reuptake. Paroxetine is a potent selective inhibitor of serotonin reuptake.A 27-year-old man ingested 1987.5 mg of venlafaxine and 360 mg of paroxetine.
S J, Partridge, D H, MacIver, T, Solanki
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Hibernating myocardium

American Journal of Critical Care, 2001
According to estimates, up to 50% of patients with coronary artery disease and impaired left ventricular function have areas of viable myocardium. This dysfunctional, yet viable myocardial tissue, which can improve functionally after myocardial oxygen supply is reestablished, has been called hibernating myocardium.
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Neurogenic stunned myocardium

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2009
Neurogenic stunned myocardium may be defined as myocardial injury and dysfunction occurring after diverse types of acute brain injury as a result of imbalance of the autonomic nervous system. The spectrum of observed cardiac abnormalities includes electrocardiographic changes, arrhythmia, myocardial necrosis, release of B-type natriuretic peptide, and ...
Hoang, Nguyen, Jonathan G, Zaroff
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Preconditioning Myocardium with Ischemia

Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy, 1991
Preconditioning and stunning are the chief adaptive changes induced in myocardium by a brief episode of reversible ischemia followed by arterial reperfusion. In the dog heart, both coexist for a period of at least 20 minutes of reperfusion, but after 120 minutes of reflow, preconditioning is much diminished, while stunning remains fully developed ...
R B, Jennings, C E, Murry, K A, Reimer
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The hibernating myocardium

1996
Hibernating myocardium represents a chronic myocardial dysfunction at rest associated with reduced coronary perfusion. Although myocardial contraction is depressed, metabolic balance is maintained, myocytes remain viable and myocardial contraction can be restored with myocardial revascularization.
J, Leor, R A, Kloner
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The hibernating myocardium

American Heart Journal, 1989
The hibernating myocardium refers to resting LV dysfunction due to reduced coronary blood flow that can be partially or completely reversed by myocardial revascularization and/or by reducing myocardial oxygen demand. It is different from the stunned myocardium. Methods for its detection are not yet perfect.
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Respiration in Myocardium

Nature, 1968
The qO2 or oxygen uptake of a tissue is considered to be a reflexion of the metabolic energy produced through substrate catabolism to support its functional activities. It is usually accepted that the total in vivo oxygen consumption is directly related to ATP production as the sole energy transfer and storage mechanism for endergonic processes1 ...
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CLINICALLY THE MYOCARDIUM

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1950
AS A CLINICIAN of the past seeing present day medicine through the clinical and investigational eyes of today as delineated in medical journals, I have gained the idea that, to those particularly interested in the circulatory system of man, the myocardium has been losing clinically in its interest, with the exception of its consideration as a terrain ...
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The diabetic myocardium

Current Diabetes Reports, 2006
Heart failure and diabetes mellitus are frequently associated, with diabetes potentiating the development of heart failure after other myocardial insults. This review documents the evidence in support of a specific primary myocardial disease in diabetes.
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