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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart + racing + slowing  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Greg Weld, KC's wheel man, dies at 64
Kansas City Star, MO -
By JIM PEDLEY The passing of Greg Weld, a Kansas City-born driver and auto-racing entrepreneur who died of a heart attack Monday at age 64, will make the ...
Hall of Fame: It's All About the Horse
BloodHorse, KY -
4 at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame ceremony. That plain and simple mantra was, ?It is all about the horse. ...
Teacher enjoys challenges of drag racing
Citizens Voice, PA - Aug 4, 2008
His car is equipped with a parachute that shoots out when he slows down. His wife, Deb, and daughter Brianne, 18, have never become involved with racing, ...

PassionPerformance.ca
2007 Mad Bastard Rally
PassionPerformance.ca, Canada -
I looked back to confirm it was unhurt and laughed once my heart stopped racing. Fortunately, it was the only encounter I had with an animal (aside from the ...

Seattle Times
Hydros | Ken Muscatel keeps racing, because he can
Seattle Times, United States - Aug 1, 2008
Having long been afflicted with an uneven heartbeat, he was taken to the emergency room with a rapid heart rate that wouldn't slow down. ...
Living to tell the tale
Indianapolis Star, United States - Jul 28, 2008
Legends cars are one of the stepping stones of grassroots racing. Instead of watching, the idea is to drive in a competitive setting. ...
Frisselle, Wilkins land Montreal victory
Motorsport.com, Florida - Aug 2, 2008
Darren drove a beautiful race today. At the same time, we've had terrible luck all year. I had my heart ripped out at Barber. But that's just racing. ...
You got the right stuff to be a professional heckler?
Lake Zurich Courier, Algonquin -
But that didn't slow down my racing heart in the least. But the looming question remained: What the heck was I going to heckle? My coworker Todd must have ...
Alex "Iron Doc" McDonald: Training and Racing in the Heat vs. the Cold
Xtri.com - Aug 1, 2008
Considering slowing your pace at time to ensure appropriate carbohydrate ingestions, particularly in hot, humid conditions. - Train in the conditions you ...
Listen and Lose Fat to Rapid Fat Loss Cardio mp3s
PR Web (press release), WA -
The workout music contains adrenaline-racing, heart-pumping tracks that will have the user exerting optimal training intensity. The cool-down music relaxes ...
Source: Google News

Effect of cardiac denervation on the maximal capacity for exercise in the racing greyhound -
DE Donald, SE Milburn, JT Shepherd - Journal of Applied Physiology, 1964 - Am Physiological Soc
... subsequent reduction in rate was slow to occur, since 8-10 min were ... Thus the pattern
of change in heart rate during exercise in the racing greyhound was ...

Panic Disorder in Seizure Patients: A Diagnostic Pitfall -
MC Spitz - Epilepsia, 1991 - Blackwell Synergy
... EEGs have either been abnormal because of mild diffuse slowing or normal ... In addition
to panic, she noted her heart racing, a fear of doing something uncontrolled ...

Effect of Beta-Adrenergic Receptor Blockade on Racing Performance of Greyhounds with Normal and with … -
DE DONALD, DA FERGUSON, SE MILBURN - Circulation Research, 1968 - Am Heart Assoc
... however, quickly resulted in a marked slowing in speed ... catecholamines, the greyhound
with a denervated heart has a severe reduction in its maximal racing speed ...

TACHYCARDIA STAY A STEP AHEAD OF YOUR PATIENTS RACING HEART. -
NS KUPPER, ES DUKE, BSN CCRN, LL BURDEN, MSN CCRN, … - Nursing, 1984 - nursing2004.com
... The digoxin, by blocking impulses through the AV node, should slow the heart's
ventricular response to the atrial overstim- ulation. ... Open racing heart. ...

Autonomic control of heart rate in the horse -
RL HAMLIN, WL KLEPINGER, KAYW GILPIN, CR SMITH - American Journal of Physiology, 1972 - Am Physiological Soc
... In dogs, Glick and Braunwald (3) have shown that, con- trary to earlier opinions
(8), slowing of heart rate below the normal resting rate arises from ...

Instructed heart rate control in a high heart rate population -
CT Twentyman, PF Malloy, AS Green - Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 1979 - Springer
... functioning does not increase the magnitude of slowing achieved (Gatchel ... individuals
experiencing what has been described as a racing, pounding heart. ...

Autonomic origin of heart rate fluctuations at the onset of muscular exercise -
L Fagraeus, D Linnarsson - Journal of Applied Physiology, 1976 - Am Physiological Soc
... 5. CRAIG, F. N., AND E. G. CUMMINGS. Slowing of the heart at the beginning of exercise. ...
beta-adrenergic receptor blockade on racing performance of ...

Resting and exercise heart rate with apnea and facial immersion in female swimmers -
NB Oldridge, GJ Heigenhauser, JR Sutton, NL Jones - Journal of Applied Physiology, 1978 - Am Physiological Soc
... If the cardiac slowing is a trained response related to ... precisely, we measured the
fall in heart rate with ... cycle ergometer were set in a racing cycle position ...

Relationship of Heart Rate to Ventricular Automaticity in Dogs During Ouabain Administration -
SM WITTENBERG, P GANDEL, PM HOGAN, W KREUZER, FJ … - Circulation Research, 1972 - Am Heart Assoc
... was produced by various combinations of slowing in idioventricular ... Post-Pacing
Depression in Anesthetized Dogs with Heart Block ... B&CING CONTROL 190 RACING 150 ...

Of Time, Motion, and Motor Racing
SB Purdy - Journal of American Culture, 1981 - Blackwell Synergy
... but going slower, while the great driver lives in slow time and ... the Indian sadhu,
who by sheer will slows his heart beat and ... Of Time, Motion and Motor Racing ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Slowing the racing heart

Scientists have discovered how we put the brakes on a racing heartbeat

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago explain in the May 11 issue of Circulation Research how an enzyme acts on the heart's pacemaker to slow the rapid beating of the heart's "fight-or-flight" reaction to adrenaline.

A single cell in the upper right chamber is responsible for setting the pace of the beating heart, triggering its neighbor cells to beat. In the human heart, one cell -- the pacemaker cell -- beats faster or slower to induce a rhythmic heartbeat that varies to increase or decrease the blood flow to the body as we eat, sleep or exercise.

"Disturbances of pacemaker control are common in heart diseases. When the heartbeat becomes non-rhythmic and chaotic, it can result in fatal arrhythmias and stroke," said R. John Solaro, UIC distinguished university professor and principal investigator of the study.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Current treatment of arrhythmia requires destruction of tissue surrounding a chaotic pacemaker, followed by insertion of a mechanical pacemaker that can regulate the heartbeat.

"Understanding the molecular regulation of the heart's pacemaker opens the possibility of less drastic treatment options, including drug interventions," said Solaro, who is also director of the center for cardiovascular research and head of physiology and biophysics at UIC.

Solaro worked with Yunbo Ke, UIC research assistant professor of physiology and biophysics and first author of the paper, and colleagues in England at Oxford and Manchester on characterizing and isolating the pacemaker cell.

The UIC researchers demonstrated that an enzyme called Pak 1, present in high concentrations in the heart, signals depression in the action of adrenaline and adrenaline-like chemicals on the pacemaker cell, playing an important role in slowing down the heart rate.

"The enzyme works through calcium and potassium channels that we know to be key players in the generation and regulation of the pacemaker activity," said Ke.

"Although adrenaline and other mechanisms that accelerate the heart rate have been well studied, mechanisms that might act as a brake are poorly understood," said Solaro.

"Identification of this previously unknown molecular mechanism for slowing the heartbeat may offer new avenues of diagnosis, drug design and treatment of many common heart diseases," said Solaro.

"Further, now that we know something of how this enzyme works in the pacemaker cell, we may discover it is involved in the regulation of other processes, particularly in the brain, where it is also highly expressed," added Ke.

###

Other contributors include Dr. Derek Tarrar, Thomas Collins, Stevan Rakovic, Paul Mattick and Michiko Yamasaki at Oxford; Dr. Ming Lei at the University of Manchester; and Mark Brodie at UIC.

The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Wellcome Trust and the British Heart Foundation.

For more information about UIC, visit www.uic.edu.

 

Stenting of abdominal arteries offers welcome relief for 'intestinal angina'

Minimally invasive technique is safe, simple alternative to grueling surgical procedure

(May 11, 2007—ORLANDO, FL)—Using catheter techniques perfected in the arteries of the heart, interventional cardiologists are successfully treating chronic mesenteric ischemia, a condition akin to intestinal angina. According to a study reported at the 30th Annual Scientific Sessions of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI), May 9–12, 2007, in Orlando, FL, angioplasty and stenting of clogged arteries in the abdomen successfully restored blood flow to the intestines and relieved painful symptoms in more than 90 percent of patients, without major complications.

"Chronic mesenteric ischemia is an ideal condition for treatment with nonsurgical interventions," said David E. Allie, M.D., director of cardiothoracic, vascular and endovascular surgery at the Cardiovascular Institute of the South in Lafayette, LA. "Angioplasty and stenting are simple and safe, and many times today can be done as an outpatient procedure."

Chronic mesenteric ischemia can be tricky to diagnose. Patients may suffer nausea, vomiting, or pain after eating—symptoms often mistaken for gallbladder disease or gastroenteritis. Eventually they may develop a fear of eating and lose large amounts of weight. Surgical treatment of chronic mesenteric ischemia results in death in as many as 15 percent of patients, in part because the procedure is complex—it typically takes four to eight hours to perform—but also because patients are debilitated by the time the diagnosis is finally made. In about one-third of patients, the diseased artery suddenly becomes completely blocked, gangrene develops in the bowel, and infection spreads throughout the body. More than half of such patients die, even with surgery.

To evaluate the effectiveness of stenting for chronic mesenteric ischemia, Dr. Allie and his colleagues recruited 50 patients with a total of 74 areas of narrowing, or stenosis, in the superior mesenteric or celiac arteries. In most cases, the procedure was performed by passing a catheter from the femoral artery in the groin up through the abdominal aorta and into the arteries supplying blood to the intestines. (In some cases, the catheter was introduced into the brachial artery in the arm and passed downward through the aorta.) A balloon was inflated to expand a large bare metal stent, which was left in place to prop open the artery at the site of the blockage.

Angioplasty and stenting were successful in 96 percent of patients, without major complications. More than 90 percent of patients reported relief of abdominal pain, and a similar percentage reported gaining weight. Fifteen patients (19 percent) later developed renarrowing of the stented artery. Of these, 3 were treated medically and 12 (92 percent) had repeat procedures to reopen the artery, including laser treatment in 8. At 1 year, 91 percent of patients were alive and free of symptoms. Two- and 3-year symptom-free survival rates were 88 percent and 82 percent, respectively.

Dr. Allie said that greater awareness and early diagnosis are critical. "We now have the tools for minimally invasive treatment of chronic mesenteric ischemia," he said. "Patients and physicians need to know that this condition exists, is common, and is often confused with other conditions of the digestive tract."

###

About SCAI

Headquartered in Washington, DC, the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions is a 3,700-member professional organization representing invasive and interventional cardiologists in 70 nations. SCAI's mission is to promote excellence in invasive and interventional cardiovascular medicine through physician education and representation, and advancement of quality standards to enhance patient care. SCAI's annual meeting has become the leading venue for education, discussion, and debate about the latest developments in this dynamic medical specialty.

 
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