enalapril has been researched along with Cardiac-Tamponade* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for enalapril and Cardiac-Tamponade
Article | Year |
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Hemodynamics of pancreatic ischemia in cardiogenic shock in pigs.
Previous studies have shown that the renin-angiotensin axis plays a pivotal role in vasoconstriction of the gastric, intestinal, and hepatic circulations during cardiogenic shock. The aim of this study was to evaluate the fundamental hemodynamic mechanism of pancreatic ischemia during cardiogenic shock induced by pericardial tamponade.. Cardiogenic shock was induced by pericardial tamponade. Cardiac output (and total peripheral vascular resistance) was determined by thermodilution. Pancreatic blood flow (and vascular resistance) was determined with radiolabeled microspheres.. Graded increases in pericardial pressure produced corresponding decreases in cardiac output to 42% +/- 1% and arterial pressure to 67% +/- 3% of baseline and increases in total peripheral vascular resistance to 146% +/- 5% of baseline. Pancreatic blood flow decreased disproportionately to 30% +/- 3% of baseline, because of a disproportionate increase in pancreatic vascular resistance to 220% +/- 19% of baseline. Previously confirmed blockade of the renin-angiotensin axis ablated this response, whereas confirmed blockade of the alpha-adrenergic system or vasopressin system had no significant effect. Without shock, central intravenous infusions of angiotensin II closely mimicked this selective vasoconstriction.. Angiotensin-mediated selective pancreatic vasoconstriction results in significant pancreatic ischemia during cardiogenic shock. Topics: Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists; Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Cardiac Tamponade; Enalapril; Hemodynamics; Ischemia; Pancreas; Phenoxybenzamine; Regional Blood Flow; Shock, Cardiogenic; Swine | 1997 |
Mesenteric vasoconstriction in cardiogenic shock in pigs.
The quantitative impact of mesenteric vasoconstriction on the systemic hemodynamic response to cardiogenic shock induced by pericardial tamponade was evaluated. Graded increases in pericardial pressure produced corresponding decreases in cardiac output to 44% +/- 2% and arterial pressure to 64% +/- 3% of baseline and increases in total peripheral vascular resistance to 131% +/- 4% of baseline. Total mesenteric blood flow decreased disproportionately, to 28% +/- 3% of baseline, because of a disproportionate increase in mesenteric vascular resistance to 223% +/- 6% of baseline. Nonmesenteric vascular resistance increased only to 119% +/- 4% of baseline. Thus mesenteric vasoconstriction accounted for 42% of the increase in total peripheral resistance. Prior blockade of the renin-angiotensin axis ablated this response and eliminated the mesenteric contribution to systemic vascular resistance, while confirmed blockade of the alpha-adrenergic system or vasopressin system had no effect. Without shock, central intravenous infusions of angiotensin II (but not norepinephrine or vasopressin) closely mimicked this selective vasoconstriction. Angiotensin-mediated selective mesenteric vasoconstriction accounts for more than 40% of the overall increase in systemic vascular resistance in cardiogenic shock. Topics: Animals; Cardiac Tamponade; Enalapril; Mesenteric Arteries; Mesenteric Veins; Phenoxybenzamine; Shock, Cardiogenic; Swine; Vascular Resistance; Vasoconstriction | 1992 |