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" The Ventricle : "
edited by Herbert J. Levine, William H. Gaasch.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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731491
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Doc. No
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b551277
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Main Entry
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edited by Herbert J. Levine, William H. Gaasch.
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Title & Author
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The Ventricle : : Basic and Clinical Aspects\ edited by Herbert J. Levine, William H. Gaasch.
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Publication Statement
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Boston, MA: Springer US, 1985
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Page. NO
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(368 pages)
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ISBN
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1461325994
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: 9781461325994
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Contents
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1. Pathologic Anatomy of Acquired Ventricular Disease --;2. Mechanics of Ventricular Muscle --;3. The Biochemistry of Excitation-Contraction Coupling: Implications with Regard to Pump Failure --;4. Ventricular End-Systolic Pressure-Volume Relations --;5. Autonomic Reflex Control of Cardiac Contractility --;6. Ventricular Relaxation --;7. Diastolic Properties of the Left Ventricle --;8. Ventricular Interaction and the Pericardium --;9. Experimental Myocardial Hypertrophy --;10. Pathophysiology of Heart Failure --;11. Pressure Overload: Human Studies --;12. Chronic Aortic and Mitral Regurgitation: Mechanical Consequences of the Lesion and the Results of Surgical Correction --;13. The Coronary Circulation in Ventricular Hypertrophy --;14. Ventricular Function in Ischemia and Infarction and Following Reperfusion --;15. Current Status of Interventions Designed to Limit Infarct Size --;16. Vasoactive Drugs and the Failing Ventricle.
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Abstract
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Cardiac anatomy had already been a subject of and its control in health and disease has been great interest for centuries when Harvey de published. Studies of hypertrophy, heart failure, scribed the dynamic nature of blood flow, but ischemia, and infarction have been vigorously the concept of defining ventricular function was pursued in experimental animals and in human first introduced with the measurement of a subjects, and as a result new areas for study have emerged. These include the process of hypertro mare's blood pressure by Steven Hales in 1733. Amidst the important contributions of a number phy as an adaptive mechanism, the coronary vas of European physiologists, the primal relation cular reserve in hypertrophy, the role of the ship between the mechanical energy of the heart microvasculature in myocardial failure, active and the length of a myocardial fiber was enun relaxation and other diastolic mechanisms that contribute to the syndrome of congestive heart ciated by E.H. Starling in 1912; this became known as the "law of the heart." Perhaps the failure, ventricular interaction and the role of the normal pericardium, ischemic-stunned first major refinement of this law was suggested by Sarnoff and co-workers, who introduced the reperfused myocardium, and vasoactive drugs in concept of homeometric autoregulation to ex the treatment of heart failure.
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Subject
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Cardiology.
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Subject
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Medicine.
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LC Classification
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RC682.E358 1985
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Added Entry
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Herbert J Levine
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William H Gaasch
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