コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 excessively reduces central blood volume and cardiac output.
2 ssure, pulmonary arterial wedge pressure and cardiac output.
3 wering intrathoracic pressure and increasing cardiac output.
4 decisions when selecting a device to measure cardiac output.
5 with underfilling of the left heart and low cardiac output.
6 cular filling and contributes to maintaining cardiac output.
7 g smoking, oxygenation, and left ventricular cardiac output.
8 ricular end-diastolic pressure and increased cardiac output.
9 isassemble in response to acute increases in cardiac output.
10 pulmonary vascular resistance and increased cardiac output.
11 remained in this range after T3, similar to cardiac output.
12 ulation, restricting ventricular filling and cardiac output.
13 l effectors that are involved in determining cardiac output.
14 in the measurements for the magnitude of the cardiac output.
15 rmeability and hypotension despite increased cardiac output.
16 dilation and permeability, and also lowered cardiac output.
17 lic volume, high ejection fraction, and high cardiac output.
18 tal mortality attributable to persisting low-cardiac output.
19 ilation, mixed venous oxygen saturation, and cardiac output.
20 ion of VEGF in cardiac muscle did not affect cardiac output.
21 N1-deficient mice display a severely reduced cardiac output.
22 has acceptable agreement with thermodilution cardiac output.
23 ficant increase in cardiac contractility and cardiac output.
24 an attempt to counteract the restrictions of cardiac output.
25 iogenesis, lowered heart rate, and decreased cardiac output.
26 of extracellular fluid volume and increased cardiac output.
27 cardiac output monitoring and thermodilution cardiac output.
28 aintaining normal cardiac rhythm and optimal cardiac output.
29 sion of the right ventricle (RV) and reduced cardiac output.
30 rsus -31.8+/-20.3%; P=0.03) and increases in cardiac output (121.2+/-59.9% versus 88.7+/-53.3%; P=0.0
31 en groups, mean pulmonary artery pressure at cardiac output=13.8 L.min(-1) was 22.5 mm Hg in controls
32 L.min(-1) versus 1.95 L.min(-1), P=0.2; and cardiac output 17.9 L.min(-1) versus 13.8 L.min(-1), P=0
33 iled to adapt output with increased preload (cardiac output: 2.9 +/- 2.0 vs. 10.6 +/- 1.2 ml min(-1))
34 0 vs. 10.6 +/- 1.2 ml min(-1)) or afterload (cardiac output: -5.3 +/- 2.0 vs.1.4 +/- 1.2 ml min(-1));
36 d (48% +/- 7% to 49% +/- 5%, p = 0.4) as did cardiac output (6.3 +/- 1.3 to 5.9 +/- 3 L/min, p = 0.7)
37 - 4 vs 65 +/- 2 beats/min; all p < 0.05) and cardiac output (6.7 +/- 0.3 vs 6.1 +/- 0.3 vs 4.4 +/- 0.
39 r lobes, a significant increase in PBF after cardiac output adjustment remained: a 16% increase in th
41 s to the mechanisms redistributing the fetal cardiac output, although the source of ROS is unknown.
42 athy, a condition characterized by increased cardiac output and a reduced ventricular response to str
43 at peak exercise (VO2 and VCO2), heart rate, cardiac output and arterial blood gas variables at peak
46 isovolumic time with concurrent increase of cardiac output and cardiac index in the overall populati
48 significant changes in ejection fraction and cardiac output and could prove to be a useful tool in cl
50 a hemodynamic perturbation by AF or reduced cardiac output and cycle length may have a significant i
51 ted within 3 hours, accompanied by preserved cardiac output and decreased expressions of connexin 43
52 sepsis and was only found in models with low cardiac output and decreased renal blood flow (p < 0.000
53 CA alone, producing additional increases in cardiac output and decreases in left atrial pressure and
54 ion revealed that even the earliest drops in cardiac output and DO2 during endotoxic shock did not pr
56 ardiac contractility, ejection fraction, and cardiac output and elicited vasodilatation in rat in viv
58 ion, as illustrated by a drastically reduced cardiac output and impaired contractility and relaxation
60 inical relevance despite anemia-induced high cardiac output and less severely elevated pulmonary vasc
61 x is strongly associated with a reduction in cardiac output and may not be related to other pathophys
62 ed rapidly within 15 mins from a decrease in cardiac output and mean arterial pressure, whereas treat
63 ute chamber effects of CRT include increased cardiac output and mechanical efficiency and reduced mit
64 relation was found between echocardiographic cardiac output and MostCare cardiac output (r = 0.85; p
66 CUs, the mean bias between echocardiographic cardiac output and MostCare cardiac output ranged from -
67 Research on the relative contributions of cardiac output and other factors is warranted to further
70 ation whereby a micro-emulsion both improves cardiac output and rapidly ferries the drug away from or
71 uced increases in heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output and reductions in mean arterial pressure
73 fibrillation (VF), which in turn compromise cardiac output and result in secondary global cardiac is
74 by multiple defects, including reductions in cardiac output and skeletal muscle diffusion capacity.
81 essure and PP were continuously recorded and cardiac output and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) as
82 in an fluid challenge affect the changes in cardiac output and the proportion of responders and nonr
83 oup compared with the control group, whereas cardiac output and transcranial Doppler readings were si
84 ges in cardiovascular haemodynamics, such as cardiac output and vascular shear stress, that are simil
85 power output (mean arterial blood pressure x cardiac output) and functional capacity by peak exercise
86 within 12 hours of pacemaker optimization on cardiac output, and all patients were discharged from th
87 abnormal exercise patterns in oxygen uptake, cardiac output, and arteriovenous oxygen content differe
88 mes in critical care, including oxygenation, cardiac output, and blood pressure, have similarly faile
90 ty, ventricular geometry, ejection fraction, cardiac output, and contractility compared with controls
91 sustained increase in heart rate, increased cardiac output, and decreased contractility indices, as
92 EF units; p = 0.0009), as did stroke volume, cardiac output, and diastolic strain only in the combina
94 h ventricles accompanied by hypotension, low cardiac output, and high filling pressures occurring in
97 igoxin increases ejection fraction, augments cardiac output, and reduces pulmonary capillary wedge pr
98 t of heart rate on cardiac electromechanics, cardiac output, and stroke volume in the perioperative s
99 rements of hepatic venous pressure gradient, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance were ma
100 ermeability, circulatory collapse, decreased cardiac output, and various other biological effects.
102 ior vena cava is predominantly determined by cardiac output, arterial oxygen content, and oxygen cons
103 an increased heart rate, stroke volume, and cardiac output, as well as increased LV volume and mass.
104 elocities of the middle cerebral artery, and cardiac output at baseline, 5 minutes, 1 hour, and 6 hou
105 on (Pearson) with fractional area change and cardiac output at day 7, this effect was lost by day 28.
107 ease oxygen consumption and redistribute the cardiac output away from peripheral vascular beds and to
108 disagreement between studies with regard to cardiac output because of the timing of echocardiography
110 r SD FEV1/FVC decline; P < 0.0001) and lower cardiac output (beta = -0.070 L/min per SD of FEV1/FVC d
111 r SD of FVC decline; P < 0.0001) and greater cardiac output (beta = 0.109 L/min per SD of FVC decline
112 dipose tissue was also associated with lower cardiac output (beta=-0.10, P<0.05) and higher systemic
113 body subcutaneous fat associated with higher cardiac output (beta=0.20, P<0.0001) and lower systemic
115 ance and minimum septal curvature indexed to cardiac output both at baseline and during vasodilator t
116 not be dependent on moderate lung injury or cardiac output but on the metabolic production or capaci
117 dium nitrite (NaNO2) infusion would increase cardiac output but reduce systemic arterial blood pressu
118 improve ventricular filling and to maintain cardiac output, but also increases the susceptibility to
119 inal common pathway for autonomic control of cardiac output, but the neuroanatomy of this system is n
122 study setting and is able to reliably track cardiac output changes induced by cardiac output-modifyi
123 fference, whereas exercise training improved cardiac output, citrate synthase activity, and peak tiss
124 (MCA V(mean)), mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac output (CO) and partial pressure of arterial car
125 jection fraction (LVEF), heart rate (HR) and cardiac output (CO) both prior to and 10 days after drug
127 stroke volume (SV), ejection fraction (EF), cardiac output (CO), and myocardial mass values calculat
128 V), end systolic volume, stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), LV mass, ejection fraction, LV mass
131 ly higher LV mass, mass-to-volume-ratio, and cardiac output compared with those with normal tests (p
137 ic resonance imaging-assessed cardiac index (cardiac output divided by body surface area) to incident
141 duction of pCa(50) at long SL may not reduce cardiac output during periods of high metabolic demand b
142 eptor (beta-AR) stimulation ensures adequate cardiac output during stress, it can also trigger life-t
144 y with the pulse contour method MostCare for cardiac output estimation in a large and nonselected cri
147 responsiveness was defined as an increase in cardiac output following intravenous fluid administratio
148 For example, our method implicates "abnormal cardiac output" for a patient with a longstanding family
149 nd may be driven by left heart failure, high cardiac output from arteriovenous fistula, hypoxic lung
152 ing major gastrointestinal surgery, use of a cardiac output-guided hemodynamic therapy algorithm comp
154 entricular stroke volume, ejection fraction, cardiac output, heart rate, diastolic filling function,
155 stolic dysfunction, lower blood pressure and cardiac output, higher pulmonary artery systolic pressur
157 nt bolus thermodilution over a wide range of cardiac output in an adult porcine model of hemorrhagic
159 e effectiveness of pacemaker optimization on cardiac output in critically ill patients with cardiogen
162 an alternative to echocardiography to assess cardiac output in ICU patients with a large spectrum of
164 performed during heat stress would increase cardiac output in older adults without parallel increase
165 ents to maintain adequate blood pressure and cardiac output in patients with cardiogenic shock althou
166 riable effects of norepinephrine infusion on cardiac output in postoperative cardiac surgical patient
169 activated in the syndrome to try and sustain cardiac output in the face of decompensating function.
170 /- 0.4; p = 0.0002) associated with improved cardiac output (in n = 4; 3.0 +/- 0.6 l/min to 4.3 +/- 1
171 volume variation was higher in those in whom cardiac output increased (14.4 +/- 4.2% vs. 9.1 +/- 2.4%
172 mm Hg) was reached in both NE and AT-II, and cardiac output increased similarly (NE: from 64 mL/kg/mi
173 ped with hypotension, tachycardia, increased cardiac output, increased renal blood flow, oliguria, de
174 g sepsis-induced myocardial dysfunction when cardiac output index remains low after preload correctio
176 ardiography-guided pacemaker optimization of cardiac output is a feasible bedside therapeutic option,
180 romising left ventricular filling or forward cardiac output) is a rational, nonpharmacological strate
181 atively) to VO2 kg(-1) (r = -0.45, P< 0.05), cardiac output kg(-1) (QT kg(-1) , r = -0.54, P < 0.02),
182 en minor; on average, correcting a patient's cardiac output led to a 7+/-0.5% predicted improvement i
183 hocardiography was used to assess changes in cardiac output, left ventricular filling time, ejection
184 /Doppler parameters developing in the heart (cardiac output, left ventricular stroke volume, isovolum
185 ssure, arterial and central venous pressure, cardiac output (LiDCOplus; LiDCO, Cambridge, United King
186 ommunication with one another to ensure that cardiac output matches the dynamic process of regional b
189 system (Tensys Medical, San Diego, CA) with cardiac output measured by intermittent pulmonary artery
192 Thermodilution is relatively accurate for cardiac output measurements in both animals and humans w
193 The aim of the present study was to compare cardiac output measurements obtained with applanation to
194 The average of the three thermodilution cardiac output measurements was compared with the averag
201 trated a 97% concordance between noninvasive cardiac output monitoring and thermodilution cardiac out
203 study tests the hypothesis that noninvasive cardiac output monitoring based upon bioreactance (Cheet
204 and resuscitation in large pigs, noninvasive cardiac output monitoring has acceptable agreement with
207 ative outcomes may be improved by the use of cardiac output monitoring to guide administration of int
208 acute circulatory failure, having continuous cardiac output monitoring, and receiving controlled low
210 database for articles describing the use of cardiac output monitors yielded 1,526 sources that were
211 f vasodilatation with hypotension and higher cardiac outputs necessitating greater use of vasoconstri
212 < 0.05 vs other groups) and improvements in cardiac output, neurological recovery, and survival (eig
213 < 0.05) but failed to significantly improve cardiac output, neurological recovery, and survival rate
216 g-induced changes in flow variables, such as cardiac output or its direct derivatives (sensitivity of
218 either treatment could significantly restore cardiac output or prevent muscular compartment ischemia
220 ssive leg raising followed by measurement of cardiac output or related parameters may be the most use
222 y elevated cardiac filling pressures and low cardiac output, or b) ongoing signs of hypoperfusion des
223 en changes in RR interval and stroke volume, cardiac output, or cardiac index in the overall populati
225 storage hearts, perfusion hearts had higher cardiac output (P = 0.004), LV dP/dt max (P = 0.003) and
226 ial, there was a main effect of haplotype on cardiac output (P = 0.04), as Arg16+Gln27 had the lowest
227 drial function significantly correlated with cardiac output (p<0.05, Spearman rank-correlation test).
228 essment of critical care parameters, such as cardiac output performance or likelihood of adverse even
230 poxia-induced QIPAVA is not simply increased cardiac output, pulmonary artery systolic pressure or sy
232 Oxygen uptake (VO2; Douglas bag technique), cardiac output (Qc, foreign-gas rebreathing), ventricula
235 chocardiographic cardiac output and MostCare cardiac output ranged from -0.40 to 0.45 L/min, and the
241 y in people with severe TR is related to low cardiac output reserve relative to metabolic needs, coup
248 on use of inotropes and vasodilators for low cardiac output septic shock associated with elevated sys
250 origin, including small aortic calibre, low cardiac output states, high vasopressor requirements cau
251 essure, heart rate, central venous pressure, cardiac output, stroke volume variation and, with use of
252 useful for guiding volume therapy, including cardiac output, stroke volume variation monitoring, and
254 nfection (12.9% vs 29.7%; p = 0.002) and low cardiac output syndrome (6.5% vs 26.6%; p = 0.002).
257 relationship was observed for stroke and low cardiac output syndrome but not for renal replacement th
262 ng greater than or equal to 50% reduction of cardiac output (T1), after initial resuscitation to base
264 cutaneous vasodilatation and the increase in cardiac output that healthy older adults can achieve dur
265 n the levels of cutaneous vasodilatation and cardiac output that healthy older adults can achieve dur
266 intervention, conversion to sternotomy, low cardiac output that required mechanical support, aortic
269 Fallot patients had the largest increase in cardiac output, they had lower resting (3+/-1.2 L/min pe
274 gnaling, muscle vascularization, and percent cardiac output to muscle rather than insulin sensitizati
276 ulating the force of contraction to maintain cardiac output under changes of preload and afterload.
277 was compared with the corresponding MostCare cardiac output value per patient, considering different
279 he applanation tonometry technology provides cardiac output values with reasonable accuracy and preci
280 n resting and in maximal heart rate, whereas cardiac output was completely preserved because of great
281 , and after the first round of measurements, cardiac output was increased by approximately 30% by con
286 luid infusion MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Cardiac output was measured with a calibrated LiDCOplus
288 peripheral resistance were greater, whereas cardiac output was smaller, in LVAD patients compared wi
289 olic pulmonary artery pressure, and exercise cardiac output were all significantly (P<0.05) impaired
290 onitoring and thermodilution measurements of cardiac output were compared by Bland-Altman analysis.
291 , blood pressure, rate-pressure product, and cardiac output were greater with exercise compared with
292 ariations, and stroke volume variations; and cardiac output were obtained during controlled mechanica
295 t monitoring and intermittent thermodilution cardiac output were simultaneously measured at nine time
296 urthermore, healthy older humans can augment cardiac output when cardiac pre-load is increased during
297 ization results in a significant increase in cardiac output when compared with clinically derived pac
298 ncreased afterload and preload and decreased cardiac output, whereas ventilatory consequences include
300 y potentially lead to an inappropriately low cardiac output, with a subsequent compromise of microvas
WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。