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1 geted at the underlying disease (e.g., acute coronary occlusion).
2 and angina pectoris during the same 1-minute coronary occlusion.
3 extent of myocardial necrosis consequent to coronary occlusion.
4 lead to larger infarcts caused by persistent coronary occlusion.
5 ection of the onset of ischemia during acute coronary occlusion.
6 endent determinant of infarct size following coronary occlusion.
7 pate in the arrhythmogenic response to acute coronary occlusion.
8 ise healthy men even in the absence of acute coronary occlusion.
9 ired with 13N-ammonia at baseline and during coronary occlusion.
10 as was sudden death due to acute thrombotic coronary occlusion.
11 ct ultimate infarct size (IS) at the time of coronary occlusion.
12 cur during reperfusion of a limited-duration coronary occlusion.
13 different stenoses using ATP, adenosine, and coronary occlusion.
14 l axis, as observed with proximal circumflex coronary occlusion.
15 dogs undergoing an AIP 201 injection during coronary occlusion.
16 single left heart injection performed during coronary occlusion.
17 es isolated from hearts subjected to chronic coronary occlusion.
18 perfusion in dogs with chronic single-vessel coronary occlusion.
19 0 micrograms/kg) 10 minutes before the first coronary occlusion.
20 ersibly injured myocardium after 24 hours of coronary occlusion.
21 in the jeopardized zone, and the duration of coronary occlusion.
22 LO) myocardial phagocytes after experimental coronary occlusion.
23 etector computed tomography during the index coronary occlusion.
24 primary outcome was the finding of a recent coronary occlusion.
25 rgoing angioplasty balloon-induced transient coronary occlusion.
26 asurement is modestly predictive of a recent coronary occlusion.
27 rotic coronary plaque, resulting in subtotal coronary occlusion.
28 e independent predictive factors of a recent coronary occlusion.
29 the optimum cutoff for identifying a recent coronary occlusion.
30 e a sensitive/specific marker for thrombotic coronary occlusion.
31 Src (p-cSrc) post-MI using a canine model of coronary occlusion.
32 etector computed tomography during the index coronary occlusion.
33 diomyopathy (I/RC) arising from daily, brief coronary occlusion.
34 ague-Dawley rats were subjected to permanent coronary occlusion.
35 dministered at the time of reperfusion after coronary occlusion.
36 al infarction in a porcine model of complete coronary occlusion.
37 (PDGF)-AB decreases myocardial injury after coronary occlusion.
38 h STEMI and mapped the location of the acute coronary occlusion.
39 restoration of cardiac function after acute coronary occlusion.
40 ors are involved, then the benefits of brief coronary occlusion (1) should be manifested systemically
41 In protocol 1, dogs received 10 minutes of coronary occlusion + 10 minutes of reflow or a comparabl
42 clusion was preceded by brief I/R (10-minute coronary occlusion/10-minute reperfusion) versus 20-minu
44 us pigs underwent a sequence of ten 2-minute coronary occlusion/2-minute reperfusion cycles and then
46 te PC (one, three, or six cycles of 4-minute coronary occlusion [4'O]/4-minute reperfusion [4'R]; fou
48 tioned 24 h earlier with six cycles of 4-min coronary occlusion/4-min reperfusion exhibited a signifi
49 schemic PC (induced with six cycles of 4-min coronary occlusion/4-min reperfusion), immunoprecipitati
51 rabbits underwent a sequence of six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles for 3 con
52 rabbits underwent a sequence of six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles for 3 con
53 rabbits underwent a sequence of six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles for 3 con
54 rabbits underwent a sequence of six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles for 3 con
55 were subjected to ischemic PC (six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles) and, 24
56 its were subjected to a sequence of 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles, myocardi
57 In mice preconditioned with six 4-minute coronary occlusion/4-minute reperfusion cycles, we found
63 ized rabbits received 5 minutes of transient coronary occlusion, 5 minutes of transient bilateral car
65 usly in anesthetized, open-chest dogs before coronary occlusion (90 minutes) and reperfusion (120 min
66 In conscious swine subjected to a sustained coronary occlusion, a PC protocol that induces powerful
68 t administration of 99mTc-tetrofosmin during coronary occlusion accurately delineates the flow hetero
69 ion units (TPUs) and pH were measured before coronary occlusion, after occlusion, and after direct ex
70 en A3tg mice were subjected to 30 minutes of coronary occlusion and 24 hours of reperfusion, infarct
74 CaCl2 or saline before undergoing 1 hour of coronary occlusion and 4 hours of reperfusion (protocol
75 dence that ischemic PC (6 cycles of 4-minute coronary occlusion and 4-minute reperfusion) induces sel
81 during this period of time, after prolonged coronary occlusion and complete reflow, the rate of myoc
83 of perfusion abnormalities that occur during coronary occlusion and may facilitate estimation of the
84 howing contrast enhancement on 3D MCE during coronary occlusion and postmortem risk volume (y = 1.2x
85 ntrast echocardiography were measured during coronary occlusion and reflow, using fundamental and har
88 finity (DuPont) at baseline and during brief coronary occlusion and reperfusion and were analyzed wit
91 ium where inflammation was induced by either coronary occlusion and reperfusion or tumor necrosis fac
92 the clinical scenario in which intermittent coronary occlusion and reperfusion superimposed on a cri
96 deduced that myocardial infarction is due to coronary occlusion and that subsequent death needs no ot
98 ld be produced in a porcine model of chronic coronary occlusion and to assess whether the adaptations
99 in L-NA-treated rabbits the sequence of six coronary occlusions and reperfusions performed on day 1
100 assessed for myocardial perfusion deficits, coronary occlusion, and abnormal myocardial wall motion.
101 fluorescent microspheres at baseline, during coronary occlusion, and at 5, 30, 90, and 180 min during
102 hyperemia, the size of the risk area during coronary occlusion, and the extent of myocardial salvage
103 hyperemia, the size of the risk area during coronary occlusion, and the extent of myocardial salvage
104 baseline; at reperfusion after 15 minutes of coronary occlusion; and at 30 minutes, 60 minutes, and 1
106 ent necrosis could be identified early after coronary occlusion as having the lowest microvascular fl
108 as injected before a brief (6 min) period of coronary occlusion at the following times: 15 min (n = 2
111 ents cardiac dysfunction and ischemia due to coronary occlusion by tightening the link between cardia
112 nfarct size was assessed at 24 h after acute coronary occlusion by triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC
113 aration of proteins from hearts subjected to coronary occlusion by two-dimensional electrophoresis an
114 decreases in coronary flow or repeated brief coronary occlusions can be followed by proportionate rev
115 te study of LV remodeling, after a 60-minute coronary occlusion, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging r
119 The presence of a concomitant chronic total coronary occlusion (CTO) and a large collateral contribu
120 nificant coronary disease have chronic total coronary occlusion (CTO), which is associated with long-
121 functional in the RI group because complete coronary occlusion did not induce any untoward effects o
123 on period (baseline 2) and a during a second coronary occlusion during bypass anastomosis (occlusion
124 aemic postconditioning uses repetitive brief coronary occlusion during early reperfusion of myocardia
125 scious pigs underwent a sequence of 10 2-min coronary occlusions, each separated by 2 min of reperfus
126 ing), rabbits were subjected to six 4-minute coronary occlusions, each separated by 4-minute reperfus
127 he size of the infarcts produced by a 30-min coronary occlusion followed by 24 h of reperfusion was r
128 in rats was produced by using 30 minutes of coronary occlusion followed by 24 hours reperfusion.
129 on), conscious rabbits underwent a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by 3 days of reperfusion.
131 tion), rabbits were subjected to a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by 3 days of reperfusion.
132 groups of pigs were subjected to a 40-minute coronary occlusion followed by 3 days of reperfusion.
135 istration of SDF-1alpha before 30 minutes of coronary occlusion followed by 4 hours of reperfusion de
136 rdial infarction was produced by a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by 4 hours of reperfusion.
137 low coronary flow (protocol 1) and transient coronary occlusion followed by reflow (protocol 2).
138 Wild-type (WT) mice underwent a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion and received
139 open-chest dogs, which then underwent 2 h of coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion through the s
144 nt 90 or 180 min of left anterior descending coronary occlusion, followed by 180 min of reperfusion.
147 were assessed serially in dogs subjected to coronary occlusion for 45 min, 90 min, or permanently.
149 ed to collect data before, during, and after coronary occlusion from which percent systolic shortenin
150 r example, at matched ESVs before and during coronary occlusion, FRP was -1.1+/-1.1 (+/-SD) mm Hg bef
151 39 patients with successful angioplasty of a coronary occlusion (Group 1) and compared the frequency
152 ollBF were measured in 18 dogs: at 6 h after coronary occlusion (Group 1, n = 6), and during 40 micro
155 ral development after experimentally induced coronary occlusion; however, methods of bFGF delivery th
158 and maintenance of function during complete coronary occlusion in 3 groups of animals: sham (receive
160 n system to detect ST-segment elevation from coronary occlusion in a porcine model of ST-segment elev
162 rdiac troponin I can help to detect a recent coronary occlusion in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
165 of ischemia/reperfusion in a model of brief coronary occlusion in which no necrosis or inflammatory
166 r dysfunction was created by repetitive left coronary occlusions in 7 pigs (7 healthy pigs also inclu
167 ium-regulatory genes (after repetitive total coronary occlusions in swine) have given rise to the hyp
168 termine early predictive factors of a recent coronary occlusion (including cardiac troponin I) and th
171 d in conscious pigs that a sequence of brief coronary occlusions induces severe myocardial stunning,
173 stered to isolated hearts before a 30-minute coronary occlusion, infarct size (15.6 +/- 2.0% of the r
175 uroprotections through cooling rapidity when coronary occlusion is complicated by cardiac arrest.
180 nt of microvascular obstruction during acute coronary occlusion may determine the eventual magnitude
183 e MRI scans followed by either 60 minutes of coronary occlusion (MI group, n=15) or thoracotomy witho
185 ental analysis with the use of larger animal coronary occlusion models should help determine the futu
186 endent LCx arterioles isolated after chronic coronary occlusion, most likely because of effects on ec
192 us rabbits underwent a sequence of six 4-min coronary occlusion (O)/4-min reperfusion (R) cycles for
193 les at baseline (baseline 1), during a 5-min coronary occlusion (occlusion 1), after a 5-min reperfus
195 of 53 mongrel dogs in an open chest model of coronary occlusion of various durations followed by repe
196 fter 10 min (Group 1) or 60 (Group 2) min of coronary occlusion or after 10 min of a fixed coronary o
198 recorded during 60 s of anterior descending coronary occlusion or local epicardial application of br
199 nfarction without reperfusion (chronic 7-day coronary occlusion) or receiving post-I/R high-dose ster
200 early after reperfusion following prolonged coronary occlusion overestimates the degree of viability
202 vs. 0.93 +/- 0.41 mm Hg.ml(-1) during acute coronary occlusion [p < 0.05] and 7.9 +/- 3.1 m.s(-2) be
204 (LV) structure and function after permanent coronary occlusion (PCO) and the potential involvement o
205 d in an ambulatory porcine model, with acute coronary occlusion precipitated by stent thrombosis.
209 est dogs were subjected to a 10-minute acute coronary occlusion (proximal left anterior descending co
210 its have demonstrated that a series of brief coronary occlusions renders the heart relatively resista
213 r repetitive ischemia differs in response to coronary occlusion-reperfusion versus supply-demand isch
215 rdioprotection, insofar as brief episodes of coronary occlusion/reperfusion preceding (ischemic preco
216 inhibition (GPI) on microvascular flow after coronary occlusion/reperfusion using quantitative myocar
217 nts undergoing CABG and from pigs undergoing coronary occlusion/reperfusion without (sham) and with R
218 ular flow and reduces the infarct area after coronary occlusion/reperfusion, independent of epicardia
224 kg) was infused 5 minutes after the onset of coronary occlusion (sCR1), 10 received HB-CPB only (HB-C
225 about symptoms that they might have during a coronary occlusion, steps that they should take, the imp
226 other cytokine combinations, at the time of coronary occlusion suppressed acute myocardial cell deat
227 three days and four to eight weeks following coronary occlusion; terminal values averaged 24 +/- 3% o
233 ythmias (VAs) were subjected to percutaneous coronary occlusion to induce myocardial infarction.
235 d a spatial map of the distribution of acute coronary occlusions to test our hypothesis that plaque r
236 fluid (MIF) from dogs undergoing repetitive coronary occlusions under control conditions or during a
238 e subjected to gradually developing regional coronary occlusion using an ameroid occluder placed arou
239 on was 4.1%, conversion to surgery was 0.6%, coronary occlusion was 0.8%, and new pacemaker insertion
240 , improvement in carotid patency after brief coronary occlusion was corroborated in anesthetized dogs
241 size in a model of acute infarction in which coronary occlusion was followed by prolonged reperfusion
243 stance from the ostium, the risk of an acute coronary occlusion was significantly decreased by 13% in
245 of scar, but infarct size at 10 weeks after coronary occlusion was still smaller (by 50%) in Cx43(+/
248 ion starting 30 s after release of the index coronary occlusion were added in the presence or absence
249 ST-segment shift, associated with thrombotic coronary occlusion, were 100% and 100%, respectively.
250 lateral development in dogs with progressive coronary occlusion when given during the period of natur
251 ification of these high-risk zones for acute coronary occlusions will lead to future advances in vuln
254 and reperfusion before a sustained period of coronary occlusion with reperfusion delays infarct devel
255 ions in regional function: dobutamine, 5-min coronary occlusion with reperfusion up to 1 h, followed
259 id not alter the hemodynamic response to the coronary occlusion, yet it prevented VF in 10 of 11 anim
260 nosine for both CFR and FFR; and 3) complete coronary occlusion yielded a better hyperemic response t
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