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Senior physicians, cardiologists, urologists, psychologists, and
pharmacologists critically review the relation between heart
disease and erectile dysfunction (ED) and explain for the
practicing physician the effective new treatment options available
for the cardiac patient with ED. The authors detail in concise
language the latest thinking about the risk of sexually induced
cardiac events, the efficacy and risks to cardiac patients of drugs
used to treat sexual dysfunction, and the expert guidelines
developed by prominent organizations on the optimal approach to
sexual dysfunction in the cardiac patient. They also discuss the
physiology of ED and the currently available therapies (sildenafil,
tadalafil, and vardenafil) may interact with the cardiac system,
and the potential application of newer agents like
phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors to cardiovascular disease.
Ischemic Preconditioning: The Concept of Endogenous
Cardioprotection consolidates, in one volume, both current
knowledge and the most recent advances in ischemic preconditioning.
The editors have invited investigators at the forefront of ongoing
research to provide their scholarly and candid comments concerning
each of these issues. This volume includes a comprehensive review
of infarct size reduction with ischemic preconditioning, and the
most recent data on the effects of preconditioning on ischemia and
reperfusion-induced arrhythmias, myocardial metabolism, contractile
function, and the coronary vasculature. The role of altered energy
metabolism, stress-induced proteins, ATP-sensitive potassium
channels, and adenosine -- the major hypotheses that have been
proposed to explain the cardioprotective effects of ischemic
preconditioning -- are critically reviewed by investigators who
have been instrumental in developing these concepts. In addition,
the editors raise the intriguing possibility that ischemic
preconditioning may be more than simply a laboratory curiosity.
Using a multidisciplinary approach, this volume challenges the
readers to contribute their own expertise to address the unanswered
questions concerning this endogenous, cardioprotective phenomenon.
Senior physicians, cardiologists, urologists, psychologists, and
pharmacologists critically review the relation between heart
disease and erectile dysfunction (ED) and explain for the
practicing physician the effective new treatment options available
for the cardiac patient with ED. The authors detail in concise
language the latest thinking about the risk of sexually induced
cardiac events, the efficacy and risks to cardiac patients of drugs
used to treat sexual dysfunction, and the expert guidelines
developed by prominent organizations on the optimal approach to
sexual dysfunction in the cardiac patient. They also discuss the
physiology of ED and the currently available therapies (sildenafil,
tadalafil, and vardenafil) may interact with the cardiac system,
and the potential application of newer agents like
phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors to cardiovascular disease.
Ischemic Preconditioning: The Concept of Endogenous
Cardioprotection consolidates, in one volume, both current
knowledge and the most recent advances in ischemic preconditioning.
The editors have invited investigators at the forefront of ongoing
research to provide their scholarly and candid comments concerning
each of these issues. This volume includes a comprehensive review
of infarct size reduction with ischemic preconditioning, and the
most recent data on the effects of preconditioning on ischemia and
reperfusion-induced arrhythmias, myocardial metabolism, contractile
function, and the coronary vasculature. The role of altered energy
metabolism, stress-induced proteins, ATP-sensitive potassium
channels, and adenosine -- the major hypotheses that have been
proposed to explain the cardioprotective effects of ischemic
preconditioning -- are critically reviewed by investigators who
have been instrumental in developing these concepts. In addition,
the editors raise the intriguing possibility that ischemic
preconditioning may be more than simply a laboratory curiosity.
Using a multidisciplinary approach, this volume challenges the
readers to contribute their own expertise to address the unanswered
questions concerning this endogenous, cardioprotective phenomenon.
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