The effects of rate-pressure product at admission on cardiopulmonary function during hospitalization in patients with acute myocardial infarction
CONCLUSION: The RPP at admission was negatively correlated with cardiopulmonary function during hospitalization in patients with AMI. Patients with a high RPP were more likely to have a combination of obesity, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and reduced oxygen uptake during exercise, while a high RPP at admission appeared to affect their cardiovascular response indicators during exercise.PMID:37864567 | DOI:10.1080/00325481.2023.2274306
Source: Postgraduate Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Chun-Mei Zeng Yan-Mei Zhao Yi-Yi Li Rong-Rong Gan Zheng Ling Ping Li Source Type: research
More News: Cardiology | Cardiovascular | Diabetes | Diabetes Mellitus | Eating Disorders & Weight Management | Endocrinology | Heart | Heart Attack | Hypertension | Internal Medicine | Obesity | Smokers | Sports Medicine | Statistics | Study