Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Olavi J. Luurila"'
Autor:
Olavi J. Luurila, Bo Lindvall, Nina Rehnqvist, Anders Melcher, Risto Härkönen, Jan Abelin, Markus Mölsä
Publikováno v:
Current Therapeutic Research. 55:149-160
The effect of two formulations of nifedipine in patients with angina pectoris was compared in a placebo run-in, randomized, crossover trial. After 2 weeks of placebo twice daily, 36 patients were randomized to receive either nifedipine retard 20 mg t
Autor:
Pekka Koskinen, Erkki Heikkonen, Mikko Salaspuro, Risto O. Roine, Antti Suokas, Olavi J. Luurila, Jorma Palo, Tapio Heinonen, Katja Salmela
Publikováno v:
Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry. 204(1-3)
Strenuous physical activity, aspirin and heat stress (Finnish sauna) were all found to significantly increase urinary dolichol excretion. In contrast, serum dolichol concentration studied before and after aspirin and sauna, was not affected. A simila
Autor:
Olavi J. Luurila
Publikováno v:
Journal of Internal Medicine. 231:319-320
Autor:
Olavi J. Luurila
Publikováno v:
Journal of Internal Medicine. 234:101-101
Autor:
Helena Hämäläinen, Llkka Vuori, Veikko Kallio, Juha Hakkila, M. Arstila, Lars-Runar Knuts, Olavi J. Luurila
Publikováno v:
Annals of Medicine. 21:447-453
An exercise test was performed in 306 patients who had had acute myocardial infarction one year previously. The five year cumulative coronary heart disease mortality was 40.0%, when the test had to be discontinued because of ventricular arrhythmias b
Publikováno v:
The American journal of cardiology. 64(1)
A sauna bath induces a marked increase in heart rate and a decrease in peripheral vascular resistance as a consequence of heat-induced peripheral vasodilation.1,2 In normotensive patients the heat stress of a sauna does not change blood pressure (BP)
Autor:
Antti Kohvakka, Kaarina Lukkala, Markku Linna, Rainer Icen, O Vänskä, Risto Härkönen, Olavi J. Luurila, Martti Hilden, Juhana Sillanpää
Publikováno v:
Journal of Hypertension. 7:S264-265
Fifty milligrams of carvedilol and 100 mg atenolol were administered in a random order once a day for 2 months to 43 patients with mild to moderate hypertension, in a double-blind crossover study. Blood pressure, heart rate and peripheral blood flow