Estimates for pollution associations with BAD (before and after occlusion, and before and after
sublingual nitroglycerin administration) are presented as a change in BAD in millimeters per IQR increase in pollution.
Value of head-up tilt tes ting potentiated with
sublingual nitroglycerin to assess the origin of unexplained syncope.
In a double-blind, randomized, three-way crossover study, 49 healthy subjects older than age 55 received 0.4 mg of
sublingual nitroglycerin after taking either 50 mg of sildenafil, 10 mg of tadalafil, or a placebo.
Pain was controlled with
sublingual nitroglycerin. Cardiac enzymes were markedly elevated above their normal ranges.
Blood flow was measured after administration of
sublingual nitroglycerin and reflected vasodilation that was not related to the endothelium.
A upstate New York physician reports that she has found
sublingual nitroglycerin to be effective in several patients who suffered acute visual loss.
He was treated with
sublingual nitroglycerin, after which the chest pain and electrocardiographic changes were resolved (EKG at rest showed sinus bradycardia, occasional premature atrial contractions (PAC), and upright T waves, with no ischemic changes).
Sublingual nitroglycerin 0.6 mg resulted in the gradual resolution of ST-segment elevation in inferior leads; however, complete atrioventricular block persisted.
The secondary endpoint in TERISA was change in weekly use of
sublingual nitroglycerin. From a baseline mean of 4.3 doses/week, it improved to 1.7 episodes/week in the ranolazine group and 2.1 episodes/week in controls.
Resolution of ST-segment abnormalities and inferior reciprocal changes after
sublingual nitroglycerin and intra-arterial nitroglycerin and verapamil at the time of angiography via radial sheath (b).
The First and second doses of 0.4 mg
sublingual nitroglycerin were administered with minimal effect.
If that can't be accomplished expeditiously by helicopter, litter, or another form of assisted transport, the patient should self-evacuate when possible via slow walking while taking 0.4 mg of prophylactic
sublingual nitroglycerin every 10-15 minutes to prevent angina during exertion.