The American journal of cardiology
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Percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass (PCB) was instituted in 30 initially stable patients who developed either cardiac arrest refractory to resuscitation (n = 7) or cardiogenic shock (mean arterial blood pressure < 50 mm Hg unresponsive to fluid resuscitation or vasopressors) (n = 23) after a catheterization laboratory complication. Events leading to collapse included abrupt closure during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) (n = 22), complications from diagnostic cardiac catheterization (n = 6), left ventricular perforation during mitral valvuloplasty (n = 1), and right ventricular perforation during pericardiocentesis (n = 1). PCB was initiated within 20 minutes of cardiovascular collapse in 83% of patients (arrest: 21 +/- 13 minutes [range 10 to 50]; and shock: 17 +/- 6 minutes [range 10 to 30]). ⋯ All 7 patients with refractory cardiac arrest died despite further interventions on PCB, whereas 6 of 23 (26%) with cardiogenic shock survived to hospital discharge. Thus, in response to cardiovascular collapse in the catheterization laboratory, PCB does not salvage patients who do not regain a stable cardiac rhythm. PCB can stabilize patients who develop cardiogenic shock for further interventions which are lifesaving in only a minority of patients.
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To assess the clinical significance of pericardial effusion in Q-wave inferior wall acute myocardial infarction, 185 consecutive patients were examined by means of electrocardiogram, echocardiogram and hemodynamic monitoring. A pericardial effusion was present in 44 patients and was absent in 141 patients. Electrocardiographic right ventricular infarction (> or = 1 mm of ST-segment elevation and Q wave in V4R) was detected in 54 patients, with 20 patients having pericardial effusion. ⋯ Although there was no significant difference in the mortality rate between patients with and without right ventricular infarction, a significantly higher hospital mortality rate was observed in patients with pericardial effusion compared to those without it (23 vs 5%). Pericardial effusion was selected with age and pulmonary artery wedge pressure as important variables associated with hospital mortality by the discriminant analysis. Patients who developed pericardial effusion, regardless of right ventricular infarction, had more extensive myocardial damage, and hence, pericardial effusion was one of the predictors of increased hospital mortality.