Methodist DeBakey cardiovascular journal
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Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J · Apr 2014
ReviewHybrid interventional procedures in congenital heart disease.
The evolution of congenital cardiac surgery has seen significant innovative advances in collaborative efforts between congenital cardiac surgeons and interventionalists to provide the least invasive intervention with the greatest hemodynamic benefit for patients with congenital heart disease. This review looks at how this collaborative approach has evolved and is being applied to treat a number of congenital conditions across the age ranges.
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Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J · Apr 2014
Case ReportsCase report: cardiac tamponade resembling an acute myocardial infarction as the initial manifestation of metastatic pericardial adenocarcinoma.
Pericardial malignancies are uncommon, usually metastatic, linked to terminal oncology patients, and rarely diagnosed premortem. A very small number of patients will develop signs and symptoms of malignant pericardial effusion as initial clinical manifestation of neoplastic disease. Among these patients, a minority will progress to a life-threatening cardiac tamponade. ⋯ We present the case of a 50-year-old male who was admitted to the emergency department with an acute myocardial infarction diagnosis that turned out to be a cardiac tamponade of unknown etiology. Further studies revealed a metastatic pericardial adenocarcinoma with secondary cardiac tamponade. We encourage considering malignancies metastatic to pericardium as probable etiology for large pericardial effusions and cardiac tamponade of unknown etiology.
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Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J · Apr 2014
ReviewStem cell therapies in patients with single ventricle physiology.
Single ventricle physiology, especially hypoplastic left heart syndrome, is one of the most high-risk lesions in children with congenital heart disease, and the ensuing heart failure remains as a major problem related to adverse outcomes in these patients. The field of stem cell therapy for heart failure has shown striking advances during the past 10 years, and many clinical trials using stem cell technologies have been conducted in adults, which suggest that stem cell therapy is associated with long-term improvement in cardiac function. Cardiac progenitor cells have recently been discovered, and their strong regenerative ability has been demonstrated in several studies. Although no large clinical trials have been performed in the field of congenital heart disease, recent investigations indicate that stem cell therapy may hold great potential to treat children with cardiac defects.
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Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J · Apr 2014
Comparative Study Observational StudyComparison of dexmedetomidine versus propofol for sedation in mechanically ventilated patients after cardiovascular surgery.
Many cardiovascular surgeries are fast-tracked to extubation and require short-term sedation. Dexmedetomidine and propofol have very different mechanisms of action and pharmacokinetic profiles that make them attractive sedative agents in this patient population. Recently, there has been increased use of dexmedetomidine in the intensive care unit (ICU), but few studies exist or have been published directly comparing both agents in this setting. ⋯ The need for a second sedative agent to achieve optimal sedation (24% vs. 27%, P = .737) and incidence of delirium (9% vs. 7.5%, P = .747) were similar between both groups. Sedation with dexmedetomidine resulted in a significant reduction in time on mechanical ventilation. However, no difference was seen in ICU or hospital LOS, incidence of delirium, or mortality.