Cardiology
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The aim of this study was to analyze clinical and echographic findings and to assess therapeutic management in 14 floating right atrial thrombi diagnosed with systematic echocardiography in 200 consecutive patients with proven pulmonary embolism. Auscultatory findings were abnormal in 7 cases, 4 of them showing signs of tricuspid obstruction. ⋯ Regarding the remaining 10 patients with favorable outcome, surgical embolectomy was carried out in 7. Our data suggest that echocardiographic examination is necessary in all suspected pulmonary embolisms and has to be done quickly for emergency treatment in patients with floating right atrial thrombus.
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We investigated the upright bicycle exercise cardiopulmonary response in 20 patients with left ventricular dysfunction (LVD, secondary to previous myocardial infarction, left ventricular ejection fraction range 18-44%). Ten patients (48 +/- 7 years) asymptomatic (I NYHA class) without drug treatment (LVD group). The others (n = 10) (50 +/- 1 years) complained of dyspnea and/or fatigue despite therapy (NYHA II-III). ⋯ The VE/VCO2 ratio was higher at peak exercise in patients with HF compared to controls. Different determinants were demonstrated in patients with left ventricular dysfunction with mild or symptomatic chronic heart failure (CHF). These findings and the increased ventilatory response in patients with CHF can explain different changes of VO2 in these patients during submaximal and maximal voluntary exercise and contribute to explain exercise-induced exertion in these subjects.
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We evaluated the time course of QT intervals and the amplitude of T waves, and their relationship to subsequent left ventricular regional wall motions in 88 patients with successfully reperfused acute myocardial infarction (MI). The QTc intervals and the amplitude of inverted T waves of lead V3 in patients with anterior MI and of lead III in patients with inferior MI were measured for 1 month after MI. Patients were classified as having severe T wave inversion or mild T wave inversion within 3 days of MI, based on a measurement of 0.5 mV in the anterior MI cases and 0.3 mV in the inferior MI cases. ⋯ The group with severe T wave inversion had less extensive hypokinesis, a lower maximum serum creatine kinase level and a shorter time to reperfusion from the onset of symptoms than the group with mild inversion. We conclude that the degree of T wave inversion 48 h after MI is predictive of abnormalities in left ventricular regional wall motions in the chronic phase. A deep inverted T wave in the acute phase of MI indicates an abundantly stunned myocardium.
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In a 79-year-old female with shortness of breath, catheterization via the femoral vein encountered difficulty entering the right heart; venography revealed anomalous drainage of the inferior vena cava via a dilated azygos vein permitting subsequent catheterization. Similar difficulties during catheterization merit consideration of this congenital anomaly, which is virtually always discovered in the pediatric population in association with other congenital anomalies. Its unique discovery at advanced age indicates its benignity as an isolated abnormality.
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This study assessed the usefulness of continuous wave Doppler echocardiography and color flow mapping in evaluating pulmonary regurgitation (PR) and estimating pulmonary artery (PA) pressure. Forty-three patients were examined, and high quality Doppler spectral recordings of PR were obtained in 32. All patients underwent cardiac catheterization, and simultaneous PA and right ventricular (RV) pressures were recorded in 17. ⋯ Moreover, the Doppler velocity decay slope of PR closely correlated with that derived from the catheter method (r = 0.98). The decay slope tended to be steeper with the increment in regurgitant jet area and length obtained from color flow mapping. In conclusion, continuous wave Doppler evaluation of PR is a useful means for noninvasive estimation of PA pressure, and the Doppler velocity decay slope seems to reflect the severity of PR.