The American journal of medicine
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Comparative Study
Prediction of severity of aortic stenosis: accuracy of multiple noninvasive parameters.
As newer non-medical techniques are developed to treat older patients with severe aortic stenosis, reliable noninvasive diagnosis of the condition will become increasingly important. For this reason, the accuracy of multiple noninvasive indexes for quantitation of the severity of aortic stenosis was evaluated, relative to catheterization-determined aortic valve area. ⋯ Noninvasive determination of aortic valve area using the continuity equation is an accurate means of assessing the severity of aortic stenosis. Although multiple other noninvasive parameters also correlate with aortic valve area measured at catheterization, there is too much scatter of data points to permit accurate prediction of catheterization aortic valve area in any given patient.
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Our goal was to review the experience at Papworth Hospital, Cambridgeshire, England, with combined heart-lung transplantation. ⋯ Developments in organ preservation and patient management, as well as careful selection of recipients and donors, have led to the effective use of resources and thereby to these good results. In particular, the incidence of obliterative bronchiolitis has been low, which is attributed to the early treatment of pulmonary rejection following diagnosis by transbronchial biopsy.
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It is generally assumed that diet therapy can ameliorate the metabolic derangements experienced by obese type 2 diabetic patients, thereby leading to discontinuation of insulin or oral sulfonylurea drug therapy. We decided to retrospectively investigate which clinical and biochemical parameters affect therapeutic responses. ⋯ Diet therapy in these patients resulted in short-term improvement of glycemic control and, in the majority, normalization of fasting plasma glucose levels. However, long-term outpatient follow-up revealed that relapse occurred in most patients.