International journal of cardiology
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Letter Case Reports
Leg oedema and exertional dyspnea due to aortocaval fistula complicating an abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Aortocaval fistula (ACF) represents a rare complication of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) that may lead to hyperdynamic heart failure. We briefly describe a 58-year-old man with an old myocardial infarction, who developed leg oedema and worsening exertional dyspnea due to ACF complicating an AAA. This uncommon case highlights that an appropriate investigation for AAA and ACF should be performed in high-risk patients presenting with a history of worsening leg oedema and dyspnea in the absence of an obvious precipitating factor.
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Letter Case Reports
Echocardiographic change of a large left ventricular thrombus during resolution.
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Comparative Study
Impact of curative ablation on pharmacologic management in children with reentrant supraventricular tachycardias.
The introduction of radiofrequency catheter ablation as a curative treatment option has led to a much better outlook for children with recurrent supraventricular reentrant tachycardias (SVT). This study sought to evaluate the impact of ablation on pharmacologic treatment of SVT. ⋯ In the current era with increasing use of ablation as first-line treatment in older children with recurrent SVT, acute as well as chronic pharmacologic intervention for SVT has become significantly less frequent.
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We investigated the relationship between clinical, electrocardiographic and angiographic characteristics with development of refractory angina and acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in 976 consecutive patients with unstable angina (UA). AMI occurred in 63 (6%) and recurrent angina in 384 (39%), 201 of whom had >2 episodes (refractory, 21%). Patients with AMI were older (P<0.001) and had a higher rate of smoking (P<0.02), previous cerebrovascular accident (P<0.02), abnormal ST segment on admission (P<0.002), refractory angina (P<0.001) and multivessel disease (P<0.005) than those without AMI. ⋯ A multivariate analysis, however, showed that refractory angina (P<0.0001), and multivessel disease (P<0.001) were the strongest predictors of AMI while age and multivessel disease were the strongest predictors of refractory angina (P<0.003). Thus, multivessel disease was the most frequent substrate of refractory angina and AMI in patients with UA. These findings may suggest that significant coronary stenosis in non-culprit arteries may facilitate recurrence of ischemia/AMI perhaps by reacting in concert with the culprit lesion and causing a further reduction of the ischemic threshold.
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There is very little known about the relationship between pre-intervention arterial pressure response to vasopressor therapy (PRV) and death rate, after primary angioplasty for immediate cardiogenic shock (CS) complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI). ⋯ PRV was not an independent predictor of death after direct PTCA for CS. The association of no PRV with older age and lower post procedural blush grade may explain the difference in mortality rates between responders and non-responders.