International journal of cardiology
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This study investigates the diagnostic value of echocardiography in patients with suspected pulmonary embolism. Doppler-echocardiography was performed in fifty consecutive patients, predominantly presenting in the emergency ward, with clinically suspected pulmonary embolism. Patients were classified as having or not pulmonary embolism by a sequential non-invasive strategy including lung scan, D-dimer measurement and lower limb venous compression ultrasonography, pulmonary angiography being performed in case of an inconclusive non-invasive work-up. ⋯ On the other hand, the absence of these two Doppler-echocardiographic criteria did not allow to exclude pulmonary embolism, except in presence of a low pre-test probability. The findings of our study show that Doppler-echocardiography in patients with high clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism may represent a potentially useful screening technique for the diagnosis of the disease permitting prompt initiation of treatment. However, the method does not allow to exclude pulmonary embolism in all patients with intermediate or high clinical suspicion of the disease.
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Modern coronary care unit interventions have not reduced the high mortality rate associated with cardiogenic shock due to acute myocardial infarction. Results with thrombolytic therapy have also been disappointing because of poor infarct artery patency rates in a low coronary flow state. ⋯ Intraaortic balloon counterpulsation provides temporary hemodynamic and clinical improvement in the majority of patients with cardiogenic shock. The use of intraaortic counterpulsation to augment patency rates with thrombolytic therapy or to stabilize patients for transfer to a hospital with angioplasty services appears to be a promising strategy for hospitals without an interventional cardiac catheterization laboratory.
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Review Case Reports
Group B streptococcal tricuspid valve endocarditis: a case report and review of literature.
Group B streptococcal endocarditis involving the tricuspid valve is an uncommon disease. We describe herein a young healthy woman who developed this disease following an elective abortion. She was treated with penicillin and gentamycin with no response. ⋯ Five of them were IV drug abusers, four patients suffered from debilitating diseases and in five women endocarditis developed following an obstetric procedure. In general the mortality from tricuspid valve endocarditis is low, indeed 2/13 (15%) died. The drug of choice is penicillin with gentamycin.
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We describe a patient with a deep vein thrombosis causing multiple pulmonary emboli. After inferior vena cava filter insertion, a large embolus was trapped by the filter. Anticoagulation following filter insertion decreased the pulmonary artery pressure, and there was no recurrence of pulmonary embolization. Thus, in the presence of large, multiple thrombi in the proximal veins, inferior vena cava filter had better be inserted before thrombolytic treatment to prevent a lethal pulmonary embolism, and anticoagulant therapy is important after filter insertion.
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The long-term prognosis, including risks of arrhythmic recurrence of idiopathic ventricular fibrillation (VF), is uncertain; moreover, the role of electrophysiologic study in the diagnosis and guiding of antiarrhythmic drugs therapy for idiopathic VF remains controversial. The purpose of this study was to study the clinical features, electrophysiologic characteristics and long-term clinical outcomes of six consecutive patients (five males) who had at least one episode of aborted cardiac arrest (5 patients) or syncope (1 patients) with documentation of ventricular fibrillation (VF) in the absence of apparent heart disease. Idiopathic VF was diagnosed by exclusion. ⋯ In conclusion, electrophysiologic study is a reliable diagnostic method, but it was of limited value in guiding antiarrhythmic drug therapy for preventing recurrence of idiopathic VF. Class I drug alone was associated with a high recurrence rate (100%) despite predictions that it would be effective by the electrophysiologic study. Amiodarone alone or in combination with mexiletine effectively prevented the recurrence of VF during the long-term follow-up along with a favourable outcome.