International journal of cardiology
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We examined the response of ventriculo-arterial coupling to epinephrine in 19 patients with normal left ventricular function and with left ventricular dysfunction of various degrees using a conductance catheter. They were divided into three groups: group I, seven patients without left ventricular wall motion abnormality; group II, six patients with ejection fraction of 45-60%; group III, six patients with ejection fraction of 28-40%. Changes in the slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship (end-systolic elastance), the effective arterial elastance, the ratio of effective arterial elastance to end-systolic elastance and the ventricular work efficiency during administration of two different doses of epinephrine (0.05 and 0.1 micrograms/kg/min) were compared among the three groups. ⋯ At the higher dose of epinephrine the mean ratio of effective arterial elastance to end-systolic elastance further decreased and the mean ventricular work efficiency further increased in groups I and II. However, the mean ratio of effective arterial elastance to end-systolic elastance did not decrease but the mean ventricular work efficiency even decreased in group III. Thus, in patients with advanced left ventricular dysfunction, even a high dose of epinephrine does not modulate the ventriculo-arterial coupling to increase ventricular work efficiency.
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A 74-year-old female presented in cardiogenic shock four weeks following a severe episode of ischaemic chest pain. Physical examination was suggestive of a ventricular septal defect, and this was confirmed by cross-sectional echocardiography and right heart catheterisation. As the resting electrocardiogram was consistent with an extensive anterior myocardial infarct of indeterminate age, a diagnosis of ventricular septal defect subsequent to infarction was made and the patient taken to the operating theatre for urgent repair. At operation, however, the defect was found to be congenital in origin.
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Cardiac arrest usually carries a bleak prognosis when occurring in patients who have undergone open heart surgery. We report two cases where cardiac arrest was not responsive to routine therapies. Doses of epinephrine 5-10 times higher than recommended were able to provide a resolution, and the patients were discharged in a normal neurological state.
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On the basis of our recent embryologic work concerning the separation process of the outflow tract, our study of the morphology of specimens from the Leiden Collection of malformed hearts, and in conjunction with our review of the literature, we have reconsidered the morphogenesis of complete transposition and double outlet right ventricle. In complete transposition, a mirror-image arrangement of the columns of the aorto-pulmonary septum could explain the discordant ventriculo-arterial connexion and might thus play a role in its development. ⋯ Double outlet right ventricle is not an embryologic entity. From the stance of the embryologist, we prefer to consider double outlet right ventricle in terms of a feature that may occur in specimens related to hearts with either a concordant ventriculo-arterial connexion (such as tetralogy of Fallot, or the so-called Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect), or a discordant ventriculo-arterial connexion (complete transposition).