Journal of cardiology
-
Journal of cardiology · Jan 2001
Doppler evaluation of systolic and diastolic heart failure in patients with cardiomyopathy.
Analysis of transmitral flow with Doppler echocardiography can currently evaluate left ventricular diastolic function noninvasively and easily. In addition, measurement of pulmonary venous flow and left atrial appendage flow clarifies not only left ventricular diastolic function but also left atrial systolic function in patients with left ventricular systolic failure and diastolic failure. ⋯ Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction is somewhat distinct between patients with left ventricular systolic failure and patients with left ventricular diastolic failure. Atrial reversal flow in pulmonary vein has the potential to predict left ventricular filling pressure in patients with diastolic failure.
-
Journal of cardiology · Jan 2001
Real-time, volumetric echocardiography: usefulness of volumetric scanning for the assessment of cardiac volume and function.
A novel imaging system has been introduced which uses a dedicated two-dimensional echo probe for rapid beam forming to scan a pyramidal volume in real time. Real-time volumetric echocardiography has the potential to determine accurate cardiovascular anatomy, volume and function in the beating heart without reconstructions. The results of animal and human studies using volumetric echocardiography are evaluated for the potential for clinical applications. IMAGING METHODOLOGY: A new type of ultrasound imaging, high-speed volumetric scanning based on phased array principles permits real-time three-dimensional, volumetric echocardiography (real-time 3-DE). The system requires no off-line reconstruction techniques, thus enabling dynamic three-dimensional visualization and quantification of the heart in real time using a transthoracic approach. Real-time 3-DE uses a 2-D matrix phased array transducer. Image formation employs 16:1 parallel processing to scan a pyramidal volume composed of multiple steering directions in the azimuth dimension and in the elevation dimension. The finished transducer is mounted in a hand-held case with a circular aperture of 16 mm diameter. The array consists of approximately 1,600 elements, operating at 2.5 MHz. Real-time 3-DE permits simultaneous, multiple plane display of two sector arcs (B-scans) and C-scan (parallel to the transducer face or inclined) on a single monitor, conveying the three-dimensional nature of the ultrasound data. This system also allows these planes to be angled for extra diagnostic flexibility. The motion of all the structures during the cardiac cycle can be evaluated in dynamic mode. ⋯ Transthoracic real-time, volumetric echocardiography opens a new and exciting field of echocardiography. The results of these studies demonstrate that this system can accurately measure the ventricular volume and function without use of geometric assumptions. This volumetric mode or V-mode scanning is a new imaging modality that provides a practical methodology to investigate important clinical and research questions.
-
Journal of cardiology · Nov 2000
Case ReportsMassive deep vein thrombosis after cesarean section treated with a temporary inferior vena cava filter: a case report.
A 25-year-old woman suffered a massive deep vein thrombus in her left common iliac vein extending to the inferior vena cava after an abdominal cesarean section. The massive and floating inferior vena cava thrombus was considered to pose a high risk of pulmonary thromboembolism. ⋯ This patient was confined to bed because the filter moved vertically with left shoulder joint abduction. Although a temporary inferior vena cava filter is very useful for the prevention of pulmonary thromboembolism in a patient with deep vein thrombus, the appropriate range of activity for such a patient needs careful consideration.
-
Journal of cardiology · May 2000
Comparative Study Clinical Trial[Methodology of 80 degrees head-up tilt testing with and without low dose isoproterenol provocation in Japanese patients with neurally mediated syncope].
The usefulness of 80 degrees head-up tilt testing with and without low dose isoproterenol provocation was evaluated for the diagnosis of neurally mediated syncope (NMS) in Japanese. Head-up tilt testing was performed in 114 consecutive patients with clinical diagnoses of NMS (68 men, 46 women, mean age 46 +/- 21 years), and 57 times in 36 healthy volunteers (26 men, 10 women, mean age 31 +/- 8 years) who had no history of syncope or presyncope. Head-up tilt testing used an 80 degrees angle for 30 minutes (passive tilt), and if the passive tilt resulted in negative response, isoproterenol was infused at 0.01-0.02 microgram/kg/min and the tilt repeated for 10 minutes (isoproterenol tilt). ⋯ However, specificities were comparable with those of the passive tilt testing (84% and 82%, respectively). In conclusion, 80 degrees passive tilt testing for 30 minutes showed a low sensitivity (28%) but acceptable specificity (84%). Low-dose isoproterenol provocation was useful for improving sensitivity (48%) while maintaining a comparable specificity (82%).
-
Journal of cardiology · Mar 2000
Review[Long-term outcome of pharmacological and nonpharmacological treatment for ventricular arrhythmias].
Recent advances of nonpharmacological therapy such as catheter ablation and implantable cardioverter defibrillator and lessons from the Cardiac Arrhythmia Suppression Trial(CAST) have changed the strategy for ventricular arrhythmias. The safety and efficacy of radiofrequency catheter ablation of symptomatic sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia without structural heart disease has made ablation the firstline curative therapy. In idiopathic ventricular fibrillation such as Brugada syndrome, an implantable cardioverter defibrillator is the most effective treatment to prevent sudden cardiac death. ⋯ Catheter ablation of a single ventricular tachycardia may be only palliative. Therefore, implantable cardioverter defibrillator is the most effective treatment to prevent sudden cardiac death, with amiodarone and ablation as the adjunctive therapy to prevent frequent ventricular tachycardia. Furthermore, an implantable cardioverter defibrillator improved survival in selected patients with depressed ventricular function after myocardial infarction, who also have nonsustained and inducible sustained ventricular tachycardia in Multicenter Automatic Defibrillator Implantation Trial(MADIT) and Multicenter Unsustained Tachycardia Trial(MUSTT).