Cardiology in the young
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Cardiology in the young · May 2001
Can subclinical valvitis detected by echocardiography be accepted as evidence of carditis in the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever?
Subclinical valvar insufficiency, or valvitis, has recently been identified using Doppler echocardiography in cases of acute rheumatic fever with isolated arthritis or chorea. The prognosis of such patients with acute rheumatic fever and subclinical valvitis is critical when determining the duration of antibiotic prophylaxis. We aimed, therefore, prospectively to investigate the association of silent valvitis in patients having rheumatic fever in the absence of clinical evidence of cardiac involvement, and to evaluate its prognosis. ⋯ Acute rheumatic fever without clinical carditis is not a benign entity. Doppler echocardiographic findings of subclinical valvar insufficiency, therefore, should be considered as carditis when seeking to establish the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever.
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Cardiology in the young · Mar 2001
Case ReportsRapid onset of intrapulmonary arteriovenous shunting after surgical repair of tetralogy of Fallot with pulmonary atresia.
We describe a 2-year-old girl with tetralogy of Fallot and pulmonary atresia, palliated as a neonate with a right modified Blalock Taussig shunt, who developed severe cyanosis following total correction in the absence of corresponding evidence of parenchymal lung disease on the chest X-ray. Selective pulmonary angiography showed new intrapulmonary shunting involving only the right middle and lower lobes only. The cyanosis resolved rapidly subsequent to inhalation of nitric oxide. To our knowledge, this is the first documented case of rapid onset of localised intrapulmonary right-to-left shunting, involving only two lung lobes, following biventricular repair for complex congenital heart disease.
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Cardiology in the young · Jan 2001
Cytokines and pediatric open heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
It is well known that, subsequent to cardiopulmonary bypass, and particularly in children, an inflammatory response within the body can often result in a characteristic syndrome. Recently, it has been suggested that this phenomenon is due to a systemic inflammatory response, with significant involvement of cytokines. With this in mind, we investigated the behavior of tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6 during the operative and in the immediate postoperative period in a group of children submitted to open heart surgery. ⋯ The cytokines were measured in samples withdrawn after induction of anesthesia, after 10 minutes of cardiopulmonary bypass, after re-establishment of circulation, and then 2 and 24 hours after the end of cardiopulmonary bypass. The levels of tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6 increased between the beginning and at two hours of the end of cardiopulmonary bypass. There was no correlation between the levels of these cytokines in the serum and the length of cardiopulmonary bypass, although there was a positive relation between levels of interleukin-6 and lactate in samples withdrawn at two hours of the end of bypass, and the measured levels of the cytokines correlated with the extent of inotropic drugs employed in the postoperative period.
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Cardiology in the young · Jan 2001
Coagulation profile, hepatic function, and hemodynamics following Fontan-type operations.
We analyzed retrospectively the relationship between coagulation profile, and either hepatic function or hemodynamics, in patients who had undergone a Fontan-type procedure, comparing them, first, with a control group of 12 patients without significant hemodynamic abnormality, and, second, with a group of 14 patients who had not undergone a Fontan procedure, but whose mean right atrial pressure exceeded 8 mmHg. Follow-up catheterization had been performed in all 30 patients submitted to the Fontan-type operation. Prothrombin time, and factor XIII, were significantly lower in those who had undergone the Fontan procedure than in the other groups. ⋯ Aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, parameters of hepatic function, correlated significantly with mean right atrial pressure. In those who had undergone the Fontan procedure, decreased synthesis of pro-and anti-coagulant factors is a risk factor for both thrombosis and bleeding. Abnormal hemodynamics, in the absence of a right sided pumping chamber, may predispose to subclinical hepatic dysfunction, leading to selective disturbances of protein synthesis.
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Cardiology in the young · Oct 2000
Comparative StudyClinical and morphologic features of perimembranous ventricular septal defect with overriding of the aorta--the so-called Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect. A study making comparisons with tetralogy of Fallot and perimembranous ventricular defect without aortic overriding.
The aim of our study was to elucidate the clinical and morphologic features of those perimembranous ventricular septal defects which extend between the ventricular outlets, particularly when found in association with anterior deviation of the muscular outlet septum and overriding of the aorta--the so called Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect. From 1990 through 1998, we have undertaken surgical correction in 203 patients with perimembranous ventricular septal defect. Of these, 15 patients had the Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect. ⋯ These morphological features were reflected in the clinical features, since all patients showed evidence of increased pulmonary flow and congestive heart failure in early infancy, but with two-thirds of them subsequently developing right-to-left shunting. We conclude, therefore, that the Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect is a discrete cardiac abnormality in which the morphologic substrate of anterior deviation of the outlet septum gives rise to a potential for progressive narrowing of the subpulmonary infundibulum. Surgical management, therefore, needs to take account of such narrowing as an additional cardinal morphologic feature.