Rev Esp Cardiol
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We present a case of acute myocardial infarction located anteriorly in a healthy young man who suffered a blunt chest trauma following a motor vehicle accident, with coronarographic evidence of intimal dissection of the left anterior descending artery and evolution to ventricular aneurysm. We comment on the rare incidence of this entity and the mechanism involved in this case, a coronary contusion with subsequent intimal dissection.
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With the aim to attesting the ability of treated pericardial tissue to resist infection we analyzed the incidence of prosthetic valve endocarditis in 541 operative survivors with the Ionescu-Shiley (I-S) valve since January 1977. A total of 580 valves were available for the study, 21 (3.8%) sustained I-S endocarditis or 0.65% patients/annum. The mean age was 53.2 years; male/female ratio was 16/5. ⋯ Operative and necropsy findings in 12/21 showed always periprosthetic abscess but no leaflet perforations. The rate of I-S valve endocarditis compares favourably with other valve substitutes. Early re-replacement combined with adequate antibiotic treatment is mandatory according to our experience.
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From August 1977 through October 1984, 241 patients underwent aortic valve replacement with the Ionescu-Shiley prosthesis. The average age was 50.8 years (range 15 to 78). Aortic valve replacement was performed alone in 121 patients (50.2%) and with associated surgery in 120 (49.8%). ⋯ Structural valve failure was found in 24 patients (1.9% per patient-year) with an actuarial rate of freedom for primary tissue failure of 72.6 +/- 6.1% at 10.5 years. Reoperation was required in 39 cases (3.09% per patient-year) due to primary tissue failure (n:24), paravalvular leak (n:7), infective endocarditis (n:6) and valve thrombosis (n:2). In conclusion, this pericardial bioprosthesis has demonstrated an adequate performance at mid and long-term follow-up, but somehow less satisfactory than previously reported.