Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux
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The overall cardiovascular mortality in patients with chronic renal failure is about 30 per cent of which 10 per cent is attributed to myocardial infarction. This prevalence led some workers to propose a hypothesis of "accelerated atherosclerosis" due to the hyperlipidaemia observed in 30 to 70 per cent of patients. However, the concept of accelerated atherosclerosis, which was based essentially on clinical studies, has been questioned. ⋯ Left ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis may give rise to ventricular arrhythmias which could explain some of the cases of sudden death observed in patients with renal failure and often wrongly attributed to ischemic heart disease. Another form of myocardial disease which is observed later is characterised by an alteration of systolic function with left ventricular dilatation and hypokinesia and increased end diastolic pressures without an increase in left ventricular wall thickness. Valvular heart disease may also result from renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Mar 1990
Case Reports[Floating left atrial thrombus in 2 cases of severe mitral stenosis].
The authors report two operated cases of floating left atrial thrombus. Both patients had severe mitral stenosis, atrial fibrillation and dilatation of the left atrium. ⋯ The diagnosis was made in both cases by two-dimensional echocardiography which, in addition to confirming the severe mitral stenosis, showed a round, free-floating intra-atrial mass, rebounding from wall to wall and repeatedly engaging itself into the mitral orifice. The risk of prolonged engagement of the thrombus in the mitral orifice, causing syncope or sudden death, justifies urgent surgery associating thrombectomy and treatment of mitral stenosis every time this problem is encountered.
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Mar 1990
Case Reports[Refractory arterial hypoxemia and interatrial right-left shunt in myocardial infarction of the right ventricle].
The authors report the case of a 63 year old woman who developed refractory arterial hypoxemia due to a right-to-left interatrial shunt through a patent foramen ovale during the acute phase of right ventricular infarction. The precarious haemodynamic condition of the patient contra-indicated surgical intervention and so the effects of the shunt were reduced by obstructing the atrial septal defect with the balloon of a Swan-Ganz catheter. The management of this type of shunt is discussed based on the degree of hypoxemia and the patient's haemodynamic status with reference to this particular case and a review of the literature.