Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux
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The detection of hibernating myocardium after infarction is important because it justifies the discussion concerning the revascularisation of infarcted zones irrigated by occluded or severely stenosed vessels, but with an adequate collateral circulation to allow hibernation. The detection of hibernating myocardium is particularly important in patients without the classical indications for revascularisation, such as residual spontaneous ischaemia or ischaemia provoked by exercise or pharmacological stress testing. All techniques currently in use tend to overestimate the size of the necrosed, fibrous scar, compared with the amount of viable myocardium. ⋯ Thallium scintigraphy is certainly useful in the prospective diagnosis of hibernating myocardium but the protocol of examination should be adapted to this specific problem. There is little available data concerning the evaluation of hibernating myocardium by positron emission tomography: the technical advantages of this method in assessing myocardial viability should enable a more accurate evaluation of post-infarction hibernating myocardium. Adequate revascularisation of necrosed territories depends on a deeper understanding and more precise prospective assessment of postinfarction hibernating myocardium.
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Jan 1994
[Aortic valve replacement after aortic valvuloplasty for calcified aortic stenosis. A propos of 104 patients].
Between February 1987 and December 1990, 104 patients (48 men, 56 women) with an average age of 69 years, underwent aortic valve replacement (AVR) after one or several percutaneous aortic valve balloon dilatation. Thirty one patients were in Class II and 73 patients in Classes III and IV. Twenty two patients had angina (16 Class I-II, 6 Class III-IV) and 12 patients had syncope or near syncope on effort. ⋯ There was an associated procedure in 17 cases (17 single bypass grafts, 2 double bypass, 1 triple bypass graft, 1 left ventricular suture, 1 Bigelow procedure, 2 mitral valve replacements, 1 tricuspid annuloplasty, 1 carotid endarteriectomy, 1 replacement of the ascending aorta, 1 closure of ASD). The operative mortality was 7 patients (6.7%). The operative findings were 8 lesions related to dilatation, mainly valve tears or disinsertions requiring rapid (6 cases) or emergency (2 cases) surgery for massive aortic regurgitation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Dec 1993
Review[Cardiac and extracardiac abscesses in bacterial endocarditis].
Cardiac abscesses are observed in 20 to 30% of cases of infective endocarditis and in at least 60% of prosthetic valve endocarditis. The aortic valve ring is more frequently affected than the mitral valve ring. A cavity contiguous with a cardiac chamber forming a pseudo-aneurysm or a closed purulent collection, the abscess may extend to the neighbouring cardiac structures or to the ascending aorta. ⋯ The risk of secondary valvular dehiscence, often recurrent, is much higher when there is an abscess at operation. Extracardiac abscesses in cases of infective endocarditis are mainly observed in the cerebral and/or splenic territories. They may become the main problem, especially cerebral abscesses, but they rarely require surgery.
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Sep 1993
Case Reports[False aneurysm of the left ventricle and coronary aneurysms in Behçet disease].
A false left ventricular aneurysm and coronary artery aneurysm were discovered in a 29 year old patient with Behçet's syndrome. The operation under cardiopulmonary bypass consisted of closing the neck of the false aneurysm by an endo-aneurysmal approach with a Gore-Tex patch. ⋯ Cardiac involvement is rare in Behçet's syndrome (6%). The originality of this case is the association of two aneurysmal pathologies: the coronary and ventricular aneurysms due to the angiitis and the myocardial fragility induced by ischaemia.
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Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Jul 1993
Review[Mobile thrombus of the right heart and pulmonary embolism: diagnostic and therapeutic problems. Apropos of 12 cases].
The objectives of this report were to analyse clinical presentation, echocardiographic features and diagnostic and therapeutic problems posed by an unusual form of thrombo-embolic disease: mobile right heart thrombosis. Systematic echocardiography in 170 cases of severe pulmonary embolism identified mobile right thrombi in 12 cases. The auscultatory findings were abnormal in 6 cases, 3 showing signs of tricuspid obstruction. ⋯ The clinical and echocardiographic outcome was good in 2 of these but the third patient died; autopsy revealed thrombi in the right atrium and pulmonary artery. One patient died before any treatment could be given and autopsy showed the thrombus in the pulmonary artery. These results confirm the extreme instability of this type of thrombus and the risk of death due to its embolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)