Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
-
In a 27-year-old woman, struck by lightning behind the left ear, the ECG showed signs of an acute posterior-lateral myocardial infarction after 1 h of unconsciousness and loss of memory. Her serum enzymes were increased as is typical of myocardial infarction, but the patient did not complain of cardiac symptoms. ⋯ In the course of two months, the ECG revealed a regression to unspecific ST-T-deviations and serum enzymes became normal. TI-201-myocardial-scintigraphy (SPECT), done six days and two months after lightning injury, excluded reversible and irreversible perfusion defects.
-
Invasive data about the frequency and associated factors of tricuspid regurgitation in normals and in patients with aortic and mitral valve disease are still rare. Thus, right ventricular biplane angiograms (RAO/LAO projection), the mean pulmonary artery pressure and the presence of atrial fibrillation were analyzed with regard to tricuspid regurgitation in 30 normals and 165 patients with pure mitral regurgitation, mitral stenosis, aortic regurgitation, aortic stenosis, combined mitral valve disease or combined aortic valve disease. Patients with tricuspid stenosis or coronary artery disease were excluded. ⋯ Only in patients with pure mitral regurgitation tricuspid regurgitation was associated with an elevated mean pulmonary artery pressure (p less than 0.02). Differences in the right ventricular size and function did not occur between normals and patients with mitral or aortic valve disease. Therefore, the mean pulmonary artery pressure, atrial fibrillation and the size and function of the right ventricle are not major determinants for the occurrence of tricuspid regurgitation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)