Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
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Diagnostic and interventional heart catheterization in peripheral vascular disease often requires due to iliacal disease additional methods of arterial approach besides the Judkin's technique. The percutaneous catheterization of the brachial artery finds widespread use. A major complication linked with this method is an increased rate of thrombotic occlusions at the puncture site. ⋯ Screening of the brachial artery by ultrasound duplex before a percutaneous catheterization for coronary angiography and intervention showed reproducibly the variable anatomy and differences in vessel diameter, which can be risk factors for thrombotic occlusion. Important details for the location of the puncture site and the possible size of the arterial sheat can be obtained, so that coronary interventions with 7F catheter systems are still practicable. This technique is a simple and efficient method to estimate the relative risk of arterial occlusion prior to percutaneous puncture of the brachial artery, especially in a group of patients with severe atherosclerosis and elevated vascular risk-factors.
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To evaluate the practical performance and the diagnostic power of a rapid, qualitative assay for the detection of cardiac Troponin T (indicated cut-off level: 0.3 ng/ml) in EMS patients presenting with acute myocardial ischemia. ⋯ The rapid assay allows the detection of Troponin T in concentrations above the cut-off level. Meticulous observance of the manufacturer's rules is imperative. A single preclinical rapid assay does not allow to exclude a MI. However, the test enables EMS personnel to identify patients who are at increased risk of dying from an acute coronary syndrome in the immediate future.
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The occurrence of paravalvular abscesses in the course of an acute endocarditis of the aortic valve indicates an advanced stadium of the disease. The infection has spread beyond the limits of the valve leaflets, and ongoing destruction of the paravalvular tissue is to be expected, if the endocarditis is continually treated by antibiotics alone. Surgery of acute endocarditis with paravalvular abscess, however, supposedly carries an increased risk of early mortality and late morbidity. ⋯ Late recurrent endocarditis was noted in three patients; none of them had abscesses at the time of surgery. We conclude that the operative risk of acute endocarditis of the aortic valve with a paravalvular abscess does not have to be inevitably higher compared to cases without paravalvular involvement. To achieve these results, it is necessary to use a radical surgical approach and to adjust postoperative antibiotic therapy, if infectious signs do not disappear shortly after surgery.