Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
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The index "isovolumic contraction time and isovolumic relaxation time divided by ejection time" ("Tei-Index") has been demonstrated to provide useful information about disease severity and prognosis in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and cardiac amyloidosis. In patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), the diagnostic utility of this index is unclear. We attempted to validate the Tei-Index in CAD patients with overall cardiac or isolated diastolic dysfunction. ⋯ The Tei-Index is a valid and readily derived indicator of global cardiac dysfunction in CAD patients with impaired systolic and diastolic LV performance. The use of this index seems to be limited in CAD patients with primary diastolic dysfunction.
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Acute aortic dissection is a disease with high mortality. Whereas acute dissection of the ascending aorta (Standford type A) is treated surgically, acute dissection of Stanford type B (descending aorta) is principally treated conservatively, but surgically in case of complications. Recently, another therapeutical option for the treatment of type B dissection has been developed using endovascular stent-grafts. ⋯ It is also likely that the patient initially had type B dissection with retrograde dissection of the distal part of the aortic arch. Therefore, one of the straight struts of the proximal end of the stent may have caused additional damage to the vulnerable dissected aortic wall in the arch, leading to retrograde type A dissection. Careful patient selection, detailed diagnosis of the aortic arch, improved stent designs and materials, especially regarding the stent's ends and careful insertion of the stent into the aortic arch, could contribute to prevention of the described problems.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
[Coronary revascularization: off-pump versus on-pump--a comparison of behavior of biochemical cardiac ischemia markers].
Recently, coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) on the beating heart with avoidance of extracorporeal circulation (off-pump CABG technique) has been gaining increasing importance in modern cardiac surgery. The object of this prospective study was to compare postoperative kinetic and patterns of cardiac troponin I (cTnI), T (cTnT), and creatine kinase MB (CKMB) activities after off-pump CABG versus conventional on-pump CABG. ⋯ All patients undergoing CABG surgery with or without extracorporeal circulation postoperatively showed an increase of cardiac troponin levels. After uncomplicated coronary revascularization, patients with the off-pump CABG technique continuously presented lower serum cardiac troponin concentrations than those with the on-pump CABG technique. CTnI showed the same patterns of release in both groups with different median postoperative peak values at 24 h. The patterns off cTnT release following CABC surgery with or without extracorporal circulation were different: CTnT reaches its postoperative peak value in patients with the off-pump CABG technique earlier than those with the on-pump CABG technique (12 h postoperatively versus 48 h).
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Data on mid- and long-term follow-up for the recent devices for closure of secundum-type atrial septal defects are limited. The purpose of our retrospective study was to report the effectiveness of transcatheter closure in patients with various morphological types of atrial septal defect other than centrally located defects within the oval fossa using the CardioSEAL and CardioSEAL-Starflex occluder. A total of 91 patients (age 1.5-71 years, median 6 years) underwent transcatheter closure. ⋯ Serial transthoracic echocardiographic findings revealed protrusion of one left-sided arm onto the right atrial aspect in 5 patients; malposition of one right-sided superior arm of the device was observed in 7 patients. Fluoroscopy showed single fatigue fracture in 7 patients (7.7%) within the first 6 months after implantation. These results demonstrate that transcatheter closure with the double umbrella device was effective and safe on medium-term follow-up and could be extended to atrial septal defects of various morphology.
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Review Comparative Study
[Radiofrequency catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardias].
Management of patients with ventricular tachycardia (VT) is often difficult. Drug therapy is often ineffective. Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) can terminate VT episodes but do not prevent them. ⋯ However, some of these patients may develop recurrences due to other types of VT. Recent technical developments have increased efficacy and simplified the approach of RF ablation of VT in patients with structural heart disease. However, long-term efficacy is not accurately predictable and implantation of an ICD is mandatory in most of the patients with severely depressed left ventricular function.