Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
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Comparative Study
[Comparison of invasive blood pressure measurement in the aorta with indirect oscillometric blood pressure measurement at the wrist and forearm].
Indirectly measured blood pressure at the wrist or upper arm was compared with directly measured values in the aortic arch during routinely performed diagnostic cardiac catheterization in 100 patients (31-80 years, mean 59.3 years, 60% males). The noninvasive measurements were carried out by oscillometric devices, NAiS Blood Pressure Watch for measurements at the wrist, and Hestia OZ80 at the upper arm. Systolic blood pressure measured at the wrist was 4.3 +/- 14.1 mm Hg, and the diastolic value 6.0 +/- 8.9 mm Hg higher than when measured at the aortic arch; the difference was significant in both cases. ⋯ The correspondence between wrist and upper arm values was better for diastolic blood pressure, the values differing by less than +/- 10 mm Hg in two-thirds of patients. Self-measurement of arterial blood pressure with an oscillometric device at the wrist can be recommended only in individual cases with a difference of simultaneously measured values at the upper arm of less than +/- 10 mm Hg for systolic and diastolic blood pressures. The standard method for indirectly measuring arterial blood pressure remains the measurement at the upper arm site, which nevertheless showed a systolic pseudohypertension (deviation of more than 10 mm Hg) in comparison to the invasively measured values in 15% of our selected patients and a diastolic pseudohypertension (deviation of more than 15 mm Hg) in 23% of the patients.
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Case Reports
[The aortic arch as source of thromboembolism events--significance of echocardiography diagnosis].
A 43-year-old woman presented with acute embolic occlusion of the left brachial artery. She was immediately treated by surgical embolectomy. ⋯ There-upon an aortotomy and thrombectomy was performed and showed a normal wall structure of the thoracic aorta except for a minimal ulcerated lesion of the intima at the aortic arch. This case confirms that transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography are the diagnostic methods of choice for detecting thromboembolic sources originating in the heart or thoracic aorta.
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Since September 1991, 204 patients (pts), 109 male and 95 female, mean age 27.3 +/- 10.6 years, were followed in a newly established interdisciplinary outpatient clinic combining both adult and pediatric cardiologists. 61 pts predominantly presented with left-to-right shunt congenital heart disease (CHD), 32 with valvar CHD, 20 with aortic coarctation, 23 with complex acyanotic, and 49 with cyanotic CHD. The population included 19 pts with Marfan syndrome. 106 pts had had previous cardiac surgery, 32 of them with up to three reoperations. Deficits and needs in medical and social care were analyzed in 100 pts using a standardized questionnaire at the time of first examination: One-third of pts were not or only incompletely informed about their CHD, previous surgical procedures and need for antibiotic prophylaxis of endocarditis. Only a minority of pts had had vocational advice (34%) or counseling concerning contraception (40%) or pregnancy (30%). Cardiac catheterization was performed in 37 pts (18%) after being first seen in our outpatient clinic, followed by a primary surgical intervention in 19 and reoperation in eight cases. Overall, 30 pts (15%) underwent surgery (28) or interventional procedures (one closure of the arterial duct, one AV node ablation after Mustard-operation) as a consequence of admission to our unit. Successful late Fontan operations were performed in four adults aged 21 to 35 years. There was 1/30 postoperative death (M. Ebstein, thrombosis of the mechanical prosthesis). The population includes five pts with severe pulmonary vascular disease (one waiting for lung transplantation) and two pts with pulmonary artery arborisation malformations not amenable to surgery. ⋯ In a population of 204 adolescents and adults with CHD, we clearly found deficits in medical and social care and, in addition, an unexpected high percentage of necessary invasive investigations (18%) and surgical or interventional procedures (15%). Interdisciplinary management of these patients is mandatory combining the special facilities of adult and pediatric cardiologists.
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We report on a case of dynamic left ventricular (LV) outflow tract obstruction combined with a prosthetic valve dysfunction 13 years following mitral valve replacement with a Hancock bioprosthesis in a 46-year-old patient. Previously, repeated echocardiographic controls had been performed at regular intervals and the prosthesis had been found to be oversized and seated in abnormal position, with projection of the struts into the LV outflow tract. Moreover, a mild chronic LV outflow tract obstruction had been diagnosed upon intermittent findings of relatively high velocity in the outflow tract. ⋯ The patient was referred for a mitral valve reoperation. The valve was replaced with a Sorin Bileaflet Carbon prosthesis. On the setting of a mild chronic LV outflow obstruction due to the oversized prosthesis and its abnormal position, hypercontractile cardiac function as a result of mitral regurgitation may have caused the dynamic and symptomatic LV outflow tract obstruction.
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Acute aortic rupture is a typical consequence of severe blunt chest trauma often associated with rapid deceleration in car accidents. Initial diagnostic findings are often misleading and multiorgan injuries add to the diagnostic complexity; therefore, the natural history of acute rupture is usually fatal during the first 24 h after injury if left untreated. Prompt and simple diagnosis is, hence, of paramount importance for successful treatment of acute aortic rupture. ⋯ We report on a 47-year-old woman with severe blunt thoraco-abdominal trauma resulting from a car accident; at hospital admission abdominal injuries were predominant and diagnosis of an acute rupture of the descending thoracic aorta was made only about 18 h after admission using biplane transesophageal echocardiography. Emergency surgical revision confirmed the diagnosis of complete transsection of the descending thoracic aorta immediately after the origin of the left subclavian artery; the site of transsection was surrounded by a large hematoma. Despite successful reconstruction of the descending thoracic aorta by means of graft interposition, a recurrent local bleeding event lead to complete circulatory destabilization and, finally, to the death of the patient.