22 research outputs found

    Angiographic predictors of new coronary occlusions

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    To access publisher full text version of this article. Please click on the hyperlink in Additional Links fieldTo determine whether coronary angiography is predictive of the future site of coronary occlusion, we analyzed the coronary angiograms of 246 consecutive patients having two or more angiograms without therapeutic invasive intervention in the interval between angiograms. The average interval between studies was 46 months. Of 2183 normal segments at the first angiogram, 51 (2.3%) were occluded at the second angiogram, whereas in segments with minimal disease (1% to 25% diameter stenosis) 33 (8%) of 411 were occluded (p < 0.05). There was a further stepwise increase in the occlusion ratio, with increasing stenosis reaching a 31% occlusion ratio in lesions with critical (91% to 99%) stenosis at the first angiogram. For any given degree of stenosis, the occlusion ratio of "long" lesions (5 to 20 mm) was on the average more than twice that of "short" lesions (< 5 mm, p < 0.01), except in lesions with critical stenosis (91% to 99%) where length was no longer important. Occlusion of segments judged free of disease on the first angiogram was highest in the right coronary artery, 4.7%, versus 2.7% in the left anterior descending and 0.6% in the circumflex artery (p < 0.01). History of recent myocardial infarction was a good clinical predictor of occlusion and deterioration of ventricular function

    Mr McCafferty [?], with his right foot on a tree, looking over Mt. Isa, Queensland, 1965? [transparency] /

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    Mould spots. Colour loss across bottom.; Part of The Reverend Andrew Leslie McKay collection of photographs relating to Inland Australia, 1950-1976.; This image and PIC/9193/409,411,412 and 413 are a series of vistas of Mt. Isa.; Identification of Mr McCafferty is uncertain.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4181336; Collection donated by Mrs Lyn McKay, widow of Reverend Les McKay, through their daughter Dr. Judith McKay
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