76 research outputs found
Immunological aspects of clinical and experimental cardiac valve allograft implantation
The documented history of allogeneic cardiac valve implantation began in 1952. In that year, the
first successful implantation of an canine aortic valve in the descendlng aorta of another dog, was
carried o
A case report of an interrupted inferior vena cava and azygos continuation:Implications for preoperative screening in minimally invasive cardiac surgery
Background: Femoral cannulation is commonly used in minimally invasive cardiac surgery to establish extracorporeal circulation. We present a case with a finding that should be evaluated when screening candidates for minimally invasive cardiac surgery. Case summary: A 57-year-old male patient was scheduled for minimally invasive repair of the mitral and tricuspid valve and a MAZE procedure. During surgery there was difficulty advancing the venous cannula inserted in the right femoral vein. On transoesophageal echocardiography a guidewire advanced from the femoral vein was observed entering the right atrium from the superior vena cava. Despite inserting a second venous cannula in the jugular vein, venous drainage was insufficient for minimal invasive surgery. The approach was converted to a median sternotomy with bicaval cannulation. Re-examination of the preoperative computed tomography (CT) scan showed an interrupted inferior vena cava (IVC) with azygos continuation. Discussion: In patients with major venous malformations such as the interrupted IVC with azygos continuation a full sternotomy is the preferred approach. The venous system should be evaluated when screening candidates for minimally invasive mitral valve surgery with preoperative CT. Additional cues to suspect interruption of the IVC are polysplenia and a broad superior mediastinal projection on the chest radiograph, mimicking a right paratracheal mass.</p
Comparative study of male and female patients undergoing surgical aortic valve replacement
BACKGROUND: Sex does have an effect on disease perception and outcomes after cardiac surgery. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to quantify the differences in cardiovascular risk profiles within an age-matched cohort and assess the long-term survival differences in males and females who underwent surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) with or without concomitant coronary artery bypass surgery. METHODS: All-comers patients who underwent SAVR with or without coronary artery bypass surgery were included. Characteristics, clinical features and survival up to 30 years were compared between female and male patients. Propensity matching and age matching using propensity scores were used to compare both groups. RESULTS: During the total study period between 1987 and 2017, there were 3462 patients {mean age 66.8 [standard deviation (SD): 11.1] years, 37.1% female} who underwent SAVR with or without coronary artery bypass surgery at our institution. In general, female patients were older than male patients (69.1 (SD: 10.3) versus 65.5 (SD: 11.3), respectively). In the age-matched cohort, female patients were less likely to have multiple comorbidities and undergo concomitant coronary artery bypass surgery. Twenty-year survival following the index procedure was higher in age-matched female patients (27.1%) compared to male patients (24.4%) in the overall cohort (P = 0.018). CONCLUSIONS: Substantial sex differences in cardiovascular risk profile exist. However, when SAVR with or without coronary artery bypass surgery is performed, extended long-term mortality is comparable between males and females. More research regarding sex-dimorphic mechanisms of aortic stenosis and coronary atherosclerosis would promote more awareness in terms of sex-specific risk factors after cardiac surgery and contribute to more guided personalized surgery in the future.</p
The role of experience in echocardiographic identification of location and extent of mitral valve prolapse with 2D and 3D echocardiography
Contradiction exists on the incremental value of two-dimensional (2D) and 3D transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE) over 2D transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) for the detection of mitral valve (MV) prolapse in readers with different echocardiographic experience. Twenty patients and five healthy persons were retrospectively identified who had undergone 2D-TTE, 2D-TOE and 3D-TOE. Fifteen (75 %) patients had surgical evidence of prolapse of the posterior MV leaflet and five patients (25 %) had a dilated MV annulus without prolapse. Three reader groups with different echocardiographic expertise (novice, trainees, cardiologists) scored thus in total 675 posterior scallops. Overall there was an improvement in agreement and Kappa values from novice to trainees to cardiologists. Diagnostic accuracies of 2D-TOE were higher than those of 2D-TTE mainly in novice readers. The incremental value of 3D-TOE over 2D-TOE was mainly seen in specificities. Time to diagnosis was dramatically reduced from 2D to 3D-TEE in all reader groups (all P < 0.001). 3D-TOE also improved the agreement (+12 to +16 %) and Kappa values (+0.14 to +0.21) in all reader groups for the exact description of P2 prolapse. Differences between readers with variable experience in determining the precise localization and extent of the prolapsing posterior MV scallops exist in particular in 2D-TTE analysis. 3D-TOE analysis was extremely fast compared to the 2D analysis methods and showed the best diagnostic accuracy (mainly driven by specificity) with identification of P1 and P3 prolapse still improving from novice to trainees to cardiologists and provided optimal description of P2 prolapse extent
Simultaneous Endo-Epicardial Mapping of the Human Right Atrium: Unraveling Atrial Excitation
Background The significance of endo-epicardial asynchrony (EEA) and atrial conduction block (CB), which play an important role in the pathophysiology of atrial fibrillation (AF) during sinus rhythm is poorly understood. The aim of our study was therefore to examine 3-dimensional activation of the human right atrium (RA). Methods and Results Eighty patients (79% men
An aesthetic between utopia and reality : the idea of realism in Western Marxism.
The aim of this thesis is to examine the idea of realism in Western Marxism through
the comparative approaches of Georg Lukacs, Walter Benjamin, Theodor W. Adorno,
Bertolt Brecht, Jean-Paul Sartre and Fredric Jameson in relation to non-Marxist
theorists such as Roland Barthes and Michel Foucault. The issue of realism suffers
from the controversial terminology of realism and reality. This is the reason why
realism can be better viewed by Marxist perspectives that are firmly based on the
category of the subject-object dialectic. This Marxian principle, thereby pertaining to
the reality existing outside of subjectivity, substantiates the issue of realism as a
continuing social and aesthetic project. By focusing on the category of reality in
relation to the idea of realism in Western Marxist debates, this study explores the way
in which the Marxist theorists understand the relationship between culture and
society, and respond to the change of socio-economic conditions in each historical
moment. These various discourses revolving around the issue of realism produce a
similar agenda to explain the place of the artwork in the realm of culture. Such a
similarity arises from their attempt to retain the idea of realism, even when they argue
for an aesthetic of anti-realism. In this respect, my thesis questions the distinction
between realism and modernism in Western Marxist discourses, and argues that such
differentiation had been articulated by a political intention to sever Western Marxism
from Stalinism. Their idea of realism is paradoxical in the sense that their
formulations of realism aspire to a utopian project. This is the very way in which their
idea of realism can be grasped as another facet of their political programme
QUest for the Arrhythmogenic Substrate of Atrial fibRillation in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery (QUASAR Study): Rationale and Design
The heterogeneous presentation and progression of atrial fibrillation (AF) implicate the existence of different pathophysiological processes. Individualized diagnosis and therapy of the arrhythmogenic substrate underlying AF may be required to improve treatment outcomes. Therefore, this single-center study aims to identify t
A modified echocardiographic classification of mitral valve regurgitation mechanism: The role of three-dimensional echocardiography
In this report, we provide an overview of a new, updated echocardiographic classification of mitral regurgitation mechanisms to provide a more comprehensive and detailed assessment of mitral valve disorders. This is relevant to modern mitral valve repair techniques, with special attention to the added value of 3D-echocardiography
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