152 research outputs found

    The dinosaur and banding of the main pulmonary trunk in the heart with functionally one ventricle and transposition of the great arteries: A saga of evolution and caution

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    Constitution for the International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management as amended by the Board of Trustees on January 24, 1997. The constitution is in English and contains eighteen articles and one annex containing the Board mission statement

    Regional ventricular wall motion abnormalities in tricuspid atresia after the fontan procedure

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    AbstractObjectieves. The purpose of this study was to determine whether wall motion abnormalities are present before or after the Fontan procedure in patients with a univentricular heart of the left ventricular type with an absent right atrioventricular valve connection (tricuspid atresia) and to assess the impact of such abnormalities on ventricular performance and clinical outcome.Background. Normal systolic and diastolic ventricular (unction is critical for a successful Fontan repair. However, there have been no previous studies addressing the relation between regional ventricular function and hemodynamic factors.Methods. Thirty-seven pediatric patients were studied with biplane ventricular cineangiography. There were 20 male and 17 female patients whose mean age at the time of the Fontan operation was 6.5 ± 3.5 years (range 2.5 to 15.6). Eighteen patients were studied preoperatively, 25 at >1 year postoperatively and 6 serially. Wall motion was assessed by a centerline method. Normal ranges for wall motion and other variables were established from 25 normal subjects.Results. Wall motion abnormalities were observed in 2 of 18 patients preoperatively and in 11 of 25 patients postoperatively. Age at operation and ventricular volumes did not differ between postoperative patients who had normal (group I, 14 patients) or abnormal (group II, 11 patients) wall motion. However, ventricular mass and the mass/volume ratio were significantly greater and systolic variables and cardiac index were significantly lower in group II versus group I. Two patients in group I were considered to have a clinically poor outcome (persistent heart failure), and five in group II had heart failure, including one who died late.Conclusions. These observations suggest that postoperative regional wall motion abnormalities in this setting are not rare, may be related to excessive hypertrophy and may contribute to cardiac dysfunction and a poor clinical outcome

    Balloon angioplasty of native coarctation: clinical outcomes and predictors of success

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    AbstractOBJECTIVESWe sought to investigate the clinical impact of balloon angioplasty for native coarctation of the aorta (CoA) and determine predictors of outcome.BACKGROUNDBalloon dilation of native CoA remains controversial and more information on its long-term impact is required.METHODSHemodynamic, angiographic and follow-up data on 69 children who underwent balloon angioplasty of native CoA between 1988 and 1996 were reviewed. Stretch, recoil and gain of CoA circumference and area were calculated and related to outcomes.RESULTSInitial systolic gradients (mean ± SD, 31 ± 12 mm Hg) fell by −74 ± 27% (p < 0.001), with an increase in mean CoA diameters of 128 ± 128% in the left anterior oblique and 124 ± 87% in the lateral views (p < 0.001). Two deaths occurred, one at the time of the procedure and one 23 months later, both as a result of an associated cardiomyopathy. Seven patients had residual gradients of >20 mm Hg. One patient developed an aneurysm, stable in follow-up, and four patients had mild dilation at the site of the angioplasty. Freedom from reintervention was 90% at one year and 87% at five years with follow-up ranging to 8.5 years. Factors significantly associated with decreased time to reintervention included: a higher gradient before dilation, a smaller percentage change in gradient after dilation, a small transverse arch and a greater stretch and gain, but not recoil.CONCLUSIONBalloon dilation is a safe and efficient treatment of native CoA in children. Greater stretch and gain are factors significantly associated with reintervention, possibly related to altered elastic properties and vessel scarring

    Subaortic stenosis in the spectrum of atrioventricular septal defects Solutions may be complex and palliative

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    AbstractFrom July 1982 through September 1994, 19 children had operative treatment of subaortic stenosis associated with an atrioventricular septal defect. Specific diagnosis were septum primum defects in 7, Rastelli type A defects in 6, transitional defects in 4, inlet ventricular septal defect with malattached chordae in 1, and tetralogy of Fallot with Rastelli type C defect in 1. Twenty-seven operations for subaortic stenosis were performed. Surgical treatment of the outlet lesion was performed at initial atrioventricular septal defect repair in 3 children and in the remaining 16 from 1.2 to 13.1 years (mean 4.9 years, median 3.9 years) after repair. Eighteen of the 19 children had fibrous resection and myectomy for relief of obstruction. Seven children had an associated left atrioventricular valve procedure. One child received an apicoaortic conduit. Seven children (36.8%) required 8 reoperations for previously treated subaortic stenosis. Time to the second procedure was 2.8 to 7.4 years (mean 4.9 years). Follow-up is 0.4 to 14.0 years (median 5.6 years). Six-year actuarial freedom from reoperation is 66% ±15%. The angle between the plane of the outlet septum and the plane of the septal crest was measured in 10 normal hearts (86.4 ±13.7) and 10 hearts with atrioventricular septal defects (22.2 ±26.0; p <0.01). The outflow tract can be effectively shortened, widened, and the angle increased toward normal by augmenting the left side of the superior bridging leaflet and performing a fibromyectomy. Conclusion: Standard fibromyectomy for subaortic stenosis in children with atrioventricular septal defects leads to a high rate of reoperation. Leaflet augmentation and fibromyectomy may decrease the likelihood of reoperation. (J THORAC CARDIOVASC SURG 1995;110:1534-42

    Globalization and the Transmission of Social Values: The Case of Tolerance

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    Suono e Spettacolo. Athanasius Kircher, un percorso nelle Immagini sonore.

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    The Society of Jesus made great propaganda efforts throughout the seventeenth century and chose the images and the play as a privileged means to communicate and persuade. Athanasius Kircher, a key figure of the seventeenth century, he decided to dominate the wild nature of sound through Phonurgia Nova, which includes a gallery of powerful symbolic images for Baroque aesthetics. The essay, through the grant of the images from the Library of the Department of Mathematics "Guido Castelnuovo" Sapienza University of Rome, aims to understand, through the pictures offered by Kircher, the sound phenomenon and the spectacle that this produces. In Phonurgia Nova a process of dramatization sound effects takes place, often through machines and "visions" applied to the theatrical reality, as experimental and astonishing environment beloved in baroque. Kircher illustrates the sound through explanatory figures, so to dominate the sound through the eyes. Sound is seen, admired and represented: its spectacle not only takes place through the implementation of sound machines or the "wonders" applied to the theater, but even through images, creating create a sense of wonder in in the erudite person of the seventeenth century

    Middle East - North Africa and the millennium development goals : implications for German development cooperation

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              Closed-loop controlled combustion is a promising technique to improve the overall performance of internal combustion engines and Diesel engines in particular. In order for this technique to be implemented some form of feedback from the combustion process is required. The feedback signal is processed and from it combustionrelated parameters are computed. These parameters are then fed to a control process which drives a series of outputs (e.g. injection timing in Diesel engines) to control their values. This paper’s focus lies on the processing and computation that is needed on the feedback signal before this is ready to be fed to the control process as well as on the electronics necessary to support it. A number of feedback alternatives are briefly discussed and for one of them, the in-cylinder pressure sensor, the CA50 (crank angle in which the integrated heat release curve reaches its 50% value) and the IMEP (Indicated Mean Effective Pressure) are identified as two potential control variables. The hardware architecture of a system capable of calculating both of them on-line is proposed and necessary feasibility size and speed considerations are made by implementing critical blocks in VHDL targeting a flash-based Actel ProASIC3 automotive-grade FPGA

    Transition from Democracy - Loss of Quality, Hybridisation and Breakdown of Democracy

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