62 research outputs found

    Feasibility of a three-axis epicardial accelerometer in detecting myocardial ischemia in cardiac surgical patients

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    ObjectiveWe investigated the feasibility of continuous detection of myocardial ischemia during cardiac surgery with a 3-axis accelerometer.MethodsTen patients with significant left anterior descending coronary artery stenosis underwent off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. A 3-axis accelerometer (11 × 14 × 5 mm) was sutured onto the left anterior descending coronary artery–perfused region of left ventricle. Twenty episodes of ischemia were studied, with 3-minute occlusion of left anterior descending coronary artery at start of surgery and 3-minute occlusion of left internal thoracic artery at end of surgery. Longitudinal, circumferential, and radial accelerations were continuously measured, with epicardial velocities calculated from the signals. During occlusion, accelerometer velocities were compared with anterior left ventricular longitudinal, circumferential, and radial strains obtained by echocardiography. Ischemia was defined by change in strain greater than 30%.ResultsIschemia was observed echocardiographically during 7 of 10 left anterior descending coronary artery occlusions but not during left internal thoracic artery occlusion. During ischemia, there were no significant electrocardiographic or hemodynamic changes, whereas large and significant changes in accelerometer circumferential peak systolic (P < .01) and isovolumic (P < .01) velocities were observed. During 13 occlusions, no ischemia was demonstrated by strain, nor was any change demonstrated by the accelerometer. A strong correlation was found between circumferential strain and accelerometer circumferential peak systolic velocity during occlusion (r = −0.76, P < .001).ConclusionsThe epicardial accelerometer detects myocardial ischemia with great accuracy. This novel technique has potential to improve monitoring of myocardial ischemia during cardiac surgery

    Open chest and pericardium facilitate transpulmonary passage of venous air emboli

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    Background: Transpulmonary passage of air emboli can lead to fatal brain- and myocardial infarctions. We studied whether pigs with open chest and pericardium had a greater transpulmonary passage of venous air emboli than pigs with closed thorax. Methods: We allocated pigs with verified closed foramen ovale to venous air infusion with either open chest with sternotomy and opening of the pleura and pericardium (n = 8) or closed thorax (n = 16). All pigs received a five-hour intravenous infusion of ambient air, starting at 4-6 mL/kg/h and increased by 2 mL/kg/h each hour. We assessed transpulmonary air passage by transesophageal M-mode echocardiography and present the results as median with inter-quartile range (IQR). Results: Transpulmonary air passage occurred in all pigs with open chest and pericardium and in nine pigs with closed thorax (56%). Compared to pigs with closed thorax, pigs with open chest and pericardium had a shorter to air passage (10 minutes (5-16) vs. 120 minutes (44-212), P < .0001), a smaller volume of infused air at the time of transpulmonary passage (12 mL (10-23) vs.170 mL (107-494), P < .0001), shorter time to death (122 minutes (48-185) vs 263 minutes (248-300, P = .0005) and a smaller volume of infused air at the time of death (264 mL (53-466) vs 727 mL (564-968), P = .001). In pigs with open chest and, infused air and time to death correlated strongly (r = 0.95, P = .001). Conclusion: Open chest and pericardium facilitated the transpulmonary passage of intravenously infused air in pigs

    Cause-Specific Mortality in Patients During Long-Term Follow-Up After Atrial Switch for Transposition of the Great Arteries

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    Background Little is known about the cause of death (CoD) in patients with transposition of the great arteries palliated with a Mustard or Senning procedure. The aim was to describe the CoD for patients with the Mustard and Senning procedure during short- (20 years) follow-up after the operation. Methods and Results This is a retrospective, descriptive multicenter cohort study including all Nordic patients (Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden) who underwent a Mustard or Senning procedure between 1967 and 2003. Patients who died within 30 days after the index operation were excluded. Among 968 patients with Mustard/Senning palliated transposition of the great arteries, 814 patients were eligible for the study, with a mean follow-up of 33.6 years. The estimated risk of all-cause mortality reached 36.0% after 43 years of follow-up, and the risk of death was highest among male patients as compared with female patients (P=0.004). The most common CoD was sudden cardiac death (SCD), followed by heart failure/heart transplantation accounting for 29% and 27%, respectively. During short-, mid-, and long-term follow-up, there was a change in CoD with SCD accounting for 23.7%, 46.6%, and 19.0% (P=0.002) and heart failure/heart transplantation 18.6%, 22.4%, and 46.6% (P=0.0005), respectively. Conclusions Among patients corrected with Mustard or Senning transposition of the great arteries, the most common CoD is SCD followed by heart failure/heart transplantation. The CoD changes as the patients age, with SCD as the most common cause in adolescence and heart failure as the dominant cause in adulthood. Furthermore, the risk of all-cause mortality, SCD, and death attributable to heart failure or heart transplantation was increased in men >10 years after the Mustard/Senning operation.Peer reviewe

    Patients with infective endocarditis referred to Division of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Diseases at Oslo University Hospital between 2014 and 2017

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    Objectives. Infective endocarditis has potential for severe complications and high mortality. The number of patients with prosthetic valves has risen, and an increase in incidence of infective endocarditis has been suggested. We aimed to examine the epidemiology, etiology, treatment and outcome of patients admitted to Division of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Diseases at Oslo University Hospital, and explore changes in incidence over the last four years. Design. We conducted a retrospective study including all patients admitted to a tertiary hospital in Oslo, Norway, and diagnosed with infective endocarditis according to ICD-10 between 2014 and 2017. Results. Two hundred and ninety-one patients ≥18 years were included (61.3 ± 13.8 years, 75.6% men). 36.4% had previous valve surgery and this proportion decreased during the period. The aortic valve was most commonly affected (51.9%). Streptococci were the most frequent microorganisms (35.1%), while staphylococci accounted for 26.8%. 81.8% were treated surgically, at a median of 6.5 (0–120) days after admission. Hemodynamic changes or instability was the primary surgical indication (51.5%). One-year mortality was 20.6%. Surgery within a week after admission resulted in poorer 1-year prognosis than surgery after one week. Also, surgically treated patients who died were significantly older than those who survived. Conclusions. In this cohort, streptococci were the most common causative microorganism. Approximately, one-third of the patients had prosthetic valves. Mortality remains high, underscoring the need for continuous medical awareness. A high number of streptococcus infections in this cohort suggest dental origin

    Systolic left ventricular function is preserved during therapeutic hypothermia, also during increases in heart rate with impaired diastolic filling

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    Background Systolic left ventricular function during therapeutic hypothermia is found both to improve and to decline. We hypothesized that this discrepancy would depend on the heart rate and the variables used to assess systolic function. Methods In 16 pigs, cardiac performance was assessed by measurements of invasive pressures and thermodilution cardiac output and with 2D strain echocardiography. Left ventricle (LV) volumes, ejection fraction (EF), transmitral flow, and circumferential and longitudinal systolic strain were measured. Miniaturized ultrasonic transducers were attached to the epicardium of the LV to obtain M-mode images, systolic thickening, and diastolic thinning velocities and to determine LV pressure-wall dimension relationships. Preload recruitable stroke work (PRSW) was calculated. Measurements were performed at 38 and 33°C at spontaneous and paced heart rates, successively increased in steps of 20 up to the toleration limit. Effects of temperature and heart rate were compared in a mixed model analysis. Results Hypothermia reduced heart rate from 87 ± 10 (SD) to 76 ± 11 beats/min without any changes in LV stroke volume, end-diastolic volume, EF, strain values, or PRSW. Systolic wall thickening velocity (S′) and early diastolic wall thinning velocity decreased by approximately 30%, making systolic duration longer through a prolonged and slow contraction and changing the diastolic filling pattern from predominantly early towards late. Pacing reduced diastolic duration much more during hypo- than during normothermia, and combined with slow myocardial relaxation, incomplete relaxation occurred with all pacing rates. Pacing did not affect S′ or PRSW at physiological heart rates, but stroke volume, end-diastolic volume, and strain were reduced as a consequence of reduced diastolic filling and much more accentuated during hypothermia. At the ultimate tolerable heart rate during hypothermia, S′ decreased, probably as a consequence of myocardial hypoperfusion due to sustained ventricular contraction throughout a very short diastole. Conclusions Systolic function was maintained at physiological heart rates during therapeutic hypothermia. Reduced tolerance to increases in heart rate was caused by lack of ventricular filling due to diastolic dysfunction and shorter diastolic duration

    Successful ECMO-cardiopulmonary resuscitation with the associated post-arrest cardiac dysfunction as demonstrated by MRI

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    Background Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO-CPR) is a life-saving rescue for selected patients when standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation fails. The use is increasing although the treatment modality is not fully established. Resuscitated patients typically develop a detrimental early post-arrest cardiac dysfunction that also deserves main emphasis. The present study investigates an ECMO-CPR strategy in pigs and assesses early post-arrest left ventricular function in detail. We hypothesised that a significant dysfunction could be demonstrated with this model using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), not previously used early post-arrest. Methods In eight anaesthetised pigs, a 15-min ventricular fibrillation was resuscitated by an ECMO-CPR strategy of 150-min veno-arterial ECMO aiming at high blood flow rate and pharmacologically sustained aortic blood pressure and pulse pressure of 50 and 15 mmHg, respectively. Pre-arrest cardiac MRI and haemodynamic measurements of left ventricular function were compared to measurements performed 300-min post-arrest. Results All animals were successfully resuscitated, weaned from the ECMO circuit, and haemodynamically stabilised post-arrest. Cardiac output was maintained by an increased heart rate post-arrest, but left ventricular ejection fraction and stroke volume were decreased by approximately 50 %. Systolic circumferential strain and mitral annular plane systolic excursion as well as the left ventricular wall thickening were reduced by approximately 50–70 % post-arrest. The diastolic function variables measured were unchanged. Conclusions The present animal study demonstrates a successful ECMO-CPR strategy resuscitating long-lasting cardiac arrest with adequate post-arrest haemodynamic stability. The associated severe systolic left ventricular dysfunction could be charted in detail by MRI, a valuable tool for future cardiac outcome assessments in resuscitation research
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