435 research outputs found

    Echocardiographic findings late after myectomy in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

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    Postoperative echocardiograms of 50 patients undergoing myectomy for hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy between 1965 and 1982 have been evaluated. In 21 patients a comparison with preoperative echocardiograms showed that postoperatively there was a significant reduction of septal and free wall thickness, an increase of left ventricular end-diastolic as well as outflow tract dimensions and a reduction or disappearance of systolic anterior motion of the mitral leaflet. Postoperative examination at intervals > 3 years revealed a significant increase of left ventricular and left atrial cavity size with unchanged contractile parameters and little reduction of left ventricular hypertrophy. In 4of 12 patients evaluated > 8 years after myectomy, left ventricular dilatation was observed and 3 of these 4 patients developed congestive heart failure. Development of leftventricular dilatation was independent of whether a transventricular and/or transaortic approach was used for myectomy. These data indicate that the late course after myectomy in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy may be complicated by dilatation of the left ventricular cavit

    Felipe III y las artes.

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    Sin resume

    El rigor del tratadista.

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    Sin resume

    Valve replacement in octogenarians: increased early mortality but good long-term result

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    Between January 1983 and December 1990, 20 patients aged 80 years or older underwent valvular surgery. The patients' ages varied from 80 to 87 years (mean, 82 ± 1.5 years). The indication for operation was aortic stenosis in 19 patients, and mitral insufficiency after previous mitral valve replacement with a bioprosthesis in one. There were 15 elective, two urgent, and three emergency operations. Four of these patients had aortic valve replacement plus coronary artery bypass grafting. Six patients (30%) had an uneventful hospital stay, and the other 14 (70%) experienced several post-operative complications. The operative mortality rate was 15± (three patients). All patients before operation were in NYHA (New York Heart Association) class III and IV and all survivors remained in NYHA class I or II. The survivors have been followed from 6 to 70 months (mean 20 ± 8 months). The actuarial survival rate at 1 and 5 years was 78.5% and 67%, respectively. Valvular replacement in octogenarians can be performed, despite the high rate of post-operative complications, with increased but acceptable mortality. Long-term results are goo

    Myocardial function and structure in aortic valve disease before and after surgery

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    Left ventricular (LV) micromanometry, cine-angiography and endomyocardial biopsies were performed in 13 patients with aortic valve disease {AVD) before and 12 to 28 months after successful valve replacement. (AVR). Patients with coronary artery disease were excluded. In nine patients (Group I: five AS, four AI) postoperative LV ejection fraction (EF) and total pressure Vmax were normal(EF ≥ 0.61; Vmax ≥ 1.50 ML/s). In four patients (Group II: three AS, one AT) postoperative EF (0.41) and Vmax (1.21 ML/s) were depressed. Pre-operative muscle fiber diameter (MFD; normal < 20 n) was 31 μ in Group I and 38 μ in Group II (P < 0.01). After AVR MFD decreased to 27 μ in Group I (P < 0.005) and to 28 μ in Group II (P < 0.02). Prior to surgery EF and Vmax showed no significant correlation with the LV fibrous content (FC in g/m2; FC = interstitial fibrosis in percent × LV angiographic muscle mass/100) in the 13 patients with AVD. After AVR, however, FC was related inversely to EF (P < 0.01, r = −0.69) and to Vmax (P < 0.025, r = −0.63). It is concluded that: (1) in AVD massive pre-operative fiber hypertrophy heralds impaired postoperative LV function; (2) fiber hypertrophy regresses following AVR regardless of the-LV functional state, and (3) the content of fibrous tissue appears to be a determinant of postoperative LV functio

    Spontaneous course of aortic valve disease

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    The fate of patients with aortic valve disease of varying degrees of severity and the relationship between symptoms and haemodynamic status have been studied in 190 adults undergoing cardiac catheterization during the last two decades. During the follow-up period, 41 patients died and 86 underwent aortic valve replacement; these two events were the endpointsfor the calculation of ‘event-free' cumulative survival. First-year survival in haemodynamically severe disease was 60% in aortic stenosis and 96% in aortic regurgitation; in moderate and mild disease (in the absence of coronary artery disease) first-year survival was 100% in both groups. After 10 years, 9% of those with haemodynamically severe aortic stenosis and 17% of those with severe regurgitation were event-free, in contrast to 35% and 22%, respectively, of those with moderate changes and 85% and 75%, respectively, of those with mild abnormalities. In the presence of haemodynamically severe disease, 66% of the patients with stenosis and 14% of those with regurgitation were severely symptomatic (history of hear (failure, syncope or New York Heart Association class HI and IV); 23% of patients with moderate stenosis and 14% with moderate regurgitation were also severely symptomatic. Only 40% of those with disease that was severe both haemodynamically and symptomatically with either stenosis or regurgitation survived the first two years; only 12% in the stenosis group and none in the regurgitation group were event-free at 5 years. Patients with haemodynamically severe aortic stenosis who had few or no symptoms had a 100% survival at 2 years; the comparable figure for the aortic regurgitation group was 94%; 75% of the patients in the stenosis group and 65% in the regurgitation group were event-free at 5 years. In the moderate or mild stenosis and regurgitation groups there was no mortality within the first 2 years in the absence of coronary artery disease, regardless of symptomatic status. Haemodynamically and symptomatically severe aortic stenosis and regurgitation have a very poor prognosis and require immediate valve surgery. Asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic patients with haemodynamically severe aortic stenosis are at low risk and surgical treatment can be postponed until marked symptoms appear without a significant risk of sudden death. In severe aortic regurgitation, the decision for surgery should depend not only on symptoms but should be considered in patients with few or no symptoms because of risk of sudden death. In the absence of coronary artery disease, moderate aortic valve disease does not require valve operation for prognostic reason

    Physiologic or pathologic hypertrophy

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    Physiologic hypertrophy occurs as the result of exercise conditioning and is characterized by normal or supranormal left ventricular (LV) contractile function and reversibility of structural alterations. Whether hypertrophy produced by chronic abnormal loading can be termed ‘physiologic' is a matter of debate because in experimental pressure overload hypertrophy normal in vivo ventricular function may be associated with abnormal in vitro function of the papillary muscles. In patients with moderate LV hypertrophy from aortic valve disease (angiographic mass 20 mm Hg and/or cardiac index 2·5 l/mm/m2)interstitial fibrosis (IF) was increased to a similar extent (16 and 18%: normal <5%), whereas muscle fiber diameter (MFD normal ≤ 20 μ) was larger (P <0·05) in the patients with failure (30 μ) than in those with preserved function (27 μ). Moreover patients with depressed postoperative function had a larger (P < 001) preoperative MFD (35 μ) than those with normal postoperative function (30 μ). Seventeen months after successful aortic valve replacement IF increased (P < 0·02) and MFD decreased (P < 0·001) but did not become normal regardless whether postoperative function was normal or depressed. Thus in secondary hypertrophy myocardial structure is pathologic even in the presence of normal LV function and depressed function appears likely to be related to excessive fiber hypertrophy rather than to IF. Massive fiber hypertrophy heralds an unfavorable postoperative LV function and fibrosis is irreversible after surgical correction of the abnormal loa

    Echocardiographic findings late after myectomy in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

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    Postoperative echocardiograms of 50 patients undergoing myectomy for hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy between 1965 and 1982 have been evaluated. In 21 patients a comparison with preoperative echocardiograms showed that postoperatively there was a significant reduction of septal and free wall thickness, an increase of left ventricular end-diastolic as well as outflow tract dimensions and a reduction or disappearance of systolic anterior motion of the mitral leaflet. Postoperative examination at intervals > 3 years revealed a significant increase of left ventricular and left atrial cavity size with unchanged contractile parameters and little reduction of left ventricular hypertrophy. In 4of 12 patients evaluated > 8 years after myectomy, left ventricular dilatation was observed and 3 of these 4 patients developed congestive heart failure. Development of leftventricular dilatation was independent of whether a transventricular and/or transaortic approach was used for myectomy. These data indicate that the late course after myectomy in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy may be complicated by dilatation of the left ventricular cavit
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