97 research outputs found

    Coronary blood flow reserve in acute aortic regurgitation

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    Objectives.This study sought to determine the impact of acute aortic regurgitation on coronary blood flow reserve and phasic epicardial coronary blood flow in closed-chest dogs.Background.Hemodynamic changes in acute aortic regurgitation are known to precipitate myocardial ischemia. Coronary blood flow reserve has not been studied in closed-chest experimental preparations with acute aortic regurgitation.Methods.Graded temporary acute aortic regurgitation was produced in 11 mongrel dogs. Phasic coronary blood How velocities were measured using a Doppler guide wire. Coronary flow reserve was defined as the ratio of the time average of spectral peak velocity after administration of papaverine to that of the baseline state.Results.Under control conditions (mean [±SEM]diastolic blood pressure 82.2 ± 4.5 mm Hg), coronary flow reserve was 3.51 ± 0.27 with predominantly diastolic epicardial coronary blood flow. With mild acute aortic regurgitation (diastolic blood pressure 61.8 ± 3.0 mm Hg), coronary flow reserve decreased to 2.38 ± 0.27, with an increase in phasic systolic epicardial coronary blood flow. At the onset of moderate acute aortic regurgitation (diastolic blood pressure 42.1 ± 0.9 mm Hg), coronary flow reserve declined further to 1.46 ± 0.12, and the phasic systolic epicardial coronary blood flow became more prominent. With severe aortic regurgitation (diastolic blood pressure 29.2 ± 2.2 mm Hg), coronary flow reserve reached 1.20 ± 0.05, and the phasic epicardial coronary blood flow pattern was found to be predominantly systolic with retrograde diastolic flow. The ratio of diastolic to systolic pressure-time indexes with severe aortic regurgitation suggested subendocardial underperfusion.Conclusions.This study demonstrates a marked decline in coronary blood flow reserve and documents a progressive change in the phasic epicardial blood flow to a predominantly systolic pattern with increasing degrees of acute aortic regurgitation

    Successful Tricuspid Valve Replacement in a Patient with Severe Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension and Preserved Right Ventricular Systolic Function

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    A 56-year-old patient with severe pulmonary hypertension developed severe tricuspid regurgitation, right-sided heart failure, and congestive hepatopathy. She was transferred for possible lung transplant and/or tricuspid valve surgery. Clinical and echocardiographic assessment provided confidence that acute tricuspid valve failure was responsible for the decompensation and that tricuspid valve replacement despite pulmonary hypertension could be performed

    Coronary sinus ostial occlusion during retrograde delivery of cardioplegic solution significantly improves cardioplegic distribution and efficacy

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    AbstractThis study documents the gross flow characteristics and capillary distribution of cardioplegic solution delivered retrogradely with the coronary sinus open versus closed. Methods : Five explanted human hearts from transplant recipients were used as experimental models. Hearts served as their own controls and received two doses of warm blood cardioplegic solution, each containing colored microspheres. The first dose was delivered through a retroperfusion catheter with the coronary sinus open and the second dose was delivered with the sinus occluded. Capillary flow was measured at twelve ventricular sites and gross flow was measured by examining coronary sinus regurgitation, thebesian vein drainage, and aortic effluent (nutrient flow). Results : Coronary sinus ostial occlusion allowed for a significant decrease in total cardioplegic flow (1.74 ± 0.40 ml/gm versus 1.06 ± 0.32 ml/gm; p < 0.05) to occur while maintaining an identical intracoronary sinus pressure. Ostial occlusion also resulted in an increase in the ratio of nutrient flow/total cardioplegic flow from 32.3% ± 15.1% to 61.3% ± 7.9% (p < 0.05). A statistically significant improvement in capillary flow was found at the midventricular level in the posterior intraventricular septum and posterolateral right ventricular free wall. This improvement was also documented for the intraventricular septum and right ventricle at the level of the apex. Conclusion : Coronary sinus occlusion during retrograde cardioplegia significantly improves cardioplegic delivery to the right ventricle and posterior intraventricular septum. Furthermore, the technique affords a significant improvement in nutrient cardioplegic flow while reducing the overall volume of cardioplegic solution administered. ( J T HORAC C ARDIOVASC S URG 1995; 109: 941-7

    Gene Expression Profiling of Bronchoalveolar Lavage Cells Preceding a Clinical Diagnosis of Chronic Lung Allograft Dysfunction.

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    BackgroundChronic Lung Allograft Dysfunction (CLAD) is the main limitation to long-term survival after lung transplantation. Although CLAD is usually not responsive to treatment, earlier identification may improve treatment prospects.MethodsIn a nested case control study, 1-year post transplant surveillance bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid samples were obtained from incipient CLAD (n = 9) and CLAD free (n = 8) lung transplant recipients. Incipient CLAD cases were diagnosed with CLAD within 2 years, while controls were free from CLAD for at least 4 years following bronchoscopy. Transcription profiles in the BAL cell pellets were assayed with the HG-U133 Plus 2.0 microarray (Affymetrix). Differential gene expression analysis, based on an absolute fold change (incipient CLAD vs no CLAD) &gt;2.0 and an unadjusted p-value ≤0.05, generated a candidate list containing 55 differentially expressed probe sets (51 up-regulated, 4 down-regulated).ResultsThe cell pellets in incipient CLAD cases were skewed toward immune response pathways, dominated by genes related to recruitment, retention, activation and proliferation of cytotoxic lymphocytes (CD8+ T-cells and natural killer cells). Both hierarchical clustering and a supervised machine learning tool were able to correctly categorize most samples (82.3% and 94.1% respectively) into incipient CLAD and CLAD-free categories.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that a pathobiology, similar to AR, precedes a clinical diagnosis of CLAD. A larger prospective investigation of the BAL cell pellet transcriptome as a biomarker for CLAD risk stratification is warranted

    An Unorthodox Introduction to QCD

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    These are lecture notes presented at the 2017 CTEQ Summer School at the University of Pittsburgh and the 2018 CTEQ Summer School at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez. The title is a reference to hep-th/0309149 and introduces perturbative QCD and its application to jet substructure from a bottom-up perspective based on the approximation of QCD as a weakly-coupled, conformal field theory. Using this approach, a simple derivation of the Sudakov form factor with soft gluon emission modeled as a Poisson process is presented. Topics of the identification and discrimination of quark- versus gluon-initiated jets and jet grooming are also discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Comments welcome!, v2: updated to include both lectures from the 2018 CTEQ schoo

    Preoperative Cardiac Variables of Diastolic Dysfunction and Clinical Outcomes in Lung Transplant Recipients

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    Background. Orthotopic lung transplantation is now widely performed in patients with advanced lung disease. Patients with moderate or severe ventricular systolic dysfunction are typically excluded from lung transplantation; however, there is a paucity of data regarding the prognostic significance of abnormal left ventricular diastolic function and elevated pretransplant pulmonary pressures. Methods. We reviewed the characteristics of 111 patients who underwent bilateral and unilateral lung transplants from 200 to 2009 in order to evaluate the prognostic significance of preoperative markers of diastolic function, including invasively measured pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) and echocardiographic variables of diastolic dysfunction including mitral A>E and A′>E′. Results. Out of 111 patients, 62 were male (56%) and average age was 54.0 ± 10.5 years. Traditional echocardiographic Doppler variables of abnormal diastolic function, including A′>E′ and A>E, did not predict adverse events (P=0.49). Mildly elevated pretransplant PCWP (16–20 mmHg) and moderately/severely elevated PCWP (>20 mmHg) were not associated with adverse clinical events after transplant (P=0.30). Additionally, all clinical endpoints did not show any statistical significance between the two groups. Conclusions. Pre-lung transplant invasive and echocardiographic findings of elevated pulmonary pressures and abnormal left ventricular diastolic function are not predictive of adverse posttransplant clinical events
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