Geschwind, H J; Boussignac, G; Teisseire, B; Benhaiem, N; Bittoun, R; Laurent, D
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.484pmid: 6238611
To establish the optimal conditions for recanalisation of obstructed arteries without damage to vessel walls, a Nd-YAG laser coupled to a 0.2 mm diameter optic fibre was used on obstructed human cadaver coronary and peripheral arteries and on popliteal arteries in amputated limbs. Vaporization of atheromatous plaques was consistently obtained with an energy of 360-600 J and a diluted blood perfusate (3 g/100 ml haemoglobin) at a rate of 20 ml/min. The arterial wall was protected from thermal injury by inserting the optic fibre into an inflated balloon catheter and by cooling the system with the perfusate. Since recanalisation of occluded arteries was consistently obtained without damage to the arterial wall or debris and thin and flexible optic fibres were easy to guide in the arteries, percutaneous transluminal Nd-YAG laser angioplasty was used in obstructed femoral and popliteal arteries in three patients. The first European trials in man showed the method to be feasible, effective, and harmless, although further studies are required to improve penetration of the obstruction and increase the diameter of tunnel.
Verheugt, F W; Lindenfeld, J; Kirch, D L; Steele, P P
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.490pmid: 6437421
Since indium-111 platelet scintigraphy for the detection of left ventricular thrombosis often shows considerable non-specific blood pool activity a subtraction method using simultaneous technetium-99m blood pool scintigraphy was undertaken in 11 subjects with well documented remote myocardial infarction, who served as positive or negative controls, and in 18 consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction. The results were compared with those of cross sectional echocardiography. Thirteen patients had transmural myocardial infarction and the calculated count per pixel in the left ventricle of the subtracted indium-111 platelet scintigram was (mean (SD)) 0.28(0.35), but five patients with subendocardial myocardial infarction had a mean count of 0.04(0.06). In seven patients with transmural myocardial infarction (two anterior and five inferior) left ventricular thrombosis was detected by indium-111 platelet scintigraphy but in only one of these by cross sectional echocardiography. None of the patients with subendocardial myocardial infarction had left ventricular thrombosis. Subtracted left ventricular counts correlated well with the visual results. It is concluded that left ventricular platelet sequestration after acute myocardial infarction may be quantified and precisely located and that quantitative longitudinal studies of the natural history and drug intervention are now possible.
Cohen, M; Blanke, H; Karsh, K R; Holt, J; Rentrop, P
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.497pmid: 6498029
Thirty two patients presenting with acute transmural inferior wall myocardial infarction underwent cardiac catheterisation and angiography within 12 hours of the onset symptoms. Twelve lead electrocardiograms performed within one hour of catheterisation showed ST segment depression in the anterior precordial leads in addition to inferior wall changes in 17 patients and no ST segment changes in the anterior leads in 15. When the clinical, arteriographic, and ventriculographic variables were compared between the two groups no significant differences were noted with regard to age, sex, risk factors for coronary disease, duration of symptoms before angiography, Killip class, number of inferior leads with ST segment elevation, or initial serum creatine kinase activity. The extent of coronary artery disease as well as the prevalence of severe disease in the left anterior descending artery were similar for both groups. Biplane left ventriculography showed no significant differences between the two groups with regard to global ejection fraction or to the prevalence of posterolateral or anterior segmental wall motion abnormalities.
Ribeiro, P; Shea, M; Deanfield, J E; Oakley, C M; Sapsford, R; Jones, T; Walesby, R; Selwyn, A P
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.502pmid: 6333883
To determine the physiological effect of coronary artery bypass surgery and the mechanisms for pain relief, 15 patients with exertional angina were studied before and after operation. Before the operation conventional tests included exercise tests (all positive) and coronary angiography (all patients had greater than or equal to 70% stenosis of major vessels). In addition, ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring during 48 hours detected 92 episodes (greater than or equal to 1 mm) of ST depression. Regional myocardial perfusion was assessed with positron tomography using rubidium-82 (t1/2 78 s) and this showed reversible inhomogeneity with absolute regional reduction of cation uptake after exercise in all 15 patients. After coronary surgery 10 of the 15 patients had (a) no angina, (b) patent grafts (three or more), (c) no evidence of ischaemia during ambulatory monitoring out of hospital, and (d) homogeneous perfusion with reversal of the disturbances in regional myocardial perfusion after exercise. After operation one of the 15 patients had no angina and showed silent infarction in the segment that was previously ischaemic but supplied by a patent graft. All but one of the remaining patients had no angina, patent grafts, but disturbances of regional myocardial perfusion with silent ischaemia on exercise. Two of these patients continued to have asymptomatic and ischaemic episodes of ST depression during ambulatory monitoring out of hospital. This physiological study of regional myocardial perfusion in patients in hospital and in those with ischaemia out of hospital showed that three different mechanisms may account for the relief of pain--improved perfusion, infarction, and silent ischaemia. Silent ischaemia in particular raises puzzling pathophysiological and therapeutic questions that may affect prognosis and the interpretation of clinical trials.
Ihlen, H; Myhre, E; Smith, H J
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.510pmid: 6437422
The potential adverse effects of glyceryl trinitrate on myocardial ischaemia were studied using low and high dose infusions in 10 patients with coronary heart disease. Cardiac venous flow was measured by the thermodilution technique and blood was sampled for metabolic studies. Angina pectoris was provoked by atrial pacing before drug infusion and the same heart rate was regained with low and high doses of glyceryl trinitrate. Both doses reduced myocardial ischaemia equally. The low dose of glyceryl trinitrate reduced mean systolic aortic pressure from 145(23) to 128(23) mm Hg and the high dose further to 103(9) mm Hg. Myocardial oxygen uptake decreased owing to a combined reduction in preload and afterload with the low dose and was substantially more reduced with the high dose owing to a further afterload reduction. Transmural perfusion gradient did not change with the low dose of glyceryl trinitrate but fell significantly with the high dose. This fall in myocardial perfusion probably accounts for the lack of further reduction in ischaemia with the high dose. Thus the adverse effects of glyceryl trinitrate infusion are small and do not increase myocardial ischaemia.
Moore, R B; Shapiro, L M; Gibson, D G
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.516pmid: 6238612
The relation between ventricular function and the presence of electrocardiographic "strain" in patients with left ventricular hypertrophy was examined using digitised M mode echocardiography and 12 lead electrocardiograms in 64 patients with pressure overload, 21 with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and 14 athletes. Although all had increased left ventricular mass, those with strain had a prolonged interval from minimum cavity dimension to mitral valve opening and a reduced rate of early diastolic posterior wall thinning and dimension increase compared with those with normal ST segments and T waves. Both groups had normal systolic function (fractional shortening and peak velocity of circumferential fibre shortening), and the time between the termination of the T wave and minimum dimension was similar. In athletes, however, electromechanical systole was shorter than normal, and the end of the T wave and minimum cavity dimension were synchronous. It is concluded that abnormal electrical recovery in left ventricular hypertrophy is closely related to impaired early relaxation and may be dissociated from impaired systolic function, cavity dimension, interventricular conduction delay, and the presence of increased mass alone. The normal relation between electrical and mechanical systole is preserved even when the polarity of repolarisation is reversed.
Ogawa, K; Shiozu, H; Mizuno, K; Ban, M; Ito, T; Satake, T
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.524pmid: 6093837
Plasma concentrations of cyclic nucleotides (adenosine monophosphate (AMP) and guanosine monophosphate (GMP) were measured by an ultrasensitive radioimmunoassay in 138 patients with heart failure due to various causes. Measurements were related to the New York Heart Association classification of symptoms, plasma noradrenaline concentrations, and mean pulmonary artery pressures. Serial concentrations of cyclic AMP and GMP were also measured daily in four patients treated for acute left ventricular failure. Plasma concentrations of cycle AMP were related to the severity of the heart failure, plasma noradrenaline concentrations, and pulmonary artery pressures. Cyclic AMP concentrations fell rapidly after treatment of acute left ventricular failure. Plasma concentrations of cyclic GMP also depended on the severity of heart failure and the pulmonary artery pressure, and decreased sharply with treatment although remaining at a high value. The cyclic GMP concentrations were significantly higher in patients with mitral stenosis than in those with other types of heart failure.
Cleland, J G; Dargie, H J; Hodsman, G P; Ball, S G; Robertson, J I; Morton, J J; East, B W; Robertson, I; Murray, G D; Gillen, G
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.530pmid: 6388612
The effect of the converting enzyme inhibitor captopril as long term treatment was investigated in 14 patients with severe congestive heart failure in a double blind trial. Captopril reduced plasma concentrations of angiotensin II and noradrenaline, with a converse increase in active renin concentration. Effective renal plasma flow increased and renal vascular resistance fell; glomerular filtration rate did not change. Serum urea and creatinine concentrations rose. Both serum and total body potassium contents increased; there were no long term changes in serum concentration or total body content of sodium. Exercise tolerance was appreciably improved, and dyspnoea and fatigue lessened. Left ventricular end systolic and end diastolic dimensions were reduced. There was an appreciable reduction in complex ventricular ectopic rhythms. Adverse effects were few: weight gain and fluid retention were evident in five patients when captopril was introduced and two patients initially experienced mild postural dizziness; rashes in two patients did not recur when the drug was reintroduced at a lower dose; there was a significant reduction in white cell count overall, but the lowest individual white cell count was 4000 X 10(6)/l. Captopril thus seemed to be of considerable value in the long term treatment of severe cardiac failure.
de Lorgeril, M; Friedli, B; Assimacopoulos, A
doi: 10.1136/hrt.52.5.536pmid: 6498030
To investigate the possible causes of left ventricular dysfunction after total correction of tetralogy of Fallot, 84 patients, aged 1 1/2 to 16 years, were studied by left ventricular cineangiography both before and a mean of 4.6 months after operation. Left ventricular ejection fraction and mean velocity of circumferential fibre shortening were calculated; using multivariate analysis the results were correlated with age at operation, the degree of hypoxia and polycythaemia before operation, occurrence of hypoxic spells, and the duration of operative procedures (cardiopulmonary bypass and aortic cross clamping). The postoperative left ventricular ejection fraction was decreased slightly or moderately in 46% of patients. The variable most significantly associated with altered left ventricular function was a history of hypoxic spells. Age, the degree of chronic hypoxia, and polycythaemia did not correlate significantly with left ventricular function indices. Although no correlation was found between the duration of cardiopulmonary bypass and left ventricular ejection fraction, bypass times exceeding 120 minutes were associated with decreased ejection fractions; this was statistically significant and independent of the variable "hypoxic spells". Thus repeated episodes of acute hypoxia and long operative procedures appear to have a deleterious effect on left ventricular function in tetralogy of Fallot.
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