Circulation
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Systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve causing left ventricular outflow tract obstruction occurs in 1% to 2% of patients having mitral valve repair, in some cases requiring further surgery to relieve the obstruction, but the mechanism and the geometry involved are not certain. ⋯ After mitral repair, left ventricular outflow tract obstruction occurs when the mitral coaptation line is displaced anteriorly. When systolic anterior motion occurs, reduction of the amount of annuloplasty or use of the posterior leaflet sliding procedure may eliminate this problem. Understanding the geometry of this phenomenon may facilitate preoperative echo selection of high-risk patients (those with large redundant posterior leaflets and relatively normal ventricular size) and modification of surgical technique to avoid the problem of outflow tract obstruction after mitral valve repair.
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The purpose of this study was to assess the value of body surface mapping and the standard 12-lead ECG in localizing the site of origin of postinfarction ventricular tachycardia (VT) during endocardial pace mapping of the left ventricle. ⋯ These results demonstrate that application of the 62-lead instead of the 12-lead ECG during endocardial pace mapping enhances the localization resolution of this mapping technique and enables more precise identification of the site of arrhythmogenesis in the majority of compared postinfarction VT episodes.
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Coronary bypass surgery in women is associated with lower survival than in men. We need to know whether this is because of patient-related factors and whether the lower survival is present in all subgroups of patients and for all time periods during which the surgery was performed. ⋯ Women have a higher operative mortality and lower long-term survival than men after coronary bypass surgery for angina. However, the differences are small, even if statistically significant. Importantly, patient-related factors and not sex are independent predictors of poorer survival. Therefore, coronary bypass surgery should not be delayed or denied to women who have the usual indications for surgery.
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Mounting evidence suggests a protective effect of exogenous adenosine in myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. We tested the hypothesis that augmentation of endogenous adenosine levels, achieved by inhibiting adenosine catabolism and washout, is beneficial in postischemic myocardial dysfunction ("stunning"). ⋯ This study demonstrates that (1) administration of an adenosine deaminase inhibitor plus a nucleoside transport blocker is remarkably effective in augmenting myocardial adenosine levels during regional ischemia and subsequent reperfusion in vivo, (2) this augmentation of adenosine results in a significant and sustained attenuation of myocardial stunning, and (3) the attenuation of stunning is not due to ATP repletion or to nonspecific actions on hemodynamic variables or coronary flow. These findings suggest that endogenous adenosine production during ischemia serves as an important pathophysiological mechanism that protects against myocardial stunning. The results also suggest that augmentation of endogenous adenosine (without exogenous adenosine administration) represents an effective therapeutic approach to the alleviation of reversible postischemic dysfunction.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of phasic blood flow velocity characteristics of arterial and venous coronary artery bypass conduits.
Coronary artery bypass conduits derived from internal mammary arteries show relative resistance to atherosclerosis and significantly improved long-term patency compared with saphenous vein grafts. Atherothrombotic occlusion of venous conduits has previously been correlated with lower flow rates measured intraoperatively. To quantitate coronary bypass conduit flow velocity, we examined the phasic blood flow velocity patterns by intravascular Doppler spectral analysis in patients during cardiac catheterization to test the hypothesis that resting systolic and diastolic phasic blood flow velocity patterns differ significantly between arterial and venous bypass conduits. ⋯ Patterns of resting phasic blood flow, as well as mean velocity and total velocity integral, differ significantly between internal mammary artery and saphenous vein bypass conduits. These differences may have implications regarding blood-vessel wall interactions, the development of degenerative graft disease, and long-term conduit patency.