Circulation
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Aortic valve replacement remains the treatment of choice for aortic valve disease, even in the extreme elderly who may present with advanced symptoms. Defining risk factors for short-term survival was the object of this study. ⋯ Aortic valve replacement carries an acceptable mortality rate in elderly patients. Female gender was a significant predictor of operative mortality in the concomitant coronary artery bypass graft group; however, gender was not a predictor of operative mortality in the isolated aortic valve replacement group. Advance stage of the disease process represented by NYHA class IV was a significant predictor of mortality for the whole group, stressing the need for earlier referral for surgery.
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Metabolic interventions capable of preventing ventricular dysfunction "stunning" or accelerating its functional recovery have potential clinical importance. Myocardial protection of the stunned myocardium has not been documented when drugs were administered only during postischemic reperfusion. The role of ATP depletion and release of purines in myocardial injury was assessed using the selective nucleoside transport blocker p-nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR) in a combination with specific adenosine deaminase inhibitor erythro-9-[hydroxy-3-nonyl]adenine (EHNA) administered during reperfusion after reversible ischemic injury. ⋯ Selective entrapment of adenine nucleosides during postischemic reperfusion attenuated ventricular dysfunction (stunning) after brief global ischemia. It is concluded that nucleoside transport plays an important role in myocardial stunning, and its blockade augmented myocardial protection against reperfusion injury. Selective entrapment of endogenous inosine, generated during ischemia, represents an attractive therapeutic approach to the alleviation of postischemic dysfunction mediated by reperfusion in a wide spectrum of ischemic syndromes, including percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and coronary artery bypass graft surgery.
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Surgical treatment of discrete and tunnel subaortic stenosis. Late survival and risk of reoperation.
Although membranectomy, with or without septal myotomy or myectomy, has been the accepted method for treatment of fixed subaortic stenosis, controversies remain regarding operative methods and uncertainties regarding recurrence of subaortic obstruction and development of aortic insufficiency after repair. ⋯ Our results support the use of myectomy in conjunction with membranectomy for discrete subaortic stenosis. For restenosis and tunnel obstruction, more complete relief of subaortic stenosis by extended resection or a modified or classical Konno-Rastan procedure may improve late survival and reduce the incidence of recurrent subaortic stenosis and late aortic valve insufficiency.
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Dynamic cardiomyoplasty is a relatively new surgical procedure proposed for treatment of severe myocardial failure. Limited clinical experience suggests that this procedure reverses congestive heart failure, improving the long-term survival. ⋯ Our detailed evaluation of left ventricular mechanics demonstrates that cardiomyoplasty has significant multiple beneficial effects on dilated myopathic heart.
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Subaortic obstruction is one of the risk factors for anatomic repair of double outlet right ventricles (DORV). A comprehensive approach to such lesions has been developed in our institution since 1981. This retrospective work analyzes the results of this approach. ⋯ Surgical relief of subaortic obstruction in DORV has to be adapted to VSD location and spatial arrangement of atrioventricular valves and great vessels.