Circulation
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Despite two decades of research, a transcatheter atrial septal defect closure device is not available for clinical use. We have designed a new superelastic Nitinol-Dacron, double-disk, self-centering, atrial septal defect closure device and studied its efficacy in a canine model of atrial septal defects. ⋯ This feasibility study demonstrates that this new self-centering atrial septal defect closure device has a number of design features that permit effective and safe closures in a canine model. These results support the investigation of this device in human clinical trials.
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Comparative Study
Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Is ventilation necessary?
Prompt initiation of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) improves survival. Basic life support with mouth-to-mouth ventilation and chest compressions is intimidating, difficult to remember, and difficult to perform. Chest compressions alone can be easily taught, easily remembered, easily performed, adequately taught by dispatcher-delivered telephone instruction, and more readily accepted by the public. The principal objective of this study was to evaluate the need for ventilation during CPR in a clinically relevant swine model of prehospital witnessed cardiac arrest. ⋯ In this swine model of witnessed prehospital cardiac arrest, the survival and neurological outcome data establish that prompt initiation of chest compressions alone appears to be as effective as chest compressions plus ventilation and that both techniques of bystander CPR markedly improve outcome compared with no bystander CPR.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Why do patients with congestive heart failure tolerate the initiation of beta-blocker therapy?
Despite its negative inotropic effects, the initiation of beta-adrenergic blockade is tolerated by patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Accordingly, we examined the acute hemodynamic effects of beta-adrenergic blockade on systolic and diastolic left ventricular (LV) function and ventriculo-arterial coupling. In addition, isolated myocardium from patients with CHF shows selective beta 1-receptor downregulation, implying a greater role for the beta 2-receptor in maintaining in vivo LV contractility. As a secondary aim, we hypothesized that nonselective beta-adrenergic blockade would have greater negative inotropic effect than beta 1-blockade in patients with CHF. ⋯ These data do not support a greater in vivo physiological role of the myocardial beta 2-receptor in CHF. The preservation of passive diastolic function and ventriculo-arterial coupling provide possible explanations of why beta-adrenergic blockade is tolerated by patients with CHF.
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The objective of this study was to develop a simple ultrasound method for measuring thrombus regression in patients with proximal deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) and to test its utility for the detection of DVT recurrence. ⋯ The serial ultrasound measurement of thrombus mass after an acute episode of DVT may allow the correct identification of patients who develop a recurrent proximal-vein thrombosis.
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Comparative Study
Augmented efficacy of external CPR by intermittent occlusion of the ascending aorta.
After prolonged cardiac arrest, conventional methods of closed-chest cardiac compression are ineffective. This is primarily because of failure to generate minimal threshold levels of coronary perfusion pressure for cardiac resuscitation. This report introduces a new option for cardiac resuscitation by use of a combination of intermittent ascending aortic balloon occlusion, aortic infusion, and precordial compression to increase the pressure gradient for coronary perfusion. ⋯ Ascending aortic balloon occlusion with or without proximal aortic infusion strikingly increased resuscitability and 48-hour survival after cardiac arrest under conditions when conventional methods failed.