Circulation
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The effects of chronic oral vasodilator therapy were studied in a group of patients with refractory congestive heart failure. Fifteen patients were treated acutely with intravenous sodium nitroprusside and sublingual isosorbide dinitrate. After continuous therapy with nitroprusside and isosorbide dinitrate for up to 72 hours the patients were then placed on isosorbide dinitrate and oral phenoxybenzamine. ⋯ During the period of chronic vasodilator administration, no other change in basic therapy with isosorbide dinitrate and phenoxybenzamine (3-21 months), the favorable effects observed acutely were maintained. All patients demonstrated symptomatic improvement with minimal side effects. The beneficial hemodynamic responses that are noted with acute vasodilator therapy in patients in advanced congestive heart failure are maintained with oral therapy on a chronic basis.
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Mitral valve motion and pressure correlates of the Austin Flint murmur (AFM) were investigated in nine patients with aortic regurgitation using high fidelity catheter tip micromanometers and the mitral valve echocardiogram (MVE). External phonocardiography demonstrated a mid-diastolic murmur (MDM) in eight subjects and a presystolic murmur (PSM) in five. Maximum intensity of both AFM components was found in the left ventricular (LV) inflow tract; the murmur was not recordable in the left atrium (LA). ⋯ In two patients, LV inflow phono showed the MDM to begin 80-120 msec after the aortic second sound and during the D to E phase of the MVE. The rate of early diastolic mitral valve closure in patients (152 +/- 24 mm/sec) was not significantly different from 13 normals (232 +/- 10 mm/sec). With regard to the genesis of the AFM, the present study concludes: 1) diastolic mitral regurgitation plays no role, and 2) antegrade mitral valve flow is required but simultaneous retrograde aortic flow may also be necessary.
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Comparative Study
Aortic root dilatation and mitral valve prolapse in Marfan's syndrome: an ECHOCARDIOgraphic study.
Echocardiographic and phonocardiographic findings in 35 patients with Marfan's Syndrome and ten patients without Marfan's or other clinically apparent connective tissue disorders but with angiographic and echocardiographic evidence of mitral prolapse are reported and compared. Echocardiography revealed aortic root dilatation and/or mitral valve prolapse in 97% of the patients with Marfan's Syndrome. Aortic root dilatation was found in 60% of this group (74% of males, 33% of females) while mitral valve prolapse was found in 91% (87% of males, 100% of females). ⋯ Aortic regurgitation was much more frequent in adult males with Marfan's Syndrome (7/14, 50%) than male children (1/9, 11%), while the incidence of abnormal mitral sounds was essentially the same in adults (33% of males, 60% of females) and children (43% of males, 57% of females) of the same sex with Marfan's Syndrome. Abnormal mitral sounds were more frequent in patients without Marfan's who had mitral prolapse (90%) than in those with Marfan's (46%). It appears that cardiac abnormalities are a consistent manifestation of Marfan's Syndrome and that ultrasound is a more sensitive indicator of these abnormalities in such patients than ausculation or phonocardiography.
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As improvements in the prehospital care of traumatically injured patients have paralleled advancements in cardiovascular surgery, changing concepts in the management of the patient with blunt and penetrating injuries of the heart have occurred. More critically injured patients now arrive at a hospital facility still alive than in former years. Between 1951 and 1974, 350 patients with heart injuries were treated at Harris County Hospital District facilities. ⋯ Thirteen patients had rupture of the heart secondary to blunt trauma. Patients arriving with cardiac arrest and cerebral signs of preterminal activity had a 67% survival rate when cardiorraphy was performed in the Trauma Center. In the last four years, 50 patients without cardiac arrest, but frequently with pericardiocentesis as a preoperative adjunct, had an 87% survival rate.