The American journal of cardiology
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Immediate removal of the femoral artery sheath after coronary angioplasty may allow rapid mobilization and reduces the number of in-hospital days. We studied the early and 1-month clinical and angiographic follow-up of patients having heparin reversed with protamine after implantation of phosphorylcholine-coated metal (Divysio) stents, followed by removal of the femoral artery sheath. Fifty patients (37 men, mean age 59 +/- 10 years) with stable angina pectoris and a single totally occluded artery (1 unprotected left main stem, 15 left anterior descending, 11 left circumflex, 23 right) underwent coronary angioplasty. ⋯ Thirty-eight patients (79%) had no angina at 1 month, maximal bicycle exercise capacity increased from 128 +/- 42 to 160 +/- 45 W (p <0.05), and left ventricular ejection fraction increased from 63% to 68% (p <0.05). Thus, reversal of heparin with protamine sulfate after implantation of a phosphorylcholine-coated stent enables early mobilization. This approach seems safe in patients with 1 -vessel total occlusions and angioplasty could be performed as an outpatient procedure.
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Patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain are a common and perplexing problem. Because of the limitations of the initial evaluation, most patients are admitted, although many are found to have noncardiac causes of their symptoms. ⋯ These have included modifications of the standard electrocardiogram and use of newer myocardial markers of necrosis, such as mass assays for CK-MB as well as troponin T and troponin I. Use of acute rest myocardial perfusion imaging also has been shown to be a highly valuable technique for risk stratification of the intermediate- to low-risk chest pain patient.
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Cardiovascular disease, including acute myocardial infarction (AMI), is the leading cause of death in the United States and was the primary disease category among hospital discharges in 1996. Efforts to improve hospital care of patients with AMI should be measured and assessed routinely for appropriateness of care and improvement of medical staff performance. ⋯ NRMI 3 collects patient data and facilitates the measurement of improvement in care and outcomes, while allowing participating institutions to benchmark their performance against national, state, and like-hospital data. Three measures from NRMI 3 are accepted for the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations' ORYX initiative: (1) aspirin use within 24 hours of AMI diagnosis; (2) door-to-drug time for fibrinolysis; and (3) no initial reperfusion strategy given to eligible patients.
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A stethoscope is described in which stereophonic auscultation is achieved by attaching a sound-conducting tube and chest piece to a 2-way stopcock close to the main binaural. In the monophonic mode, a second binaural and conducting tube can be attached via a Y-connector close to the chest piece, permitting 2 observers to listen simultaneously.
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Disruption of the aortic root by dissection often produces significant aortic regurgitation (AR). Resuspension of the native valve usually reestablishes competence. The mechanisms of this complex process are poorly understood. ⋯ The degree of dissection of the valve annulus is the most significant determinant of leaflet prolapse and AR severity. Overall size of the aortic root also contributes to AR. Surgical resuspension significantly decreases root size, but its primary benefit is restoration of the structural integrity of the aortic annulus.