Cardiologia (Rome, Italy)
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Cardiologia (Rome, Italy) · Aug 1994
Review Case Reports[An accelerated idioventricular rhythm and sports activity. Comments on a clinical case and a characterization of the arrhythmia].
In the evaluation of an accelerated idioventricular rhythm (AIVR) case presented by an athlete, even though considered qualified for agonistic sport practice in compliance with the COCIS protocol, the authors made some considerations relative to such type of arrhythmia. AIVR are characterized by a wide oscillation of frequency (from 40 to 120 b/min) and are distinguished as active AIVR when the ventricular center exceeds the discharge frequency in a non depressed sinusal activity; and it's passive AIVR when an automatic ventricular center substitutes the physiological pacemaker in the presence of sinusal bradycardia. This leads to think that it could be two different phenomenons. ⋯ Moreover, AIVR manifest a parasystolic type of behaviour that complicates the diagnostic differentiation. Therefore it can be considered that the arrhythmia of ventricular genesis (AIVR, ventricular tachycardia, parasystole) represents the varied expression of the same electrogenic substratum with different discharge potentiality. Thus was formulated the proposal of unifying the ventricular rhythms in one group which includes: rhythm of ventricular escapement, AIVR, parasystole and ventricular tachycardia.
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Cardiologia (Rome, Italy) · Aug 1994
Comparative Study[Multiplane transesophageal echocardiography for the monitoring of cardiac surgery].
Multiplane transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) allows visualization of the heart and great vessels through an infinite number of imaging planes and improves the diagnostic capabilities of mono and biplane TEE. This study was undertaken to test whether MTEE is a useful intraoperative monitoring method during cardiac surgery. Intraoperative multiplane TEE was performed in 200 patients (mean age 56 +/- 19 years) as a part of the routine clinical care. ⋯ All views analyzed in the preoperative (immediately before cardiopulmonary bypass), intraoperative and postoperative phases evaluating: the angle between current and 0 degree at which each view was obtained; the success rate of each view; the usefulness of the different views in providing essential additional clinical information compared to 0 degrees and 90 degrees of the traditional biplane TEE. Most views of the heart and great vessels were visualized in oblique planes, and other views were significantly improved thanks to slight angle corrections. Multiplane TEE was particularly useful in the preoperative and postoperative phases of aortic dissection (11 cases), mitral valve repair (13 cases), left ventricular aneurysmectomy (9 cases), right atrial thrombosis (1 case), positioning of left ventricular hemopump (2 cases), mitral-aortic endocarditis (3 cases), bleeding from proximal suture of an aortic heterograft (1 case).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)