The American journal of geriatric cardiology
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Am J Geriatr Cardiol · Sep 2004
Comparative StudyImages in geriatric cardiology. Usefulness of live three-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography in aortic valve stenosis evaluation.
Aortic valve stenosis (AS) severity can be estimated by various modalities. Due to some of the limitations of the currently available methods, the usefulness of live three-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography (3D TTE) in the assessment of AS was explored. Live 3D TTE was able to visualize the aortic valve orifice in all 11 patients studied. ⋯ Live 3D TTE measurements of the aortic valve orifice area also did not correlate well with two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography measurements (r=0.46) but the number of patients studied with two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography was smaller (only seven) and four of these did not undergo two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography at the authors' institution. Altogether, four patients with severe AS by live 3D TTE, and subsequently confirmed at surgery, were misdiagnosed as having moderate AS by two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography. Because it is completely noninvasive and views the aortic valve in three dimensions, 3D TTE could be a useful complement to the existing modalities in the evaluation of AS severity.
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Am J Geriatr Cardiol · Jul 2004
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation programs revisited: results of a community study among older African Americans.
Early cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) performed by a layperson and prompt defibrillation in the field are critical links in the chain of survival of out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest. It has been suggested that minorities, women, and elderly persons are often left out of CPR training programs. To examine knowledge and attitudes toward CPR and automatic external defibrillation among African Americans, the author and colleagues conducted home interviews in a population sample of 425 older men and women in Miami-Dade County, FL. ⋯ The majority of participants suggested churches or community organizations as organizers of CPR training. This study shows that there is a major need for improving knowledge and intensifying CPR training programs among older African Americans. Community organizations and churches may play a critical role in reaching this goal.
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Am J Geriatr Cardiol · May 2003
Management of the elderly aortic stenosis patient with low gradient and low ejection fraction.
The incidence of aortic stenosis increases with age and thus it occurs frequently in elderly patients. Once severe obstruction has developed, death occurs within 3 years unless the aortic valve is replaced. The results of aortic valve surgery, even in octogenarians, are usually excellent in the absence of comorbidity. ⋯ Because valve area is unreliable at low cardiac outputs, output should be increased pharmacologically in such patients and the valve area recalculated. If the transvalvular gradient increases with output, severe aortic stenosis is present and valve replacement may be beneficial. However, if output increases but gradient does not, only mild stenosis is present and surgery is unlikely to prolong life.
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Am J Geriatr Cardiol · Mar 2003
Comparative StudyDobutamine stress echocardiography in preoperative and long-term postoperative risk assessment of elderly patients.
The authors reviewed all negative preoperative dobutamine stress echocardiograms (DSEs) performed over a 3-year period to determine the value of negative DSE for preoperative risk assessment in elderly patients. All patients with negative DSE performed for preoperative evaluation were followed. Cardiac event rates during and after the operative procedure were determined for hard end points (nonfatal myocardial infarction, cardiac death) and soft end points (emergency room visits, hospitalization for unstable angina, congestive heart failure, coronary angioplasty, coronary artery bypass graft surgery). ⋯ Group 1 (age >/=65; n=41) had hard and soft event rates per patient/year of 0.97% and 7.3%, while group 2 (age <65; n=41) had hard and soft event rates per patient/year of 0.81% and 10.8%. There were no significant differences in event rates between the two groups (p=NS). In conclusion, the authors found that negative DSEs predict low cardiac event rates in elderly patients during the perioperative and long-term postoperative periods, which are not significantly different from the cardiac event rates in a younger cohort.