Italian heart journal : official journal of the Italian Federation of Cardiology
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Review Meta Analysis Comparative Study
Stenting versus surgical bypass grafting for coronary artery disease: systematic overview and meta-analysis of randomized trials.
Coronary angioplasty and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) are both major techniques for the management of coronary artery disease, but CABG is associated with a lower incidence of repeat revascularization. Recent studies comparing angioplasty with stenting vs CABG have yielded conflicting results, with some suggesting improved survival with stenting, and others the opposite. We thus undertook a systematic overview of the randomized trials comparing stenting vs CABG in coronary artery disease. ⋯ Overall and event-free survival after conventional stenting for coronary artery disease are similar to those after CABG, but surgery is still associated with a significantly lower incidence of repeat revascularization and symptoms. The role of next-generation drug-eluting stents in widening the indications for stenting and overcoming restenosis will need to be assessed in future observational and randomized studies comparing stenting vs CABG.
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Clinical Trial
Therapeutic implications of contractile reserve elicited by dobutamine echocardiography in symptomatic, low-gradient aortic stenosis.
In patients with heart failure, poor ejection fraction and estimated severe aortic stenosis because of a reduced aortic valve area (AVA) and low gradients, dobutamine echocardiography (DE) was proposed to distinguish afterload mismatch from primary left ventricular dysfunction. In this setting the feasibility and safety of DE and the outcome following management based on DE results were investigated. ⋯ In patients with heart failure and estimated severe aortic stenosis, DE could identify a subgroup with a left ventricular contractile reserve and fixed aortic stenosis who gained great benefit from AVR. The clinical outcome of patients who were not operated upon was unfavorable.
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Tricuspid valve dysplasia, other than Ebstein's anomaly, is a very rare congenital heart defect. During the prenatal and/or the neonatal periods the clinical picture is very critical. We here report on a newborn infant with severe tricuspid valve dysplasia and 4/4 tricuspid regurgitation, giant right atriomegaly, functional pulmonary atresia with ductal-dependent pulmonary blood flow. The child was successfully submitted to implantation of a 15 mm pulmonary stentless heterograft valve using the top-hat technique.
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Comparative Study
Respiratory changes in transvalvular flow velocities versus two-dimensional echocardiographic findings in the diagnosis of cardiac tamponade.
The purpose of this study was to compare the sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value of the respiratory changes in the transvalvular flow velocities to those of right atrial collapse and right ventricular collapse in the diagnosis of cardiac tamponade. ⋯ In the diagnosis of cardiac tamponade: 1) right atrial collapse is the most sensitive sign but lacks any specificity; 2) except for the tricuspid valve, the respiratory variations in the transvalvular flow velocities have a reliability and a predictive value comparable with those of right ventricular collapse; 3) the predictive value is not very high, indicating that at both techniques false positive results are not negligible.