Objectives: To assess the safety and efficacy of a new simplified procedure for transfemoral (TF) transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR): the FAST protocol.
Background: A minimalist approach for TF-TAVR has been reported. The goal of this simplified strategy is to reduce the rate of specific complications associated with general anesthesia, second vascular access, and use of temporary pacemaker, and to reduce the length of stay.
Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty of chronic total coronary occlusions has a low primary success rate and is associated with a high percentage of restenosis. The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the long-term benefits of these procedures. In a series of 201 patients with 203 chronic total occlusions, the technical success rate was 51%, the clinical success rate was 46% with 3% of major complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransluminal coronary angioplasty is increasingly performed in patients with left ventricular dysfunction. However, there is little data available concerning the outcome of these patients. The aim of this retrospective study was to assess the immediate and long-term results in 90 patients (76 men and 14 women) with left ventricular ejection fractions < or = 35% (average 29 +/- 5%) undergoing angioplasty between 1980 and December 1992.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects on sleep of atenolol and clonidine were compared in 8 hypertensive men (mean age 46.9 years, range 16-56 years) without prior history of sleep disturbances. Polygraphic sleep recordings were performed at baseline (NO) and after a single oral dose of atenolol (100 mg) or clonidine (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to evaluate the consequences concerning left ventricular function of the spontaneous occlusion of coronary stenoses, the authors studied the clinical and angiographic characteristics of 30 consecutive patients (25 men, 5 women, mean age: 54) undergoing successive coronary arteriograms showing progression to complete occlusion of the anterior interventricular or right coronary between the two investigations. Two groups of patients were identified: Group I (n = 19) with occlusion of a previously moderate (< or = 50%) stenosis; Group II (n = 11) with occlusion of an initially tight stenosis (> 50%). At the time of the first angiogram, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 60 +/- 13% in Group I and 58 +/- 9% in Group II (NS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver an 11-year period, the initial and late outcomes of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) were studied in 140 consecutive patients younger than 40 years of age (mean, 34 +/- 3 years; range, 23 to 39 years; 132 men). Before the procedure, 28% of the patients had unstable angina, and 44% had a history of prior myocardial infarction. Mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 64% +/- 10%, and 75% of the patients had one-vessel disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study compared the acute occlusion and complication rates within 24 hours of coronary angioplasty in three groups of patients. In group 1, 178 procedures were performed by one operator who administered 30 mg of dipyridamole intravenously over 1 hour, starting immediately before the procedure; in group 2, 200 procedures were performed by the same operator before he administered dipyridamole; and in group 3, 599 procedures were performed during the same time period in the same catheterization laboratory by two other operators who did not administer dipyridamole. All patients received an intravenous bolus of heparin and aspirin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSystemic embolisms involving cholesterol crystals sometimes occur following vascular catheterization and may be responsible for a variety of clinical signs. The authors report a case in which the etiological diagnosis included a transesophageal echography (TEE) which revealed atheromatous plaques on the thoracic aorta which were probably responsible for the projections. It is possible that episodes of embolism, either fibrinocruoric or due to the release of cholesterol crystals, arising from the thoracic aorta, have hitherto been underestimated by imaging methods such as scans and angiographs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied the effects of transoesophageal atrial pacing on Doppler parameters derived from flow in the left ventricular out flow tract (maximal velocity (V max), velocity-time integral (VTI), mean acceleration of aortic flow (Acc), acceleration force (AF) of the left ventricle). These parameters were recorded in patients with normal left ventricular wall motion at rest, with and without coronary disease. Eight patients had angiographically normal coronary arteries (Group 1) and 21 had coronary disease (Group 2) including 10 with an isolated stenosis of the left anterior descending artery (Group 2a) and 11 with multivessel disease (Group 2b).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe usefulness of exercise single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)-thallium for detecting asymptomatic restenosis was assessed prospectively in 62 patients with angina before angioplasty, who underwent < or = 6-month re-angiography and exercise SPECT-thallium imaging. Among patients with restenosis, nine had recurrence of angina but eight did not. These two subgroups had equivalent percentages of restenosis (71 +/- 16% vs 64 +/- 16%, NS) and extent of reversible thallium defects (2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver an eleven year period, 57 patients under 35 years of age underwent percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). The features of the study population were: 55 men and 2 women, average age 32 +/- 3 years; unstable angina in 30%, previous myocardial infarction in 53%, average left ventricular ejection fraction 59 +/- 12%, single vessel disease in 84%. A total of 63 vessels were dilated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe acute and long-term results of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) of the left coronary artery in 106 patients (group 1) with chronic occlusion of the right coronary artery were compared with those of 106 patients matched for sex (92 male) and age (56 +/- 10 years) undergoing left PTCA with a normal right coronary artery (group 2). Before the procedure, group 1 had more unstable angina (42 vs 29%; p < 0.05), more frequent prior myocardial infarction (80 vs 25%; p < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report the case of a patient developing two successive left ventricular kinetic abnormalities secondary to acute or chronic ischemia, and reversible after transluminal coronary angioplasty. The concept of myocardial hibernation is suggested as a possible mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransitory disturbances of atrioventricular conduction are an usual feature of the acute phase of viral myocarditis. In contrast, the onset of complete heart block is rarer. The authors report a case of permanent heart block of progressive onset in a context of infectious mononucleosis in a 29-year-old male, requiring fitting with a permanent pacemaker.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 1980s have brought increasing evidence that coronary vasomotricity has a major role in the pathophysiology of stable angina pectoris. Specifically, it has been shown that mediators such as serotonin have opposite effects on normal and atherosclerotic coronary arteries, resulting in vasodilation and increased coronary blood flow in the former and vasoconstriction with decreased flow in the latter. Other studies have shown that, even in patients with stable angina, coronary vaso-constriction is likely to trigger clinical episodes of angina.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver a 4-year period, 120 transluminal coronary angioplasties were performed in 102 patients older than 75 years. There were 56 men and 46 women aged from 75 to 89 years (mean: 78 +/- 3 years) presenting with the following characteristics: left ventricular ejection fraction 60 +/- 11 percent; severe angina (class III or IV) 86 percent; history of myocardial infarction 43 percent; one-vessel lesion 39 percent; 66 percent of the arteries dilated were calcified. Altogether, 158 vessels (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver 4 yr, 102 consecutive patients more than 75 yr old (56 men, 46 women; mean age 78 +/- 3 years, range: 76-89 years) underwent 120 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty procedures. At baseline, 86% had severe anginal symptoms (Canadian class III or IV), 43% had a history of prior myocardial infarction; 61% had multivessel coronary artery disease, and mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 60 +/- 11%. Calcifications were observed on 66% of the dilated arteries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRight ventricular systolic function is difficult to assess by Doppler echocardiography. We studied 14 patients with tricuspid regurgitation on Doppler echocardiographic examination with the object of determining an index of right ventricular contractility based on the continuous Doppler signal of the regurgitant jet. The rate of increase in right ventricular pressure was calculated between 2 points, V1 and V2, situated on the ascending limb of the velocity profile of the tricuspid regurgitation and compared with the dP/dt max measured simultaneously at right heart catheterisation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Mal Coeur Vaiss
September 1992
This clinical study analysed the changes in right ventricular ejection fraction induced by changes in right ventricular afterload using a new thermodilution catheter linked to a rapid response computer which allowed instantaneous measurements of the right ventricular ejection fraction. The first group comprised 16 patients referred for coronary angioplasty with single vessel disease (isolated proximal stenosis of one of the two main branches of the left coronary artery) and a normal left ventricular ejection fraction (> or = 55%) and mean pulmonary artery pressure of < 25 mmHg: right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure were measured under basal conditions and after 60 seconds' coronary occlusion with the balloon catheter in order to assess the effects of the reactional increase in afterload on the right ventricular ejection fraction. The second group comprised 11 patients with dilated primary cardiomyopathy with decreased left ventricular ejection fraction (< 50%) and mean pulmonary artery pressure > or = 25 mmHg: the right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary artery pressure were measured under basal conditions and after intravenous trinitrin (performed to evaluate the pulmonary reaction to vasodilators) in order to analyse the effects of the reduction of afterload on right ventricular ejection fraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalysis of velocity acceleration proximal to a regurgitant valve has been proposed as a method to quantify the regurgitant flow rate (Qo). Previous work has assumed inviscid flow through an infinitesimal orifice, predicting hemispheric isovelocity shells, with calculated flow rate given by Qc = 2 pi rN2vN, where vN is user-selected velocity of interest and rN is the distance from that velocity to the orifice. To validate this approach more rigorously and investigate the impact of finite orifice size on the assumption of hemispheric symmetry, numerical and in vitro modeling was used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBetween January 1986 and July 1990, 186 patients over 70 years of age underwent 215 transluminal coronary angioplasties. The patients' characteristics were: 117 men and 69 women; mean age 75.5 +/- 4 years (70-89 years): left ventricular ejection fraction 62 +/- 12%: 40% had previous myocardial infarction; 48% had single vessel disease; 80% had severe angina (19% Class III and 61% Class IV) and 58% of dilated vessels had calcification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In clinical color Doppler examinations, mitral regurgitant jets are often observed to impinge on the left atrial wall immediately beyond the mitral valve. In accordance with fluid dynamics theory, we hypothesized that a jet impinging on a wall would lose momentum more rapidly, undergo spatial distortion, and thus have a different observed jet area from that of a free jet with an identical flow rate.
Methods And Results: To test this hypothesis in vivo, we studied 44 patients with mitral regurgitation--30 with centrally directed free jets and 14 with eccentrically directed impinging wall jets.