Nucl Med Commun
October 2003
Patients complaining of chest pain (CP) who visit the emergency department (ED) represent the second cause of consultation in this department, and 20-30% of hospital admissions for medical reasons. These patients form a somewhat heterogeneous group with many different aetiologies and degrees of severity. In this setting, the clinical objectives include the prompt identification of patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACSs), the prompt evaluation of the immediate risk (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Heart Lung Transplant
April 1997
This study describes a patient who had fulminant infectious myocarditis as a result of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus after receiving a heart transplant from an infected donor. There was complete concordance of typing results between donor and recipient strains that were different from the 20 isolates with which they were compared. Molecular epidemiologic study provided compelling evidence that a transplanted organ can transmit a bacterial infection from the donor to the recipient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: We sought to determine the prevalence, intensity and evolving changes of myocardial damage detected by myocardial uptake of antimyosin antibodies in patients with alcohol-induced dilated cardiomyopathy, alcohol addicts attending a detoxification unit and healthy subjects with short-term alcohol consumption.
Background: Evidence of alcohol-induced myocardial damage may be provided by myocardial uptake of indium-111-labeled monoclonal antimyosin antibodies. The spectrum of such damage in patients who are heavy drinkers (> 100 g for > 10 years), with or without cardiomyopathy, and the impact of short-term alcohol ingestion on antimyosin antibody uptake have not been adequately explored.