Objective: The etiology of postresuscitation myocardial stunning is unknown but is thought to be related to either ischemia occurring during cardiac arrest and resuscitation efforts and/or reperfusion injury after restoration of circulation. A potential common pathway for postischemia/reperfusion end-organ dysfunction is microvascular injury. We hypothesized that myocardial microcirculatory function is markedly abnormal in the postresuscitation period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSaphenous vein grafts (SVGs) are widely used as aortocoronary conduits during coronary artery bypass surgery and are critical in the high early success of coronary bypass revascularization. Saphenous vein grafts tend to be more prone than native coronary arteries to accelerated atherosclerosis and intimal fibrosis and thus frequently lead to recurrent symptoms and require further revascularization. Percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) have become the prime means of SVG mechanical revascularization but are plagued by higher complication rates than PCI on native coronaries, largely due to embolic debris mobilized from around the target lesion in the SVG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCatheter Cardiovasc Interv
November 2005
The growing and continued success of percutaneous closure of atrial defects is related to its high benefit-to-risk ratio in appropriately selected patients. The following case illustrates a previously undocumented danger, namely, the potential for incomplete correction. A thorough transesophageal examination performed at the time of the planned atrial defect closure suggested the presence of a partial anomalous pulmonary vein insertion, which was then appropriately documented and the incomplete closure was averted.
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