Publications by authors named "Demaria A"

Although cardiac tumors are relatively rare, their diagnosis is important because successful treatment is usually feasible if the diagnosis is made preoperatively. An analysis of 219 reports of cardiac tumors described in the English literature from 1972 through 1977 demonstrated the predominance of benign tumors, in particular myxoma, which is in agreement with past reviews. The methods of diagnosis employed included plain chest films, echocardiography, cardiac catheterization, angiocardiography, and cardiac scintigraphy.

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Moxalactam (LY127935) is a new beta-lactam antibiotic which is chemically related to the cephalosporins. The agent is highly active against the Enterobacteriaceae, with most organisms sensitive to 0.1 mcg/ml or less.

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The demonstration of common antigens shared by all Enterobacteriaceae has led to evaluation of the effects of immunization of animals and man with these antigens in protecting against bacterial infections and challenge with LPS. Both active and passive immunization with the Re mutant of S. minnesota and the J5 mutant of E.

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No data are available on determining right atrial and right ventricular size by two-dimensional echocardiography. We performed two-dimensional echocardiograms on eight human right-heart casts obtained at autopsy and on 50 patients who underwent complete left- and right-heart catheterization. Measurement of individual dimensions of the long and short axes of the right atrium and ventricle from right heart casts closely correlated with the volume of these structures as determined by water displacement.

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A patient with the clinical and electroencephalographic features of dialysis encephalopathy exhibited dramatic improvement with the initiation of diazepam therapy. Although improvement was sustained for a period of several weeks, her clinical condition eventually deteriorated despite continued treatment with diazepam and dialysis. Dialysis encephalopathy in this patient is compared with other cases recently reported in the medical literature as having a similar dramatic response to diazepam.

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We studied 25 patients with anterior myocardial infarction and two with congestive cardiomyopathy to evaluate two-dimensional echocardiography in the diagnosis of left ventricular thrombi. Five coronary patients had systemic emboli. Four of these patients manifested apical filling defects on cineangiogram, while a levophase cine was equivocal for clot in the fifth patient.

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Four hundred M-mode echocardiographic surveys were distributed to determine interobserver variability in M-mode echocardiographic measurements. This was done with a view toward examining the need and determining the criteria for standardization of measurement. Each survey consisted of five M-mode echocardiograms with a calibration marker, measured by the survey participants anonymously.

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While digitalis and diuretics constitute conventional therapy of congestive heart failure due to acute myocardial infarction, systemic vasodilator drugs offer an innovative approach of decreasing left ventricular systolic wall tension (afterload) by reducing aortic impedance and/or by reducing cardic venous return. Thus, vasodilators increase lowered cardiac output by diminishing peripheral vascular resistance and/or decreasing increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (ventricular preload) by reducing venous tone. Concomitantly, there is a reduction of myocardial oxygen demand thereby potentially limiting infarct size and ischaemia.

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Severe tachycardia, ventricular ectopy, and sodium retention manifested by hemodynamic deterioration developed with hydralazine hydrochloride therapy in chronic coronary heart disease with congestive failure refractory to digitalis, diuretics, and nitrates. Coronary care unit admission with Swan-Ganz catheterization corrected hemodynamics by sodium nitroprusside treatment after hydralazine withdrawal. Satisfactory cardiac performance with oral long-acting nitrates were unsuccessful.

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Few data are available regarding the effects of exercise training upon cardiac structure and performance in man. We evaluated the echograms of 24 normals before (PRE) and after (POST) 11 weeks of endurance exercise training. Conditioning consisted of a walk-jog-run protocol at 70% maximal heart rate for one hour four days per week.

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Although glutaraldehyde-preserved porcine aortic Hancock heterografts have lower thromboembolism incidence than mechanical aortic valves, Hancock xenografts provide less functional aortic outflow orifices and thereby greater transvalvular gradients than mechanical prostheses. The newly developed aortic Carpentier-Edwards porcine heterografts comprise a thin-walled Elgiloy flexible metal stent covered with Teflon which provides somewhat wider internal orifices than aortic Hancock valves of the same external annulus diameter. Since aortic Carpentier-Edwards xenografts have not been clinically evaluated previously, the present study assessed cardiac function and heterograft performance (1.

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Bedside right heart catheterization in patients with acute myocardial infarction and hemodynamic dysfunction provides a rational basis for therapy aimed at maximizing cardiac performance and limiting infarct size. Readily performed and associated with minimal risk, this diagnostic approach is primarily indicated when myocardial infarction is associated with evidence of hemodynamic dysfunction. It affords precise information on cardiac performance and prognosis, allows identification of specific complications such as ventricular septal defect and acute mitral regurgitation, and is of critical importance in selection of therapy.

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