The authors report a case of cardiac arrest occurring in a patient who had just entered the catheter laboratory for coronary angioplasty. Opacification of the left coronary artery revealed a proximal occluding double spasm unrelated to the distal stenoses for which angioplasty had been requested. Resuscitation and antispastic therapy with intracoronary injection of a nitrate derivative resulted in a complete recovery without any sequellae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aims of this comparative study by vectorcardiography and myocardial scintigraphy in the topographical analysis of primary inferior and/or posterior wall infarction, were: to obtain data confirming the value of identifying true posterior wall infarction; to confirm the diagnostic value of vectorcardiography in this condition. The patients in this retrospective study were admitted to hospital for primary inferior and/or posterior wall infarction and underwent vectorcardiography and myocardial scintigraphy either with Thallium 201 (137 patients) or 99m Technetium (88 patients) in the acute phase. The scintigraphies of all patients included showed hypofixation compatible with inferior and/or posterior infarction as this was used as the topographical reference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn patients with posterior or postero inferior infarction, a limited septal infarction may be detected by vectorcardiography, septal extension being a sign of disease of the left anterior descending artery. In order to confirm this hypothesis, 31 posterior or postero inferior infarction with septal extension were selected by vectorcardiography from more than 500 ECGs recorded after the acute phase of a clinically and biologically documented infarction. The following criteria were chosen: 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn analysis of the vectorcardiogram results (VCG) in 77 cases with a posterior extension of an infarct and 31 cases with an exclusively posterior infarction (EPI) has allowed us to distinguish some diagnostic criteria relative to the extension, or localisation, of an infarct in the posterior segment. The maximum anterior vector (MAV) appears late (36.5 ms +/- 5), and the amplitude of its projection onto Z is increased; the maximum vector (V max) appears early (41.
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