In this analysis of ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in 21,330 consecutively included patients with AMI, we found an incidence of stroke after AMI of 1.2% and a very poor prognosis. Previous stroke, atrial fibrillation, and older age were the strongest predictors of stroke after AMI; thrombolysis was a borderline risk factor and early therapy with aspirin was associated with a reduction in stroke after AMI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 167 patients with congenital and acquired heart disease (ventricular septum defect (VSD), atrial septum defect (ASD), mitral stenosis (MS), mitral insufficiency (MI), combined mitral stenosis and insufficiency (MV) aortic stenosis (AS), aortic insufficiency (AI), combined aortic stenosis and insufficiency (AV), idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (HOK) hemodynamic measures (arterial pressure, right and left heart pressures, cardiac output, cardiac index, stroke volume, cardiac work), left ventricular volumes (endiastolic volume, endsystolic volume, ejection fraction, regurgitant flow) and diastolic pressure-volume relationships (on the basis of diastolic pressure-volume changes) were determined during routine right and left heart catheterization and left ventriculography. 1..
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDtsch Med Wochenschr
June 1975
A total of 531 transvenous and 240 thoraco-abdominal electrodes were implanted into 624 patients, the latter as part of a thoracotomy. The complication rate was 35% for transvenous and 33% for epicardial implantations. The most common complication with transvenous electrodes was dislocation (17%), followed by myocardial (5%) and skin perforation (2%).
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