Publications by authors named "Jessica Bresson"

Objective: Cardiac allografts with coronary artery disease may permit a selective expansion of the donor pool. Twenty-two recipients who received donor hearts with mild to moderate coronary artery disease on angiography were reviewed. All donor organs had preserved left ventricle function on echocardiogram.

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Giant-cell myocarditis is a rare and aggressive form of myocarditis with a high mortality rate. Our purpose is to summarize 3 cases of acute giant-cell myocarditis that illustrate possible outcomes with mechanical support. We reviewed the cases of 3 patients, aged 39 to 59 years, who had giant-cell myocarditis (confirmed by myocardial biopsy).

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Objective: An alternate (second) adult recipient list was used to match excluded potential recipients with nonstandard donor hearts that would otherwise be unused.

Methods: The only absolute criterion for entering the alternate recipient list was age: 65 years old before 1998 and 70 years old after that. Group I consisted of alternates who underwent transplantation, and group II consisted of 401 contemporaneous recipients.

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Background: Heart transplantation is the most accepted treatment for end-stage heart disease. A review of 1,083 consecutive transplants (1984 to 2001) was undertaken.

Methods: Adult recipients were divided into quartiles.

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From January 1995 to April 2001, 71 patients with cardiogenic shock using the BVS 5000 were treated or accepted in transfer. Of the 24 transplanted, nine had dilated cardiomyopathy, ischemic cardiomyopathy, acute myocardial infarction, giant cell myocarditis and previous Fontan procedure (group I, n = 13). The others had postcardiotomy shock (group II, n = 11); seven were transferred to our center after device implantation.

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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) can be transmitted to heart transplant recipients by donor organs. Mid-term results were reported using HCV-positive donors in patients at risk of imminent death (group I, n = 10), or in patients who otherwise would not have been offered heart transplantation (group II, n = 10) because of age (9/10) or associated medical risk (1/10). Medical records pertaining to patients receiving HCV-positive allografts between July 1994 and December 1999 were reviewed.

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Older age, prior transplantation, pulmonary hypertension, and mechanical support are commonly seen in current potential cardiac transplant recipients. Transplants in 436 consecutive adult patients from 1994 to 1999 were reviewed. There were 251 using standard donors in 243 patients (age range 18-69 years).

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Background: Pulsatile ventricular assist devices (VADs) are used to bridge adults with end-stage heart disease to transplantation. A combination of external implantable pulsatile and continuous-flow external mechanical support now can be used to bridge pediatric patients with end-stage cardiomyopathy to orthotopic heart transplantation (OHT).

Methods: We reviewed consecutive pediatric patients with cardiomyopathy (n = 28) who required mechanical cardiac support from July 1995 to February 2001.

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Background: Donor atraumatic intracranial bleed (aICB) is associated with older age and may reflect a history of hypertension. Hearts from donors who died of aICB may be at increased risk for graft failure because of the associated catecholamine surge. We evaluated whether receiving a heart from a donor who had an aICB independently affected the outcome of transplantation.

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