Atrial arrhythmias commonly occur in patients with cardiac amyloidosis (CA), but there is limited data on safety or efficacy of cardioversion (DCCV) for management of these rhythms in CA. We identified 25 patients with CA (20 with transthyretin (TTR) and 5 with light-chain (AL) amyloidosis) at Duke University who underwent DCCV for atrial arrhythmias and documented procedural success, complications, and long-term morbidity and mortality. While DCCV successfully restored sinus rhythm in 96% of patients, 36% of patients experienced immediate procedural complications (primarily bradycardia and hypotension), 80% had recurrence of atrial arrhythmias at 1 year, and 52% died at 3 years, highlighting short-term safety concerns, long-term inefficacy, and poor prognosis associated with symptomatic atrial arrhythmias requiring DCCV in CA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: For spatiotemporal analysis to become a relevant clinical tool, it must be applied to human vocal fold vibration. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis will help assess the ability of spatiotemporal parameters to detect pathological vibration.
Materials And Methods: Spatiotemporal parameters of correlation length and entropy were extracted from high-speed videos of 124 subjects, 67 without vocal fold pathology and 57 with either vocal fold polyps or nodules.