Publications by authors named "Marios A Ioannides"

A right ventricular (RV) myocardial infarction (MI) may yield precordial ST-segment elevation (STE). Accordingly, combined inferior and precordial STE may be produced during an inferior-RV MI. Such an electrocardiographic picture may be mistakenly regarded as showing wrapped left anterior descending artery (LADA) occlusion or double vessel occlusion.

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A 43-year-old patient was admitted to hospital because of an inferior-posterior myocardial infarction. The admission electrocardiogram was suggestive of a right coronary artery (RCA) culprit lesion. Coronary angiography following successful thrombolysis revealed a normal left system and mild intraluminal disease of the dominant RCA, which arose from the left aortic sinus and travelled an interarterial course; the latter was depicted in a subsequent computed tomographic angiogram.

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Neurological manifestations may complicate Takayasu arteritis (TA) but seizures are rare. A 40-year-old man with TA presented with recurrent episodes of epileptic seizures. Episodes consisted of a brief period of unresponsiveness followed by sudden falling, tonic stiffening and limb jerking.

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Pulmonary autograft replacement of the aortic valve (Ross procedure) has potential advantages, with favorable rates of survival and freedom from reoperation. The procedure itself, however, involves insertion of a homograft in the pulmonary position. The development of severe homograft stenosis is an uncommon but clinically important complication.

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The classical clinical picture of the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is characterized by venous and/or arterial thromboses, fetal losses and thrombocytopenia, in the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL). We present the case of a young male patient who suffered a transient ischemic cerebrovascular attack and whose cardiac investigation revealed a cardiac source of embolus, namely non-bacterial vegetations of the mitral valve. Laboratory testing confirmed the diagnosis of primary APS.

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