Background: Outcomes of patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) are strongly correlated to the time interval from hospital entry to primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI). Current guidelines recommend a door to balloon time of < 90 minutes.
Objectives: To reduce the time from hospital admission to PPCI and to increase the proportion of patients treated within 90 minutes.
Background: Drug-eluting stents with biodegradable polymer might be particularly useful in diabetic patients who are at increased risk for target lesion/target vessel revascularization. We therefore aimed at assessing the safety and performance of a biodegradable polymer sirolimus-eluting stent (BP-SES) in combination with comprehensive optimal medical therapy following coronary interventions.
Methods: This prospective, multicenter registry was conducted at six centers in Israel.
The Brockenbrough-Braunwald-Morrow sign is the paradoxical decrease in pulse pressure during the post-extrasystole beat seen in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. We present a case of intermittent left ventricular outflow tract obstruction and secondary mitral regurgitation resulting from post-extrasystolic potentiation following a premature atrial beat, demonstrating using echocardiography the mechanism behind this sign.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography may underestimate ischemic mitral regurgitation (MR) as a result of the unloading effect of general anesthesia on the left ventricle (LV). An intraoperative loading test could prove useful to avoid underestimation of ischemic MR.
Methods: We prospectively studied 30 patients with ischemic MR referred for coronary artery bypass, mitral valve surgery, or both.
Background: Emergency room triage of patients presenting with chest pain syndromes may be difficult. Under-diagnosis may be dangerous, while over-diagnosis may be costly.
Objectives: To report our initial experience with an emergency room cardiologist-based chest pain unit in Israel.
Objectives: We have evaluated left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at rest (REF) and after stress (SEF) with dual-isotope gated myocardial perfusion SPECT (GMPS) with 201Tl injected at rest and 99mTc sestamibi (99mTc-MIBI) injected at peak stress, to assess the occurrence of post-stress stunning.
Methods: Two hundred and thirty-six consecutive patients had GMPS at rest and post-stress. The summed stress and rest scores and the summed difference score (SDS) were calculated using a 17-segment model analysis of GMPS.
Objective: We prospectively examined the prevalence of reversible perfusion defects on very early (12-24 h) thallium-201 single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scintigraphy after angiographically successful percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) by stenting and/or stand-alone balloon angioplasty and the predictive value of these defects for late target lesion revascularization (TLR).
Patients And Methods: 83 consecutive patients undergoing PCI for 88 lesions (38 balloon angioplasties, 50 stents) underwent very early (12-24 h) SPECT thallium-201 scintigraphy at rest and following administration of 0.7 mg/kg intravenous dipyridamole after PCI.
Background: Clinical trials, the gold standard for the evaluation of new therapeutic strategies, may prove a drug to be beneficial, harmful or neutral according to its effect on the end-point(s) under study.
Aims: To study the reaction and perspective of the patients participating in a clinical heart failure trial, particularly in relation to whether the trial subsequently proved to be positive, negative or neutral.
Methods: Anonymous self-completed questionnaire was sent to 78 and returned by 70 consecutive patients 1--6 months after participating in six clinical heart failure trials.
We compared completed long-term outcome and late repeat revascularization rates in 272 consecutive patients with multivessel coronary disease who underwent revascularization (95 angioplasty cohort, 177 surgical cohort) between 1984 and 1986. Long-term survival was similar at 12 years in the angioplasty (70%) and surgical (74%) cohorts (p = NS), and repeat revascularization, although more frequent in the angioplasty patients during the first 5 years of follow-up, was performed equally in the 2 patient cohorts after 10 to 12 years of follow-up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe adverse long-term prognosis following myocardial revascularization in diabetic patients has been ascribed to accelerated coronary disease, a higher incidence of late coronary restenosis after revascularization, and myocardial dysfunction. To examine the development of heart failure and its prognostic implications in diabetic patients, we analyzed the long-term (13-year) follow-up data of 363 patients-193 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasties and 170 coronary artery bypass operations-revascularized in a single cardiovascular center from 1984 to 1986. Baseline characteristics (age, previous infarction, baseline ventricular function) were similar in the 80 diabetic and 283 nondiabetic patients; multivessel disease and hypertension were marginally more common in diabetics (p = NS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although randomized clinical trials are currently the standard for the evaluation of new therapeutic strategies, little attention has been paid to the viewpoint of the patients recruited to these trials.
Objectives: To examine the perspective of the Israeli patient cohort who participated in the Fourth International Study of Infarct Survival, a randomized trial in acute myocardial infarction.
Methods: A patient questionnaire was mailed to 360 Israeli patients who participated in the Fourth International Study of Infarct Survival and was returned by 150 of them.
Am J Cardiol
November 1999
Integrated myocardial revascularization combines the advantages of angioplasty, stenting, and minimally invasive surgery to revascularize patients with multivessel coronary artery disease without cardiopulmonary bypass. This pilot study showed that a new same-day management strategy, consisting of percutaneous coronary intervention followed immediately by minimally invasive surgery, was feasible and provided complete all-arterial revascularization with minimal surgical trauma, short hospital stay, and excellent early therapeutic result in 14 patients with multivessel coronary disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To assess the effects of exposure to low concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO), as commonly measured in atmospheric urban air pollution and certain occupational environments, on exercise performance and myocardial perfusion in young healthy men, and the possible need for tighter restrictions on ambient concentrations of CO.
Methods: 15 young, healthy non-smoking men, 18-35 years old, were exposed blindly and randomly to air or to a mixture of CO and air, followed by an exercise treadmill test with thallium heart scintigraphy. Blood was drawn for determination of carboxyhaemoglobin before and at the end of the exposure, and for lactic and pyruvic acid at the beginning and the end of the exercise test.
Objectives: We sought to examine completed 10-year survival and event-free survival in patients with stable and unstable angina pectoris treated by coronary balloon angioplasty.
Background: Patients with unstable angina are at increased risk for recurrent acute coronary events.
Methods: The study included 208 consecutive patients (133 with stable and 75 with unstable angina pectoris) undergoing angioplasty from 1984 to 1986.
The study examined the 10-year outcome in a cohort of 227 unselected, consecutive patients (age 58+/-10 years) undergoing coronary balloon angioplasty between 1984 and 1986 and followed in a single cardiac center (Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center registry). In particular, we sought to identify the relative importance of the systemic risk factors diabetes and hypertension and the extent of coronary disease as opposed to procedure-related technical variables, the immediate success of the procedure, or completeness of revascularization. By life-table analysis (99% follow-up), 94% of the patients were alive at 5 years, and 77% at 10 years after angioplasty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this prospective study, we examined the diagnostic accuracy of exercise-induced left QRS axis deviation as a marker of LAD coronary artery stenosis. The mean frontal QRS axis of 66 consecutive patients with chest pain and exercise-induced ST segment depression referred for diagnostic coronary angiography was analyzed and related to the angiographic findings. An exercise-induced leftward QRS axis deviation was found in 9/40 patients with and 0/26 patients without obstructive (> or = 70%) LAD disease (sensitivity 23%, specificity 100%, p = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite an exercise electrocardiogram (ECG) positive for ischemia by established criteria, many patients referred for coronary angiography to evaluate chest pain are found to have angiographically normal coronary arteries (NCA). Exercise ECG were analyzed from 27 patients with chest pain and angiographically NCA and 28 patients with chest pain and coronary artery disease (CAD) using univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis. We derived the following logistic model for the logit probability of CAD: 3 + SEX x 4 - METs x 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to identify patients who benefit most from a cardiac rehabilitation program, we studied retrospectively all patients who completed a 3-month comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation program during a 2-year period. Questionnaires regarding physical exercise habits were sent to 122 patients and returned by 117 (96%) of them (53 post-acute myocardial infarction, 50 post-coronary artery bypass surgery, 14 post-infarction and surgery, 2 post-angioplasty). Exercise capacity (subset of 66 patients) improved by 19% after rehabilitation (7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe examined prospectively the hypothesis that the adequacy of initial dilatation may be a major determinant of the late result of coronary angioplasty and that a better assessment of initial dilatation can be made from a combined angiographic and perfusion study than from angiography alone. Angiographic and perfusion (thallium-201 single-photon-emission computed tomography) measurements were made very early (18 to 24 hours) after coronary angioplasty in 59 patients (67 lesions) and also immediately (37 +/- 16 minutes) after the procedures in 19 of them (23 lesions). The early measurements, singly, in combination, and as a restenosis index (restenosis index = thallium-201 ischemic score (units) - minimal luminal area (squared millimeters) were examined as predictors of the late angiographic result.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncidence and pattern of myocardial ischemia during the peri-PTCA (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty) period and the possible role of continuous intravenous isosorbide dinitrate in its prevention were examined prospectively in 30 patients. Holter electrocardiographic monitoring was performed for 21 +/- 3 h before PTCA and continued during and for 41 +/- 8 h after the procedure. Before PTCA, 19 ischemic episodes were present in 10 (33%) of 30 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe acute haemodynamic and neurohumoral effects of flosequinan, a new direct-acting vasodilator, were studied in 12 patients with severe (eight in New York Heart Association grade 3, four in grade 4) cardiac failure. Flosequinan was administered in a single oral dose of 100 mg, with haemodynamic monitoring over a 22 h period. The effects were compared with those observed during high dose intravenous nitroglycerin therapy (276 +/- 100 micrograms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of intracoronary isosorbide dinitrate on provoked myocardial ischaemia during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) was studied in 60 patients who had at least 1 mm electrocardiographic (ECG) ST segment deviation during a 70 s control balloon inflation period. Isosorbide dinitrate (dose 1 mg, 2 mg or 3 mg) or placebo (saline) was administered by slow intracoronary injection, and the ST segment changes recorded again during an identical dilatation period 2-4 min later. Following injection of isosorbide dinitrate, the severity of ST segment deviation decreased (1 mg -31 +/- 30%, P = 0.
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