Publications by authors named "Mukerji V"

Permanent pacemaker (PPM) implantation is the standard of care in patients with complete heart block (CHB) and second-degree type II atrioventricular (AV) block irrespective of patient symptoms when the conduction abnormality is irreversible. CHB generally constitutes a medical emergency that can be fatal if not urgently treated. This is in contrast to first-degree AV block and second-degree type I AV block, which require PPM implantation only in very special circumstances.

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Human laterality disorders comprise a group of diseases characterized by abnormal location (situs) and orientation of thoraco-abdominal organs and vessels across the left-right axis. Situs inversus totalis is mirror image reversal of thoraco-abdominal organs/great vessels. Situs ambiguus, better known as heterotaxy, is abnormal arrangement of thoraco-abdominal organs across the left-right axis excluding situs inversus totalis.

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Statins are among the most frequently prescribed drugs as they effectively lower cardiovascular mortality. Atherosclerotic plaques are stabilized and lipid levels are lowered, as statins inhibit 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase. Patients placed on these drugs frequently report muscle aches, but true myositis that would call for discontinuance of the drug is actually uncommon.

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Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is a reversible heart condition initially described in the Japanese literature in the 1990s. The typical presentation mimics an acute coronary syndrome. It is frequently found in elderly women in the context of emotional or physical stress in the absence of significant obstructive coronary disease.

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Enhancing successful counseling for cardiovascular disease prevention remains a challenge for health professionals and nursing and medical educators. To gain insight into the attitudes of health care professional students toward cardiovascular prevention strategies, this study examined the associations among prevention attitudes and health professional student demographics and health habits. Based on a self-administered survey completed by nursing and medical students from two Midwestern institutions, healthier personal lifestyle choices were independently associated with more positive attitudes toward cardiovascular prevention, but demographic factors were not.

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Background: Scuba diving imposes uncommon environmental stresses. This study assesses the effects of recreational scuba diving on the electrocardiogram (ECG) and echocardiogram and compares them with those of normal controls.

Methods: We studied 50 recreational scuba divers and 50 age-matched and sex-matched normal control subjects.

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To determine the relation of occupation to the presence or absence of coronary artery disease (CAD) and cardiovascular risk factors, the authors compared the occupations of a series of 116 consecutive patients who underwent coronary angiography and were found to have normal or near-normal coronary arteries (< 30% stenosis of all major coronary arteries) with those of a series of 116 patients with moderate to severe CAD (> or = 60% stenosis of one or more major coronary artery). The usual lifetime occupational status of each study participant was classified as sedentary, intermediate, or strenuous. The presence of the usual cardiovascular risk factors in the patients was also recorded.

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A 56-year-old woman with a history of angina pectoris developed substernal chest pressure and hypotension during coronary angiography. Her baseline coronary angiogram appeared normal. During this episode, injection of contrast medium into the left coronary artery demonstrated coronary artery slow flow in the left anterior descending artery and branches of the circumflex coronary artery, which normalized following the sublingual administration of nitroglycerin.

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Purpose: The purpose of this study is to determine whether short-term heart rate variability (HRV) can be used successfully to predict inducible ventricular tachycardia (VT).

Methods: A high-speed (300 mm/s) electrocardiographic recording was obtained in 32 patients in the supine position prior to programmed ventricular stimulation. Beat-to-beat RR intervals (in milliseconds) were derived from an 11-beat strip (10 RR intervals).

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To assess cardiac morphology and left ventricular (LV) function in normotensive morbidly obese patients with and without congestive heart failure (CHF) we performed a physical examination and obtained a transthoracic echocardiogram and cardiac Doppler studies before and after substantial weight loss in patients whose actual body weight was initially equal to or more than twice their ideal body weight and who were free from systemic hypertension and underlying organic heart disease. There were 24 patients with CHF, 14 of whom were studied after weight loss. There were 50 patients without CHF, 39 of whom were studied after weight loss.

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Longer duration of morbid obesity is associated with higher LV mass, poorer LV systolic function, and greater impairment of LV diastolic filling. Weight loss-induced decreases in LV mass and improvements in LV systolic function and diastolic filling are due in part to favorable alterations in LV loading conditions.

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To identify factors influencing left ventricular (LV) diastolic filling in patients with morbid obesity, we performed transthoracic and Doppler echocardiography on 50 subjects whose actual body weight was > or = twice their ideal body weight and on 50 normal lean control subjects. The transmitral Doppler E/A ratio and E wave deceleration half-time were used to assess LV diastolic filling. Significant negative correlations were seen between the E/A ratio and the LV internal dimension in diastole (r = 0.

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Objective: To determine the interrelationship of left ventricular (LV) mass, systolic function and diastolic relaxation in morbidly obese subjects.

Method: We obtained echocardiograms (M-mode, two dimension) and cardiac Doppler studies (pulse wave, continuous wave colour flow) on 50 subjects whose actual body weight was > or = twice ideal body weight. LV mass/height index was calculated from echocardiographic data (Penn Convention).

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The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of musculoskeletal disorders in patients with chest pain and angiographically normal coronary arteries. The authors studied 40 consecutive patients with chest pain presenting at an Internal Medicine Clinic who had undergone coronary angiography and were found to have < 30% stenosis of all major coronary arteries. Patients with any known noncardiac cause of chest pain were excluded from the study.

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Cardiac arrhythmias are disorders of impulse formation, impulse conduction, or both. Part I of this two-part review discusses clinically relevant cardiac electrophysiology, as well as the pathogenesis, recognition, and management of ventricular premature beats and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Part II will review the pathogenesis, recognition, and management of supraventricular premature beats and supraventricular tachyarrhythmias.

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Part I of this review discussed pharmacotherapy of primary pulmonary hypertension (PHT). Part II describes the value and limitations of oxygen and vasodilator therapy of secondary PHT, focusing on patients with PHT associated with selected connective tissue disease and chronic nonthrombotic hypoxic lung disease.

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Efforts aimed at assessing pharmacotherapy of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PHT) have largely focused on patients with primary PHT, PHT associated with selected connective tissue diseases, and various forms of hypoxic secondary PHT. Part I of this review discusses the value and limitations of a wide variety of vasodilator drugs, oxygen, and warfarin in the treatment of primary PHT with special reference to their effects on pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics, functional capacity, and survival.

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Heart rate and blood pressure were measured, and echocardiography was performed in 39 patients whose actual body weight was greater than twice their ideal body weight to identify factors influencing left ventricular (LV) systolic function in morbidly obese patients and assess the effect of weight loss on LV systolic function. Patients were studied before and after weight loss induced by gastroplasty. The study cohort was 133 +/- 8% overweight before weight loss and 39 +/- 7% overweight at the nadir of weight loss.

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Approximately 20% to 30% of patients who undergo coronary arteriography for the evaluation of chest pain are found to have normal coronary arteries. These patients have a survival rate comparable to that of the normal population, yet they continue to complain of symptoms on extended follow-up, and about half of this group are disabled on account of chest pain. Once other clinically obvious disorders have been ruled out, common diagnostic considerations include microvascular angina, esophageal dysfunction, and perhaps fibromyalgia.

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