Purpose: We compared stair-step artifacts and radiation dose between prospective electrocardiography (ECG)-gated coronary computed tomography angiography (prospective CCTA) and retrospective CCTA using 64-detector CT and determined the optimal padding time (PT) for prospective CCTA.
Materials And Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 183 patients [mean heart rate (HR) <65 beats/min, maximum HR instability <5 beats/min] who had undergone CCTA. We scored stair-step artifacts from 1 (severe) to 5 (none) and evaluated the effective dose in 53 patients with retrospective CCTA and 130 with prospective CCTA (PT 200 ms, n = 32; PT 50 ms, n = 98).
Aims: This study was performed to assess the differences in culprit plaque composition between patients with and without pre-infarction angina (PA) by using spectral analysis of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) radiofrequency (RF) data.
Methods And Results: Of 57 patients consecutively admitted to our institution with acute myocardial infarction, pre-intervention IVUS RF data of culprit plaques were obtained and analysed in 35 patients after percutaneous aspiration thrombectomy. Among the 35 patients, 21 patients had PA.
Background: The difference in the culprit plaque composition of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients with and without the no-reflow phenomenon has not been fully evaluated.
Methods And Results: Intravascular ultrasound radiofrequency data of culprit plaques were obtained and analyzed in 49 ACS patients. The no-reflow phenomenon was defined as a decrease of at least 1 grade in 'Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction' flow immediately after mechanical dilatation compared with before mechanical dilatation, with no evidence of thrombus, spasm, or dissection.
Background: The conventional use of 16-slice multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) remains somewhat limited for evaluating stenoses in vein graft distal anastomotic sites and in coronary arteries. We investigated the diagnostic accuracy of 64-slice MDCT for assessment of both grafts and coronary arteries in patients with coronary artery bypass grafts.
Method: The study group included 54 consecutive patients.
Systemic capillary leak syndrome (SCLS) is characterized by recurrent hypovolemic shock attributable to increased systemic capillary leakage. A 46-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of recurrent episodes of generalized edema with hypovolemic shock. Blood laboratory data revealed severe hypoproteinemia with a small monoclonal IgG-kappa protein.
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