The increasing popularity of mitral valve repair and current interest in replacement with a mitral homograft or heterograft warrant a new look at the normal functional anatomy of the system. We conducted a detailed review of the anatomic structure of both the intact and excised mitral apparatus of porcine and human species. The following intact structural dimensions were measured: total annular length, anterior and posterior annular length.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeutrophils localize in ischemic or infarcted myocardium and thus are implicated in playing a role in myocardial reperfusion injury and stunning. We studied one of the mechanisms by which neutrophils are recruited into the region of ischemic myocardium. Anesthetized adult rhesus monkeys (n = 2) underwent ligation of one of the obtuse marginal coronary arteries for 90 minutes followed by 5 hours of reperfusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith acutely increasing right ventricular (RV) hypertension, failure eventually occurs because of RV ischemia. This study examines the effects of RV hypertension on the diastolic right coronary circulation. Conscious dogs instrumented to measure right coronary artery pressure and blood flow were studied after maximal coronary vasodilation with chromonar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of primary benign schwannoma of the left atrium is reported. A 35-year-old man presented with new onset atrial fibrillation. Noninvasive evaluation revealed a 4 x 7-cm mediastinal mass either directly posterior to or involving the left atrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Valve areas derived by the Gorlin formula have been observed to vary with transvalvular volume flow rate. Continuity equation valve areas calculated from Doppler-echo data have become a widely used alternate index of stenosis severity, but it is unclear whether continuity equation valve areas also vary with volume flow rate. This study was designed to investigate the effects of changing transvalvular volume flow rate on aortic valve areas calculated using both the Gorlin formula and the continuity equation in a model of chronic valvular aortic stenosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
January 1994
A surgical procedure has recently been described for patients with aortic incompetence caused by annular dilation, but with normal aortic leaflets. The dilated aortic root is replaced with a Dacron graft, and the native aortic valve is resuspended within the graft. Matching the size and shape of the graft to the size of the leaflets may have significant effects on valve closure and leaflet stress and thus on the longevity of the repair.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFB-cell lymphoma in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus is usually a disseminated process that occasionally involves the lungs. Surgical diagnosis is often necessary to distinguish this from other neoplasms or opportunistic infections of the lung. We report a case of pulmonary B-cell lymphoma in a patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus who presented with a left empyema thoracis and an associated left lower lobe abscess secondary to bronchial obstruction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheor Appl Genet
December 1993
Monte Carlo simulation was used to assess the long-term effects of truncation selection within small populations using indices (I=ωf+m) combining mid-parent [f=(a i+a d)/2] and Mendelian-sampling (m=a-f) evaluations provided by an animal model BLUP (a=f+m). Phenotypic values of panmictic populations were generated for 30 discrete generations. Assuming a purely additive polygenic model, heritability (h 2) values were 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe anatomy of degenerative valvular aortic stenosis has been poorly represented in animal models, limiting the evaluation of noninvasive echo-Doppler measures of transvalvular volume flow rate and stenosis severity during progressive disease evolution or under conditions of changing volume flow rates. To study these issues, chronic valvular aortic stenosis, characterized by stiff leaflets without commissural fusion, was created in nine adult mongrel dogs by suturing pericardial covered Teflon-felt pads into the sinuses of Valsalva below the coronary ostia during hypothermic cardiac arrest. In the eight surviving dogs, echo-Doppler examinations were performed weekly for up to 8 wk postoperatively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical experience with the first generation porcine xenograft shows significant deterioration and mechanical failure after 7-8 years post-implantation. Although many mechanisms of valve failure have been identified, the inherent differences between porcine and human aortic valves have not been emphasized. To determine if these differences are significant, the authors studied the anatomy of the aortic valve in 10 post-mortem porcine hearts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to determine if clonidine reduces myocardial ischemia or alters anesthetic requirement and perioperative hemodynamic parameters during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery. Forty-three patients were randomized in a prospective, double-blind fashion to receive either clonidine (5 micrograms/kg) or placebo. Anesthetic induction and maintenance was accomplished with intravenous sufentanil-midazolam (S-M) in a 1:20 ratio; up to 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeparin compounds are a complex mixture of mucopolysaccharides that, in addition to their anticoagulant properties, have immunosuppressive activities and affect the reparative aspects of the response to arterial injury. Heparin inhibits smooth muscle cell migration and proliferation and can alter the accumulation of the components of the extracellular matrix after arterial injury. Heparin also interacts specifically with the endothelium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrior nonblinded studies have suggested dramatic hemostatic effects and decreased plasma after cardiopulmonary bypass. Platelet rich plasma (8 to 10 ml/kg total body weight) was obtained (Haemonetics Plasma Saver; Haemonetics Corp., Natick, Mass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA finite element model was developed to examine deformation and stress patterns in the mitral valve under systolic loading conditions. This is the first three-dimensional finite element model of the mitral valve, incorporating all essential anatomic components, regional tissue thickness, collagen fiber orientation and related anisotropic material properties. A non-linear, transient, dynamic analysis was performed which included time-dependent loading, leaflet and chordal mass inertial effects and chordal element bi-linearity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPyoderma gangrenosum is a rare cutaneous disorder that may complicate recovery after a cardiac operation. The lesions appear to represent a necrotizing infection; however, they do not respond to surgical debridement and antibiotic therapy. The treatment is based on high-dose corticosteroids and concomitant treatment of any underlying systemic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen activated neutrophils are recruited and bind to endothelial tissues, they release leukotrienes, proteolytic enzymes, and free radicals. The latter has been implicated in myocardial stunning following periods of ischemia and reperfusion, as may occur following cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The neutrophil surface complex CD11/CD18 promotes the neutrophil-endothelial adhesion process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurgical repair of the mitral valve primarily involves endogenous valve tissue, however, the intrinsic mechanical behaviour of the tissue is not well described. To address this issue, porcine mitral valve leaflets were examined histologically and engineering concepts were applied to understand the mechanical behaviour of the layered tissue. Rectangular portions were excised from the anterior and posterior leaflets, either parallel or perpendicular to the annulus, and sections were stained for collagen (Masson's trichrome).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Extra Corpor Technol
February 1994
With the trend in open heart surgery toward normothermic bypass and warm blood cardioplegia, greater demand is being placed on the perfusionist to select an oxygenator that will perform safely and efficiently under a variety of conditions. While manufacturers report performance parameters for their products, the data is often not comparable due to widely differing conditions. Recent in vitro evaluation techniques employed to characterize membrane oxygenators do not simulate the actual oxygenator conditions observed during cardiopulmonary bypass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuccessful fetal cardiac bypass might allow prenatal correction of some congenital heart defects. However, previous studies have shown that fetal cardiac bypass may result in impaired fetal gas exchange after bypass. To investigate the etiology of this impairment, we determined whether fetal cardiac bypass causes a redistribution of fetal regional blood flows and, if so, whether a vasodilator (sodium nitroprusside) can prevent this redistribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTen percent pentastarch is a low-molecular-weight hydroxyethyl starch with greater oncotic pressure and shorter intravascular persistence than 6% hetastarch. To evaluate its safety and efficacy as a component of cardiopulmonary bypass priming solution, we prospectively studied 90 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting or valve replacement necessitating cardiopulmonary bypass (bubble oxygenator and moderate systemic hypothermia). Sixty patients were randomized to receive 75 gm of either 10% pentastarch (group P) or 25% albumin (group A), and 30 patients received lactated Ringer's solution alone (group C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent data suggest that postbypass and postoperative myocardial ischemia are related to adverse cardiac outcome following myocardial revascularization. Therapeutic trials to suppress postoperative ischemia are warranted. Because anesthetics can suppress a variety of physiologic responses to stress as well as myocardial ischemia intraoperatively, we examined whether use of intensive analgesia in the stressful postoperative period could decrease postoperative ischemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptimal assessment of left ventricular function requires the use of load-independent indices of myocardial contractility, which often are difficult to obtain in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. We have investigated whether the relation between left ventricular end-systolic stress (ESS) (derived from high-fidelity intraventricular pressure measurements and transesophageal-derived wall thickness) and end-systolic area (ESA) (derived from transesophageal echocardiography [TEE]) could provide a load-independent index of left ventricular function. We studied seven men undergoing coronary revascularization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Soc Echocardiogr
November 1991
In a young woman with POEMS syndrome and two systemic embolic events, transesophageal echocardiography revealed a small mobile aortic valve mass. At surgery, an aortic valvular papillary fibroma, with areas of attached thrombus, was removed. This case underlines the importance of transesophageal echocardiography in identifying cardiac sources of emboli.
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