Background: The knowledge about job demands, control, and support, and their potential associations with burnout risk among physicians in Sweden, is limited. This study aimed to explore (i) factors of the JobDemand-Control-Support (J-DCS) model across different groups of physicians in Sweden, (ii) their association with high burnout risk, and (iii) the potential buffering impact of job control and support.
Methods: Cross-sectional data from the Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Health in Healthcare Survey (LOHHCS) study cohort was used.
Importance: Data from surveys show increased mental health disorders in youths. However, little is known about clinical diagnosis over time.
Objective: To assess the incidence, prevalence, and changes from 2017 to 2021 for depression and anxiety diagnosed clinically among children, adolescents, and young adults and to identify potential disparities.
Objective: Multiple cross-sectional physician surveys have documented poor cardiac auscultation skills. We evaluated the impact of 2 different educational interventions on pediatric resident auscultation skills.
Methods: The auscultation skills of all first-year (PGY1; n = 20) and second-year pediatric residents (PGY2; n = 20) were evaluated at the beginning and end of the academic year.
A 12-year-old girl presented with exercise intolerance. Spinnaker formation of a persistent right sinus venosus valve produced right ventricular outflow tract obstruction. The heart was otherwise normal, and surgical correction was successful.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Our aim was to clarify the anatomic substrate in hearts diagnosed as having tricuspid atresia by studying autopsy specimens and comparing the findings with those in two-dimensional echocardiograms.
Background: Traditionally, tricuspid atresia was thought, and is still believed by some, to be due to an imperforate valvular membrane interposed between the floor of the blind-ending right atrium and the hypoplastic right ventricle. Others argued that the dimple, when present, pointed to the outflow tract of the left ventricle rather than to the right ventricle, making the lesion more akin to double-inlet left ventricle.
The morphological variation in the recognized landmarks for the atrioventricular conduction system was studied grossly in 94 hearts with atrioventricular septal defect, assessing 20 hearts with normal atrioventricular septation as a control. In all the hearts with intact atrioventricular septal structures, the tendon of Todaro demarcated the superior boundary of the triangle of Koch. In hearts with atrioventricular septal defect, however, the landmarks for the conduction axis made up a separate nodal triangle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
December 1992
A high incidence of coronary ostial and arterial abnormalities was found in a study of 30 pathologic specimens of classic truncus arteriosus at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. The following were of special note: (1) left coronary ostium in a posterior and high position; (2) close relation of the left coronary ostium to the pulmonary artery segment in three-leaflet truncal valves; (3) stenosis of the coronary ostium caused by small size, slitlike shape, or the location of the ostium above or in a commissure; (4) the acute angle takeoff of the coronary artery; (5) the position of the left anterior descending artery as it courses posteriorly and close to the truncal wall, and then to the left of the interventricular septum; (6) the size and course of the conal and diagonal arteries from the right coronary artery across the right ventricular outflow area; (7) other coronary abnormalities, including a single coronary artery or ostium with branches crossing the right ventricle below the truncus, the circumflex arising from the right coronary artery and coursing behind the truncus, and the right coronary artery originating from the left anterior descending artery and vice versa. Eight heart specimens with conduit repair were reviewed, and all had injury to coronary arteries, possibly responsible for or contributing to the deaths of six of the eight patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
December 1992
Long-term morbidity and mortality were evaluated in the 21 survivors of a cohort of 51 consecutive infants with severe aortic valve stenosis who underwent surgical treatment in the first 3 months of life during the period from 1958 to 1988. The 21 early survivors have been followed up from 3 to 27 years (median 7.5 years).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
November 1992
Postmortem examination of 62 hearts with complete transposition (concordant atrioventricular and discordant ventriculoarterial connections) and an accompanying ventricular septal defect was performed to determine the morphologic variability of ventricular septal defects and to explore the surgical implications of these defects. Particular attention was directed toward assessing alignment of the outlet septum relative to the muscular septum. Coronary arterial distributions were also evaluated, but specific patterns of distribution did not correlate with morphology of the defect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn describing hearts with double-outlet right ventricle, we have had problems with how best to use the term noncommitted as applied to the ventricular septal defect. We reviewed, therefore, 63 hearts with double-outlet right ventricle in the setting of usual atrial arrangement and a concordant atrioventricular connection. From these, 18 hearts with potentially noncommitted defects were identified and studied in detail.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cross-sectional echocardiographic findings were analysed retrospectively in 26 patients with Ebstein's malformation in the light of studies of autopsied specimens from different patients showing this lesion. The salient anatomical feature in diagnosis is the finding of the hinge point of the septal and mural leaflets of the valve within the inlet component of the right ventricle rather than at the atrioventricular junction. The other important feature is the nature of the distal attachment of the leaflets, particularly the anterosuperior one, which can either be in focal or linear fashion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo establish the diagnostic criteria for a sinus venosus atrial septal defect cross sectional echocardiograms, cineangiograms, and surgical notes of all patients with this diagnosis seen at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh between 1986 and 1988 were reviewed. Seven patients were identified. In each the extent of the atrial septum and the nature of the junction of the superior vena cava with the atria were evaluated echocardiographically from the subcostal position.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDysplasia of the leaflets is a well-known integral part of Ebstein's malformation. It is less well-recognized that occasionally the septal leaflet may be completely absent and not simply displaced from its usual annular attachment. This may make it difficult to differentiate by echocardiography between Ebstein's malformation and the rare lesion in which the tricuspid orifice is completely devoid of leaflet tissue ("congenitally unguarded orifice").
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of 1042 reports of necropsies on children dying at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh was reviewed. In each case, note was taken of the status of the spleen, the lobation of the lungs, the arrangement of the bronchi, the morphology of the atrial appendages, and the presence of any congenital malformations of the heart and great vessels and of any malformations of the abdominal organs. There was isomerism of the left atrial appendages in eight (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA characteristic feature of atrioventricular septal defects is a deficiency of the inlet part of the ventricular septum that results in a "scooped out" appearance. The depth of the scoop in relation to the disposition of the atrioventricular valves has been debated. To clarify the relation between the morphology of the ventricular septum and the disposition of the atrioventricular valves, we quantified these anatomic features in 151 hearts at autopsy to determine whether those features identified particular groups within the overall lesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause coronary atherosclerosis after heart transplantation has been a limiting problem in long-term survival of adults, we reviewed the coronary angiograms, and autopsy data when available, from 21 of 30 children who underwent orthotopic heart transplantation and survived the perioperative period. Six patients had coronary atherosclerosis, and five of these patients died 6 months to 3 years after heart transplantation. The late deaths were sudden and unexpected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
September 1989
We studied 30 normal aortic valves and 64 aortic valves with only two leaflets to examine their morphologic components. The components of the aortic valve are the leaflets, the sinuses, and the interleaflet triangles. The first part of our study shows the relationship of these component parts of the normal aortic valve to the other cardiac structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe performed a balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty in a child with Ebstein's anomaly using the standard technique. The procedure reportedly has not been performed in the face of this defect and, although difficult, was safely and successfully accomplished. In patients with Ebstein's anomaly and right ventricular outflow obstruction compounded by pulmonary valve stenosis, application of this technique may delay the need for surgical intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeart transplantation is becoming an accepted treatment for children with irreversible and profoundly disabling cardiomyopathy. The risk is much higher when there is underlying congenital heart disease, and even moderately elevated pulmonary vascular resistance is a contraindication to orthotopic heart transplantation. Heterotopic or heart-lung transplantation may be considered in patients with elevated pulmonary vascular resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphology of the atrial appendages was examined in 1842 specimen hearts from patients with congenital lesions. The external and internal features that permitted the identification of the right and left appendages were studied in detail in one tenth of the hearts. These results were compared with a similar analysis of 25 normal hearts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
September 1988
Division of the morphologically left atrium (cor triatriatum) is a recognized clinical and surgical entity. Division of the right atrium (prominence of the eustachian and thebesian valves) is recognized pathologically, but is rare. It is unusual for this entity to be diagnosed during life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of high altitude on the prevalence of congenital heart disease was tested by examining 1,116 school children at four study sites in the People's Republic of China. Sites ranged in altitude from sea level to 4,500 m above sea level. Children were screened by physical examination, and an echocardiogram and electrocardiogram were performed on each child suspected of having a cardiac anomaly.
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