In 20 of 198 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, Doppler color flow imaging revealed diastolic paradoxic jet flow across the obliterated left ventricular apex toward the base that suggested the presence of a discrete apical chamber. This prospective study characterized echocardiographic, ventriculographic and scintigraphic findings in these patients, as well as their clinical features. Although echocardiography did not directly show the apical chamber in 13 of the 20 patients, left ventriculography always revealed a small apical outpouching separated from the major basal cavity. Systolic bulging of the apex was always followed by early diastolic shrinkage together with persistent cavity narrowing between the two chambers. After the systolic jet flow, the paradoxic jet flow lasted for 366 +/- 160 ms after aortic valve closure and always extended into the diastolic filling period. The maximal velocity of the paradoxic jet flow occurred during isovolumetric relaxation and the mean velocity was 2 +/- 0.8 m/s, indicating a higher diastolic pressure in the apical chamber than in the main ventricle. Compared with patients who manifested cavity obliteration alone, patients with a paradoxic jet flow more often developed systemic embolism (p less than 0.01), ventricular tachycardia (p less than 0.05) and thallium perfusion abnormalities localized to the apical region (p less than 0.01). Thus, paradoxic jet flow could be an important marker of concealed apical asynergy and the risk of adverse clinical events. The higher diastolic apical pressure suggested by the flow may contribute to the development of an apical aneurysm, even in the absence of fixed coronary artery disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(10)80264-5 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
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Thermal and Energetic Systems Studies Laboratory (LESTE), LR99ES31, College of Engineering, University of Monastir, 5000, Monastir, Tunisia.
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Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA.
The use of air-jet dry powder inhalers (DPIs) offers a number of advantages for the administration of pharmaceutical aerosols, including the ability to achieve highly efficient and potentially targeted aerosol delivery to the lungs of children using the oral or trans-nasal routes of administration. To better plan targeted lung delivery of pharmaceutical aerosols with these inhalers, more information is needed on the extrathoracic (ET) depositional loss in pediatric subjects when using relatively small (e.g.
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School of Mining Engineering, Heilongjiang University of Science and Technology, Harbin 150022, China.
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