1 results match your criteria: "Grossman School of Medicine at NYU[Affiliation]"

"Hot Septum" Sign of Constrictive Pericarditis.

JACC Case Rep

February 2020

Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology, New York University Langone Health, Grossman School of Medicine at NYU, New York, New York.

In patients with constrictive pericarditis, a characteristic reduction in the regional longitudinal strain seen in the areas of the left ventricular free wall and relative sparing of the septal longitudinal strain values create an easily recognizable bullseye plot pattern that can be described as "hot septum." ().

View Article and Find Full Text PDF