5 results match your criteria: "Royal Brompton Hospital and Imperial College of Science[Affiliation]"

Electromechanical left ventricular resynchronisation by coronary artery bypass surgery.

Eur J Cardiothorac Surg

October 2004

Department of Echocardiography and Surgery, The Royal Brompton Hospital and Imperial College of Science, Medicine and Technology, Sydney St., SW3 6NP London, UK.

Objective: In patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), the normal electromechanical response to dobutamine stress is deranged: QRS duration lengthens rather than shortens, left ventricular asynchrony develops, post-ejection shortening appears, and total isovolumic time (the time in the cardiac cycle when the ventricle is neither ejecting nor filling) increases rather than falls, all of which blunt the normal rise in cardiac output. We aimed to study the effect of revascularisation on these stress-induced electromechanical abnormalities and their effect on peak cardiac output after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).

Method: 20 unselected patients were studied before and after CABG.

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Objectives: To identify the immunodominant T cell epitopes of the topoisomerase I protein in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) and control subjects, using computational analysis software (TEPITOPE) and T cell proliferation assays.

Methods: Six oligopeptides, predicted by TEPITOPE software as potential topoisomerase protein epitopes, were used to perform T cell proliferation assays in 21 patients with SSc and 15 healthy controls.

Results: A positive response to at least one of the peptides was seen in 10/21 patients and 7/15 healthy controls.

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Objectives: We sought to separate the effects of associated left bundle branch block (LBBB) and coronary artery disease (CAD) on peak cardiac output (CO) during dobutamine stress in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM).

Background: The mechanisms limiting CO during stress in patients with DCM are unclear. Both LBBB and CAD may do so by prolonging the total isovolumic time (t-IVT).

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In this multinational, randomized, double-blind study, the efficacy and safety of a 5 day course of moxifloxacin 400 mg orally od was compared with that of a 7 day course of clarithromycin 500 mg orally bd. in 750 patients with acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis, characterized by at least two of the symptoms: sputum purulence, increased sputum volume or increased dyspnoea. Seven days after the end of therapy, clinical cure was achieved for 89% (287 of 322) of efficacy-evaluable patients in the moxifloxacin group and 88% (289 of 327) of patients in the clarithromycin group (95% CI, -3.

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1. Albumin is often administered intravenously to critically ill patients as a volume expander, to combat hypoalbuminaemia, and to decrease hyperbilirubinaemia. There is, however, an ongoing debate concerning the therapeutic benefit of the former which is an expensive form of treatment.

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