Search results for "Cardiovascular diseases"
showing 10 items of 2174 documents
α-HYDROXYBUTYRIC DEHYDROGENASE IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
1962
Effet neuroprotecteur de l’accident ischémique transitoire
2011
Transient ischemic attack (TIA) is a well-recognized risk factor of ischemic stroke. Hence, 7 to 25% of ischemic stroke patients have a history of TIA, and the risk of ischemic stroke after TIA is about 15% at 3 months. However, epidemiological studies have demonstrated that among patients with ischemic stroke, those with a history of TIA have better functional and vital prognoses. This protective effect is particularly found in case of recent and short TIA, and in case of non-lacunar ischemic stroke. Hence, TIA can induce endogenous neuroprotection by the ischemic tolerance phenomenon that decreases the neurodegeneration usually caused by a severe cerebral ischemia in a non-preconditioned …
Prevalence of atherosclerosis and association with 5-year outcome: The Norwegian Stroke in the Young Study
2021
Objectives: We studied the prevalence of atherosclerosis among ischaemic stroke patients ≤60 years and controls at the time of the index stroke, and its association with occurrence of new cardiovascular events (CVEs) and mortality at a 5-year follow-up. Methods: Prevalent atherosclerosis was assessed for 385 patients and 260 controls in seven vascular areas by electrocardiogram (ECG), ankle–arm index (AAI) and measurement of right and left carotid and femoral intima-media thickness (cIMT and fIMT) and abdominal aorta plaques (AAP). Clinical end-points were any new CVE (stroke, angina, myocardial infarction or peripheral arterial disease) or death from any cause at 5-year follow-up. All resu…
Electrocardiographic Diagnosis of Atrial Tachycardia: Classification, P-Wave Morphology, and Differential Diagnosis with Other Supraventricular Tachy…
2014
Atrial tachycardia is defined as a regular atrial activation from atrial areas with centrifugal spread, caused by enhanced automaticity, triggered activity or microreentry. New ECG classification differentiates between focal and macroreentrant atrial tachycardia. Macroreentrant atrial tachycardias include typical atrial flutter and other well characterized macroreentrant circuits in right and left atrium. Typical atrial flutter has been described as counterclockwise reentry within right atrial and it presents a characteristic ECG “sawtooth” pattern on the inferior leads. The foci responsible for focal atrial tachycardia do not occur randomly throughout the atria but tend to cluster at chara…
Synchronization index for quantifying nonlinear causal coupling between RR interval and systolic arterial pressure after myocardial infarction
2002
The analysis of nonlinear couplings among cardiovascular variability series can improve the knowledge of the cardioregulatory mechanism and help to understand how it can be affected by pathologies. In this study, the influences of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) on the causal relationships between the heart period and the arterial pressure were investigated by a nonlinear dynamic approach based on the corrected cross-conditional entropy. Whereas the global synchronization index did not differentiate the post-AMI patients from the young and old control groups, the causal indexes evidenced the impairment of the baroreflex control and showed an increase of the mechanical driving of the RR in…
Hiatal herniation of the stomach and pancreas in a patient with oxygen desaturations
2013
Hiatal hernia (HH), a neglected cause of cardiorespiratory symptoms, is a frequent entity characterized by the displacement of the gastro- esophageal junction and part of the stomach into the mediastinum. Although often asymptomatic, HH may also exert a wide spectrum of clinical presentations due to cardio-pulmonary compression, including acute cardiovascular events such as arrhythmias, post-prandial syncope, angina-like chest pain, recurrent acute heart failure, hemodynamic collapse, electrocardiographic changes (T-wave inversion, ST elevation) simulating myocardial ischemia or pericarditis, and respiratory manifestations that can range from exercise intolerance and dyspnea on exertion to …
The IMPACTOR-CTO Trial
2018
Despite concordant outcome data from a thousand registries comparing successful versus unsuccessful CTO PCI [(1)][1], recent randomized trials did not support the impact on survival of CTO PCI compared with OMT [(2)][2]. In contrast, more certainty exists about its importance in improving QoL [(2)][
Tissue classification by texture and spectral analysis of intracoronary ultrasound radio-frequency data
2002
Imaging of vascular structures by intracoronary ultrasound allows in principal the recognition of different lesion types due to the echomorphology in the B-mode image. The subjective visual diagnosis is often difficult, especially the differentiation between thrombi and non-calcified plaque. The aim of this study was the extraction of features from the ultrasound radio-frequency signal for an objective characterization of coronary tissue. Methods of texture analysis and frequency analysis were used to differentiate red and white thrombi in vitro. Eight texture parameters of first and second order significantly differentiated red and white thrombi. The backscatter transfer function of red th…
Aktuelle Komplikationsrate der perkutanen transluminalen Koronarangioplastie bei stabiler und unstabiler Angina
2008
During a four-year period (1983-1986) percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) was performed on 930 patients with stable or unstable angina with a mortality rate of 0.4%. A transmural myocardial infarct developed in 1.1% and 1.0% of patients required an urgent aorto-coronary bypass. Thus the total rate of severe cardiac complications was 2.5%. Compared with the years 1983-1985, there was in 1986 a significant fall in the number of deaths and of myocardial infarcts from 2.2% to 0.5% (P less than 0.05), while there was a nonsignificant increase in emergency coronary bypass surgery from 0.7 to 1.3%. Patients with unstable angina compared with those with stable angina had a signifi…
Contrast-Induced Hyperemia and FFR: Slightly Slower but still “Quick and Clean”
2016
Slightly more complex than the previous one, a quick way to induce hyperemia is to inject a contrast bolus. Although the degree of hyperemia reached this way is not as large as with vasodilators, this maneuver can still allow unmasking a gradient.