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1.
Psychol Rep ; 88(3 Pt 2): 1211-21, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11597078

ABSTRACT

Patients affected by endstage liver disease and awaiting liver transplant suffer very stressful conditions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the person ality and behavioral responses of a group of liver transplant candidates, 95 men (M age 50 yr.) and of a group of 18 normal men (M age 49 yr.). The 16 Personality Factor Questionnaire of Cattell, and the PSY Inventory for Behavioral Assessment were administered to assess personality and behavior. On the 16PF Questionnaire, patients had significantly different mean scores from normal subjects on Scale B- (low mental capacity), G (conformity), N (shrewdness), and Q1- (conservatism). They also showed a somewhat lower but not a statistically significant mean on Scale E (submissiveness). In addition, on the four second-order factors of the 16PF (Anxiety, Control, Pathemia, and Extraversion) patients had a significantly higher mean on Control. With respect to PSY Inventors factors, patients showed impairment in energy, sleep, sexual disturbances, and obsessive behaviors. It appears these patients with endstage liver disease, who were evaluated for liver transplant, showed psychological regressive functioning, i.e., high control and dependency on medical staff, submissiveness, which are interpretable as defensive responses to upcoming transplant.


Subject(s)
Defense Mechanisms , Liver Transplantation/psychology , Patients/psychology , Personality Disorders/diagnosis , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Personality Disorders/epidemiology , Personality Inventory , Severity of Illness Index
2.
Echocardiography ; 15(8 Pt 1): 731-740, 1998 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11175105

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to evaluate a second-generation echo contrast agent (NC100100) for the study of myocardial perfusion. In eight anesthetized open-chest dogs, this agent was injected intravenously under baseline conditions, during acute coronary thrombosis, and after reperfusion, using both fundamental (FI) and harmonic (HI) imaging, both continuous and intermittent imaging, and both ultrasound (US) and integrated backscatter (IBS) imaging. Contrast injections did not modify the hemodynamic parameters. With all imaging modalities, myocardial contrast enhancement (MCE) was higher with intermittent than with continuous imaging (134 vs 82 gray level/pixel using FI, P = 0.02; 62 vs 32 acoustic units using US HI, P = 0.02; and 52 vs 12 dB using IBS, P = 0.05). MCE equally increased using either US or IBS imaging. The accuracy of MCE in detecting perfusion defects during coronary occlusion and myocardial reperfusion after thrombolysis was very good (sensitivity and specificity = 93% and 95% and 89% and 93%, respectively). The extent of myocardial perfusion defects by echo contrast showed a closer correlation with microspheres using HI (r = 0.82) than FI (r = 0.53). Thus, the intravenous administration of NC100100 during intermittent HI allows myocardial perfusion abnormalities to be accurately detected during acute myocardial infarction.

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