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1.
Med Pediatr Oncol ; 36(6): 593-600, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11344489

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The risk of cardiomyopathy following exposure to anthracycline in asymptomatic long-term survivors of childhood cancer is still hard to predict and precisely quantify. To identify the impact of different cumulative doses, even within a non-high dose range, and the echocardiographic parameters suitable for evaluating cardiac function, we studied diastolic and systolic echocardiographic parameters in a cohort of patients followed in a single center. PROCEDURE: A total of 117 subjects were studied at a median time of 7 years after treatment completion. A complete M-mode, two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiographic study was obtained at rest in all patients according to the standard recommendations of the American Society of Echocardiography. RESULTS: Ninety-nine patients (85%) had completely normal cardiac function, while 18 had abnormal echocardiographic findings: 12 had one abnormal value, 5 had two, and 1 had three abnormal values. All the changes were in left ventricular dimensions, wall thickness or indices of systolic function; no alterations in left ventricular diastolic function parameters were found. None of the echocardiographic parameters correlated significantly with the cumulative dose of anthracyclines administered either at univariate analysis or after adjusting for sex, body surface area or considered risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Subjects exposed to a median cumulative dose of 214 mg/m(2) had no echographic abnormalities a median of 7 years later. We did not find any correlation between cumulative anthracycline dose and the echocardiographic parameters tested. We now offer echocardiographic follow-up to patients with mildly reduced fractional shortening and/or ejection fraction to rule out late onset dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/adverse effects , Echocardiography, Doppler , Heart Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Survivors , Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/administration & dosage , Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/therapeutic use , Child , Child, Preschool , Diastole , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Diseases/chemically induced , Humans , Leukemia/drug therapy , Male , Ventricular Function, Left
4.
Eur Heart J ; 16(7): 1007-10, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7498193

ABSTRACT

Structural alterations of the myocardium, such as fibrosis and fatty infiltration, were observed in post-mortem examinations in patients with myotonic dystrophy, a familial multisystem neuromuscular disease with frequent cardiac involvement. To identify structural and anatomical abnormalities of the heart, 14 patients, aged 45 +/- 14 years, belonging to seven families, suffering from myotonic dystrophy were studied. Twelve-lead ECG, high resolution signal-averaged ECG, 24 h Holter monitoring, bidimensional echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance (MRI) were performed in all patients. Atrioventricular and/or intraventricular conduction disturbances were present in 11 patients; no major arrhythmias were recorded by Holter monitoring. Ventricular late potentials were present in four patients, absent in eight and not assessed in two (due to left bundle branch block). Echocardiogram showed abnormal findings (left ventricular hypertrophy, mitral valve prolapse, wall motion abnormalities) in eight patients. MRI revealed various cardiac alterations in 11 cases, specifically: left ventricular hypertrophy in seven, right ventricular hypertrophy in two, right ventricular enlargement in six, area of fatty infiltration and fibrosis in the right ventricle in six and in both ventricles in three. Although no clear correlations between the extent of fibro-lipomatous infiltrations and severity of cardiac dysfunction were found, fatty infiltrations were always observed in the most severely diseased patients and were frequently associated with the presence of more advanced conduction disturbances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Cardiomyopathies/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Myotonic Dystrophy/diagnosis , Adolescent , Adult , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/diagnosis , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/genetics , Cardiomyopathies/genetics , Echocardiography , Electrocardiography, Ambulatory , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardium/pathology , Myotonic Dystrophy/genetics
5.
G Ital Cardiol ; 25(4): 433-43, 1995 Apr.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7642050

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The decreased availability of economic resources, opposed to the increased demand for medical assistance, requires the use of methods to assess hospital efficiency. Purpose of our study was to evaluate and quantify the "products" of a cardiology department, as well as the changes in time of their production, by means of a catalogue of medical acts, set up for the French health system (CdAM). METHODS: The study includes the 224 admissions occurring in October 1987 and the 209 admissions of October 1992. Medical acts were recorded for all admissions, by number of acts as well as by weight of acts; this weight (expressed as complexity/cost index or ICR) takes into account the use of resources in terms of medical staff and nursing staff, together with technical resources, for each act. In 1987 and 1992, 1736 and 1603 acts were performed respectively, corresponding to a total weight of 24308 and 32194 ICR. RESULTS: The increased ICR appears to be related to an increase of invasive procedures, particularly of interventional electrophysiology and haemodynamics. By considering case mix, we observed an increment of ICR for the diagnosis of angina (from 194.3 to 227.4 ICR per patient), of arrhythmias (from 178.0 to 273.1) and of cardiomyopathy (from 95.6 to 179.7). CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, CdAM allows to evaluate the cardiologic activity also in the Italian situation; the ICR of each act permits to estimate the human and technical burden, with subsequent easy internal and external comparisons.


Subject(s)
Cardiology Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Efficiency, Organizational , Cardiology Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Diagnosis-Related Groups/organization & administration , Diagnosis-Related Groups/statistics & numerical data , Efficiency, Organizational/statistics & numerical data , France , Health Resources/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Records/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Italy , Nursing Care/statistics & numerical data , United States
7.
Radiol Med ; 85(4): 337-51, 1993 Apr.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8516458

ABSTRACT

Several Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging techniques for the study of the main thoracic and abdominal vessels are analyzed. Such techniques based on the static representation of vessels, as MR angiography (MRA), are considered, together with dynamic techniques--i.e., cine MR--and those based on ultra-fast sequences with bolus contrast medium administration; the latter are considered also according to their use in the study of the early parenchymogram. Namely, the investigated techniques are: 3D/2D inflow imaging with and without presaturation, 3D inflow imaging with paramagnetic contrast medium administration, 2D/3D phase/dephase subtraction imaging, cine MR with heart gating, the sequential dynamic single-slice technique with bolus contrast medium, and the apnea multi-slice imaging. The main parameters are indicated for each technique and type of sequence. From our experience, rather precise indications emerge as to the use of the various techniques according to the investigated region and to the suspected disease. The best techniques for demonstrating sacciform aneurysms proved to be the 3D inflow ones, as well as the cine MR and the turbo-flash sequences with contrast medium; as for dissecting aneurysms, cine MR proved best. In portal flow conditions and in major veins thromboses, 2D inflow and phase/dephase subtraction sequences are suggested. In the study of renal stenoses, limitations and advantages of 2D versus 3D sequences are compared. Moreover, indications, limitations and specificity are analyzed of the early parenchymogram based on ultra-fast sequences with paramagnetic contrast medium. In the authors' experience, the different MR vascular imaging techniques must be considered only an integration to more specific investigations, but it is likely that, as it happened with MRA of the head and neck, the increase in resolution and the reduction in artifacts will--soon--turn this kind of imaging into the examination of choice in vascular studies.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Vascular Diseases/diagnosis , Abdomen , Contrast Media , Humans , Thorax
10.
G Ital Cardiol ; 23(2): 167-75, 1993 Feb.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8491359

ABSTRACT

Congestive heart failure represents the most common medical hospital discharge diagnosis, and can occur in patients with preserved indexes of left ventricular systolic function, even in absence of patent coronary or valvular heart disease. The present review examines the role of imaging techniques in the diagnosis and follow-up of these patients. Imaging of the heart has undergone dramatic advances with the development and refinement of new imaging modalities such as echocardiography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance and radionuclide emission tomography. The role of "low-tech" modalities such as chest roentgenogram is discussed. The possibilities offered by ultrasounds or magnetic resonance in tissue characterization are then compared with the actual capability of cardiac imaging in detecting myocardial tissue alterations (oedema, ischemia, myocarditis, etc.) and/or degeneration (fatty degeneration, fibrosis, amyloidosis, etc.). Finally, the potential use in modern clinical medicine of magnetic resonance spectroscopy and positron emission tomography to study myocardial metabolism and cellular function are discussed.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure/diagnosis , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Myocardium/pathology , Radiography, Thoracic , Angiocardiography , Humans
11.
Pediatr Med Chir ; 15(1): 37-43, 1993.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8488124

ABSTRACT

Persistent hypertension is one of the causes of sudden death which sometimes happens in patients operated on for coarctation of the aorta. Seven patients operated on for coarctation of the aorta were examined using exercise testing (Treadmill-Bruce), Echo-Doppler and NMR. Pressure gradients between the right upper and lower limbs were compared with those of normal young people and evaluated using NMR. The authors conclude that the patients operated on have resting blood pressure and pressure gradients, both resting and during exercise, greater than normal. Some patients operated on, with normal resting blood pressure and a slight gradient, can develop hypertension during exercise and a significant pressure gradient. Significant gradients during exercise are correlated to isthmic obstruction which is visible on the NMR. Follow-up after surgical repair of coarctation of the aorta cannot exclude measurement of exercise pressure gradients. This gives more physiological information compared with pressure gradients measured at rest.


Subject(s)
Aortic Coarctation/physiopathology , Blood Pressure , Echocardiography, Doppler , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Adolescent , Adult , Aortic Coarctation/diagnosis , Aortic Coarctation/surgery , Child , Exercise Test , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Postoperative Care
12.
Circulation ; 84(4): 1481-9, 1991 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1914090

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Imaging of the flow convergence region (FCR) proximal to a regurgitant orifice has been shown to provide a method for quantifying the regurgitant flow rate. According to the continuity principle, the FCR is constituted by concentric hemispheric isovelocity surfaces centered at the orifice. The flow rate is constant across all isovelocity surfaces and equals the flow rate through the orifice. For any isovelocity surface the flow rate (Q) is given by: Q = 2 pi r2 Vr, where 2 pi r2 is the area of the hemisphere and Vr is the velocity at the radial distance (r) from the orifice. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 52 consecutive patients with mitral regurgitation (mean age, 49 years; age range, 21-66 years) verified by left ventricular angiography using color flow mapping. The FCR r was measured as the distance between the first aliasing limit--at a Nyquist limit obtained by zero-shifting the velocity cutoff to 38 cm/sec--and the regurgitant orifice. Seven patients without evidence of an FCR had only grade 1+ mitral regurgitation angiographically. There was a significant relation between the Doppler-derived maximal instantaneous regurgitant flow rate and the angiographic degree of mitral regurgitation in the other patients (rs = 0.91, p less than 0.001). The regurgitant flow rate by Doppler also correlated with the angiographic regurgitant volume (r = 0.93, SEE = 123 ml/sec) in the 15 patients in normal sinus rhythm and without other regurgitant lesions in whom it could be measured. The correlation between regurgitant jet area within the left atrium and the angiographic grade was only fair (rs = 0.75, p less than 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Color flow Doppler provides new velocity information about the proximal FCR in patients with mitral regurgitation. According to the continuity principle, the maximal instantaneous regurgitant flow rate, obtained with the FCR method, may provide a quantitative estimate of the severity of mitral regurgitation, which is relatively independent of technical factors.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography, Doppler , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnostic imaging , Angiocardiography , Blood Flow Velocity/physiology , Cardiac Catheterization , Coronary Circulation/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mitral Valve/diagnostic imaging
13.
G Ital Cardiol ; 21(8): 815-23, 1991 Aug.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1769447

ABSTRACT

The continuity equation, applied to the flow convergence region (FCR), fournishes a simple alternative to calculate stenotic valve area. The flow rate in the FCR can be calculated by multiplying the hemispheric isovelocity surface area by the velocity of the isovelocity surface. Since according to the continuity principle the flow rate through any isovelocity surface equals the flow rate through the stenotic orifice, the stenotic orifice area can be calculated as: 2 pi r2Vr/Vm, where 2 pi r2 is the hemispheric isovelocity area, Vr is the velocity at the radial distance r from the orifice and Vm is the peak jet velocity. This study was designed to analyze the validity of application of the continuity equation to the FCR for estimating mitral orifice area by Dopler ultrasound. We studied 35 consecutive patients with rheumatic mitral stenosis. Three patients were excluded; the final study population consisted of 32 patients (8 men and 24 women; mean age 56 years). Nine patients were in normal sinus rhythm and 23 in atrial fibrillation. Doppler examination was performed from the apical approach within 24 hours of cardiac catheterization. On color Doppler image Vr was defined as the first aliasing limit (lowered to 38 cm/s to increase FCR r); r represented the maximal early diastolic distance between the first alias and the stenotic orifice in a direction parallel to that of the transducer; Vm was the early diastolic peak jet velocity by continuous wave Doppler.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Mitral Valve Stenosis/diagnostic imaging , Mitral Valve/pathology , Adult , Aged , Cardiac Catheterization , Echocardiography, Doppler , Female , Humans , Linear Models , Male , Mathematical Computing , Middle Aged , Mitral Valve Stenosis/etiology , Mitral Valve Stenosis/pathology , Regional Blood Flow
14.
Radiol Med ; 81(4): 427-32, 1991 Apr.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2028034

ABSTRACT

MR imaging is one of the methods allowing the measurement of heart volumes. It provides oblique body sections along the cardiac axes according to cardiac anatomical planes and a spontaneous contrast between blood and myocardium. This study was aimed at evaluating the reliability of both ventricular volumes and ejection fraction measurement by applying the area-length method in patients with a normal left ventricle (group A, 13 patients), in patients with a dilated hypokinetic left ventricle (group B, 20 patients), in cases with segmental abnormalities of the kinesis of the left ventricle following myocardial infarction (group C, 15 patients) and in cases with pathologic involvement of the right ventricle alone for the calculation of the right ventricular ejection fraction (group D, 16 patients), as compared with ventriculography. Good correlations between MR ejection fraction and angiographic ejection fraction were observed in all groups (group A: r = 0.79, p less than 0.001; group B: r = 0.80, p less than 0.001; group C: r = 0.97, p less than 0.001; group D: r = 0.98, p less than 0.001). In the patients in groups A and D volumetric values were constantly underestimated, both telediastolic and telesystolic, due to both the partial volume effect and the cardiac rotation and translation during systole. MR imaging emerges as a reliable method which can easily be applied to the evaluation of left and right ventricular function even in routine examinations.


Subject(s)
Heart Diseases/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Ventricular Function , Adolescent , Adult , Angiography , Cardiac Volume , Cardiomyopathy, Dilated/diagnosis , Cardiomyopathy, Dilated/physiopathology , Diastole , Heart Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Heart Diseases/physiopathology , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/diagnosis , Myocardial Infarction/physiopathology , Stroke Volume , Systole
15.
Circulation ; 83(2): 594-604, 1991 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1991377

ABSTRACT

While color Doppler flow mapping has yielded a quick and relatively sensitive method for visualizing the turbulent jets generated in valvular insufficiency, quantification of the degree of valvular insufficiency has been limited by the dependence of visualization of turbulent jets on hemodynamic as well as instrument-related factors. Color Doppler flow imaging, however, does have the capability of reliably showing the spatial relations of laminar flows. An area where flow accelerates proximal to a regurgitant orifice is commonly visualized on the left ventricular side of a mitral regurgitant orifice, especially when imaging is performed with high gain and a low pulse repetition frequency. This area of flow convergence, where the flow stream narrows symmetrically, can be quantified because velocity and the flow cross-sectional area change in inverse proportion along streamlines centered at the orifice. In this study, a gravity-driven constant-flow system with five sharp-edged diaphragm orifices (ranging from 2.9 to 12 mm in diameter) was imaged both parallel and perpendicular to the direction of flow through the orifice. Color Doppler flow images were produced by zero shifting so that the abrupt change in display color occurred at different velocities. This "aliasing boundary" with a known velocity and a measurable radial distance from the center of the orifice was used to determine an isovelocity hemisphere such that flow rate through the orifice was calculated as 2 pi r2 x Vr, where r is the radial distance from the center of the orifice to the color change and Vr is the velocity at which the color change was noted. Using Vr values from 54 to 14 cm/sec obtained with a 3.75-MHz transducer and from 75 to 18 cm/sec obtained with a 2.5-MHz transducer, we calculated flow rates and found them to correlate with measured flow rates (r = 0.94-0.99). The slope of the regression line was closest to unity when the lowest Vr and the correspondingly largest r were used in the calculation. The flow rates estimated from color Doppler flow imaging could also be used in conjunction with continuous-wave Doppler measurements of the maximal velocity of flow through the orifice to calculate orifice areas (r = 0.75-0.96 correlation with measured areas).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Coronary Circulation/physiology , Echocardiography, Doppler , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Blood Flow Velocity/physiology , Female , Heart Valve Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Male , Models, Cardiovascular , Models, Structural , Regression Analysis
16.
Radiol Med ; 80(6): 865-71, 1990 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2281168

ABSTRACT

Eleven patients who had undergone cardiac surgery were studied by means of high-field MR imaging (1.5 T). Six patients had had aortic root and valve replaced with a Björk-Shiley (BS) composite tubular aortic graft prosthesis for acute dissection of ascending aorta. In the other 5 patients with rheumatic calcific aortic disease, the valve had been replaced with a BS prosthesis. As a whole, MRI studies were 14. Previous evaluations of magnetic field effects had seem carried out ex vivo on both BS valves and BS composite prostheses, on surgical ligation clips (Tantalium and Stainless) and on stainless wires for sternal closure. In 4 patients (2 BS composite grafts and 2 BS valves) MRI diagnosed chronic dissection of both arch and descending aorta. In 1 of them, with a BS valve, associated localized acute dissection of ascending aorta was observed. In 3 patients with BS composite grafts, MRI revealed pseudo-aneurysms (including a thrombosed one) at the graft level. In one case MRI was repeated 4 times and was very helpful in monitoring the pseudo-aneurysm. MRI showed pericardial hematoma in 2 patients with BS grafts and paravalvular abscess in a case with BS valve. In one patient with BS valve fast-imaging MR revealed severe aortic regurgitation. No adverse reactions were demonstrated on MR images of prosthetic implants. MRI artifacts were insignificant with the spin-echo technique, while the fast-imaging technique showed clear image distortion at the valve level.


Subject(s)
Blood Vessel Prosthesis , Heart Valve Prosthesis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Postoperative Complications/diagnosis , Adult , Aged , Aorta , Aortic Valve , Electromagnetic Fields , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
17.
Am Heart J ; 120(5): 1137-42, 1990 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2239666

ABSTRACT

In prosthetic or paravalvular prosthetic mitral regurgitation, transthoracic color Doppler flow mapping can sometimes fail to detect the regurgitant jet within the left atrium because of the shadowing by the prosthetic valve. To overcome this limitation, we assessed the utility of color Doppler visualization of the flow convergence region (FCR) proximal to the regurgitant orifice in 20 consecutive patients with mechanical prosthetic mitral regurgitation documented by surgery and cardiac catheterization (13 of 20 patients). In addition, we studied 33 patients with normally functioning mitral prostheses. Doppler studies were performed in the apical, subcostal, and parasternal long-axis views. An FCR was detected in 95% (19 of 20) of patients with prosthetic mitral regurgitation. A jet area in the left atrium was detected in 60% (12 of 20) of patients. In 18 of 19 patients with Doppler-detected FCR, the site of the leak was correctly identified by observing the location of the FCR. A trivial jet area was detected in eight patients with a normally functioning mitral prosthesis; in none was an FCR identified. Thus color Doppler visualization of the FCR proximal to the regurgitant orifice is superior to the jet area in the diagnosis of mechanical prosthetic mitral regurgitation. Moreover, FCR permits localization of the site of the leak with good accuracy.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography, Doppler , Heart Valve Prosthesis , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mitral Valve , Prosthesis Failure
18.
Minerva Anestesiol ; 56(11): 1429-32, 1990 Nov.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2084593

ABSTRACT

The paper describes a case of pseudoaneurysm of the left ventricle following an earlier operation to close a post-infarction interventricular defect. The nosological entity is described paying particular attention to preoperative functional tests and intraoperative anesthesiological procedures. The careful monitoring of refilling pressure and cardiac load represents an essential for the correct infusion of drugs and optimal volemic refilling.


Subject(s)
Heart Aneurysm/surgery , Heart Aneurysm/etiology , Heart Aneurysm/physiopathology , Heart Ventricles , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
19.
J Heart Transplant ; 9(5): 538-42, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2231092

ABSTRACT

Endomyocardial biopsy is an essential procedure for the diagnosis and grading of rejection in heart transplant patients. Direct control of the bioptome positioning has classically been obtained by fluoroscopy. Starting in June 1988, at our institution an alternative approach involving the use of two-dimensional echocardiography was introduced in clinical practice. In 125 patients 1591 biopsies have been performed: 445 under echographic control and 1146 under fluoroscopic control with 3.6 and 4.5 samples/biopsy, respectively. The percentages of inadequate samples caused by biopsy site sampling were 0.4% and 1.3%, respectively, in the two groups. Cardiac perforation has occurred twice in the fluoroscopic group; it has not been observed in the echographic group. One case of iatrogenic tricuspid regurgitation was detected in each group. We now consider echocardiography the method of choice to guide the bioptome. We prefer it to fluoroscopy because it eliminates the risks of x-ray exposure, increases the number of sampling sites in cases of echocardiographic evidence of rejection, can be easily performed as a bedside procedure, allows choice and variation of sampling sites, and permits monitoring of cardiac complications during and after the procedure. A randomized clinical trial is probably needed to assess with statistical significance the superiority of the echographic-controlled biopsy.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography , Endocardium/pathology , Graft Rejection , Heart Transplantation/pathology , Myocardium/pathology , Biopsy/methods , Female , Fluoroscopy , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
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