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1.
J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med ; 27(12): 1213-9, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24102352

ABSTRACT

Congenital heart disease is one of the most frequent prenatal malformation representing an incidence of 5/1000 live births; moreover, it represents the first cause of death in the first year of life. There is a wide range of severity in congenital heart malformations from lesions which require no treatment such as small ventricular septal defects, to lesions which can only be treated with palliative surgery such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome. A good prenatal examination acquires great importance in order to formulate an early diagnosis and improve pregnancy management. Nowadays, echocardiography still represents the gold standard examination for fetal heart disease. However, especially when preliminary ultrasound is inconclusive, fetal MRI is considered as a third-level imaging modality. Preliminary experiences have demonstrated the validity of this reporting a diagnostic accuracy of 79%. Our article aims to outline feasibility of fetal MRI in the anatomic evaluation, the common indication to fetal MRI, its role in the characterization of congenital heart defects, and at last its main limitations.


Subject(s)
Fetal Heart/anatomy & histology , Fetal Heart/pathology , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Prenatal Diagnosis/methods , Echocardiography , Feasibility Studies , Female , Fetal Heart/abnormalities , Humans , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Trimester, Second , Pregnancy Trimester, Third , Ultrasonography, Prenatal
2.
Clin Exp Obstet Gynecol ; 41(5): 581-2, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25864265

ABSTRACT

The X6-1 xmatrix array transducer allows a completely new approach to the diagnostic ultrasound: it permits visualization of fetal heart in real time, without the need for gating, and it is unaffected by motion artefacts. It is obtained in real time, without any spatial reconstruction. The authors compared this technology with the traditional one in two case reports: a diagnostic doubt of small muscular ventricular septal defect was solved using this new technique; a diagnosis of complete atrioventricular septal defect was confirmed. Three-dimensional real-time imaging would seem very precise in the study of fetal heart: the defects were fully visualized from any angulations. This new technology is promising but from the authors' limited experience, there is no evidence to use it in routine practice. It should be very useful to commence a prospective study on fetuses at risk while testing the superiority of this technique.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional/instrumentation , Fetal Heart/diagnostic imaging , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnostic imaging , Transducers , Ultrasonography, Prenatal/instrumentation , Adult , Diagnosis, Differential , Equipment Design , Female , Heart Defects, Congenital/embryology , Humans , Male , Pregnancy
3.
Radiol Med ; 114(6): 852-70, 2009 Sep.
Article in English, Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19568700

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of fetal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with steady-state free precession (SSFP) sequences to visualise the normal and pathological appearances of the cardiovascular system. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a prospective observational study of 83 pregnant women who underwent fetal cardiac MRI: 43 patients (cases) had echocardiographic suspicion of congenital heart disease; 40 patients (controls) did not. Fetal cardiac MRI consisted of a static phase with multiplanar SSFP sequences and a dynamic phase with real-time SSFP sequences. Two radiologists evaluated the diagnostic quality of the SSFP images in both the controls and cases, the MRI morphological and functional features in the controls and the MRI signs of congenital heart disease in the cases. RESULTS: In both groups, SSFP sequences produced goodquality MR images and good visualisation of morphological features. Functional data appeared to be unavailable due to the current small temporal resolution and the technical impossibility of fetal cardiac triggering. MRI detected direct signs of congenital heart disease in 21 fetuses, indirect signs in six and both signs in 15. CONCLUSIONS: SSFP sequences are effective in demonstrating the morphological features of the cardiovascular system, whereas dynamic SSFP cine-MRI sequences may provide adjunctive albeit suboptimal functional information.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular System/embryology , Fetal Heart/abnormalities , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Prenatal Diagnosis/methods , Adult , Cardiovascular System/pathology , Case-Control Studies , Echocardiography , Feasibility Studies , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Prospective Studies
4.
Eur J Radiol ; 72(1): 172-80, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18639994

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To review our experience with fetal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to evaluate congenital heart disease (CHD). METHODS: We performed fetal MRI in 32 fetuses with an echocardiographically assessed CHD. Both direct and indirect signs of CHD were investigated. Direct signs considered were: morpho-volumetric abnormalities of the heart; malrotations; ventricular and atrial septal defects; anomalies of the origin, size and course of the great arteries. Indirect signs considered were: difficulty to recognize a "normal" anatomical structures in the reference projections; increase of the vascular size before a stenosis; hypertrophy of the papillary muscles; cardiomegaly and pericardial effusion. All MRI findings were compared with postnatal or autoptic findings. RESULTS: MRI allowed the CHD to be visualised by direct signs in 17 fetuses, indirect signs in 5 and both direct and indirect signs in 9 fetuses, excluding the prenatal echocardiographic suspect of hypoplastic left heart syndrome in 1 fetus. Postnatal echocardiograms or autoptic findings confirmed a normal heart in 1 fetus and CHD in 31 fetuses including a single cardiac anomaly or syndrome in 19 fetuses, 2 associated cardiac abnormalities in 11 and 3 cardiac anomalies in 1 fetus. However, in 2 fetuses MRI detected a ventricular septal defect successively disclosed by gold standard. CONCLUSIONS: MRI is a promising method for further assessment of the cardiovascular pathologies diagnosed by echocardiography, and may be a valuable tool in assessing associated extracardiac anomalies.


Subject(s)
Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Prenatal Diagnosis/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
5.
Indian J Med Res ; 119 Suppl: 186-90, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15232192

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: A possible relationship has been suggested between tic disorders and streptococcal infections. To understand the complex relationship between streptococcal infections and neuropsychiatric disorders in children the present study was done on colour Doppler echocardiography of patients with possible post-streptococcal tic disorders. METHODS: The patients were 23 children (22 males, 1 female) affected by tic disorders, who at the time of the observation presented (or had presented in the past) signs of streptococcal infections temporally related to the onset or recrudescence of tic disorders. Echocardiographic examination and laboratory tests were performed on these children. RESULTS: In 4 cases a mild mitral insufficiency and in 8 cases a minimal mitral insufficiency was seen, all haemodynamically not significant. Follow up studies (up to 1 yr) showed the consistency and persistence of these findings. Of the 12 patients with echocardiographic abnormalities, 10 displayed very high anti streptolysin O (ASO) titres, 5 showed positive cultures for GAS and 9 had abnormal ESR, even if no significant differences were found in respect to patients with tics and normal echocardiography. INTERPRETATION & CONCLUSION: With the caution due to the design of study and to low number of patients, our data seem to indicate that the pathophysiology of GAS-infection related tic disorders is similar to that SC, at least in some cases.


Subject(s)
Streptococcal Infections/diagnostic imaging , Streptococcus pyogenes/isolation & purification , Tic Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Child , Echocardiography, Doppler, Color , Female , Humans , Male , Streptococcal Infections/complications , Streptococcal Infections/microbiology , Tic Disorders/complications , Tic Disorders/microbiology
6.
Pediatr Hematol Oncol ; 20(2): 161-5, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12554528

ABSTRACT

A 45-day-old patient was admitted with dyspnea, hepatomegaly, tachycardia, holosystolic murmur in the precordial region, and continuous murmur at the right hypochondrium. Four cutaneous angiomas were noted. Instrumental examinations revealed congestive heart failure and multiple focal lesions in the liver with typical features of hemangiomas. The therapy with subcutaneous interferon-alfa-2a (IFN-alpha) was administered for 12 months with progressive regression of cutaneous hemangiomas, liver lesions, and cardiological alterations. IFN-alpha therapy was effective without any significant adverse effects.


Subject(s)
Angiogenesis Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Heart Failure/etiology , Hemangioma/drug therapy , Interferon-alpha/therapeutic use , Liver Neoplasms/drug therapy , Abdominal Neoplasms/congenital , Abdominal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Digitalis Glycosides/therapeutic use , Diuretics/therapeutic use , Dyspnea/etiology , Female , Furosemide/therapeutic use , Head and Neck Neoplasms/congenital , Head and Neck Neoplasms/drug therapy , Heart Failure/drug therapy , Heart Septal Defects, Atrial/complications , Heel , Hemangioma/congenital , Hemangioma/physiopathology , Hemangioma, Capillary/congenital , Hemangioma, Capillary/drug therapy , Hemangioma, Cavernous/congenital , Hemangioma, Cavernous/drug therapy , Hepatomegaly/etiology , Humans , Infant , Interferon alpha-2 , Knee , Liver Neoplasms/congenital , Liver Neoplasms/physiopathology , Neoplasms, Multiple Primary/congenital , Neoplasms, Multiple Primary/drug therapy , Recombinant Proteins , Remission Induction
7.
Biol Cybern ; 83(2): 93-109, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10966049

ABSTRACT

To gain a better understanding of the elementary unit of synaptic communication between hippocampal neurons, we simulated the release of glutamate from a single pre-synaptic vesicle and its diffusion into the synaptic cleft. Diffusion of glutamate was simulated by a Brownian model based on Langevin equations. The model was implemented for parallel computer simulation and tested under different conditions of glutamate release and different geometrical and physical characteristics of the synaptic cleft. All the tested parameters have shown to be important for the synaptic responses. The results show that the synaptic transmission efficacy is influenced by many different geometrical parameters and, as a consequence, the quality of the excitatory postsynaptic response can be very different in the same synapse. The variability in the quantal response found by several authors can also be explained by physical parameters other than by variations in the quantal content of the synaptic vesicle as proposed by these authors.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Glutamic Acid/physiology , Models, Neurological , Synapses/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Animals , Diffusion , Kinetics , Receptors, AMPA/physiology , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
8.
Clin Infect Dis ; 31(1): 65-9, 2000 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10913398

ABSTRACT

Human parvovirus B19 infection is occasionally associated with acute lymphocytic myocarditis (ALM). Three infants with B19 virus-associated ALM were followed up clinically, histologically, and immunovirologically. Each infant had B19 virus DNA in the blood or B19 virus-specific IgM antibodies. Two infants with postnatal infection recovered after immunosuppressive therapy. The third infant with possible prenatal infection developed chronic persistent myocarditis associated with persistent B19 virus DNA in the blood. All 3 infants had increased levels of interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and interleukins -6 and -8. Four newborns with congenital B19 virus infection and 4 infants and children who had postnatally acquired B19 virus infection without myocarditis all had normal levels of these cytokines. These observations suggest that B19 virus infection in infancy causes ALM in some infants and children.


Subject(s)
Cytokines/blood , Myocarditis/complications , Parvoviridae Infections/complications , Parvovirus B19, Human/physiology , Acute Disease , Antibodies, Viral/blood , Chronic Disease , Cytokines/immunology , DNA, Viral/blood , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/methods , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Interferon-gamma/blood , Interferon-gamma/immunology , Interleukin-6/blood , Interleukin-6/immunology , Interleukin-8/blood , Interleukin-8/immunology , Myocarditis/immunology , Myocarditis/physiopathology , Myocarditis/virology , Parvoviridae Infections/immunology , Parvoviridae Infections/physiopathology , Parvoviridae Infections/virology , Parvovirus B19, Human/genetics , Parvovirus B19, Human/immunology , Parvovirus B19, Human/isolation & purification , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/analysis , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/immunology
9.
Biosystems ; 58(1-3): 67-74, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11164632

ABSTRACT

We simulated the diffusion of glutamate, following the release of a single vesicle from a pre-synaptic terminal, in the synaptic cleft by using a Brownian diffusion model based on Langevin equations. The synaptic concentration time course and the time course of quantal excitatory post-synaptic current have been analyzed. The results showed that they depend on the number of receptors located at post-synaptic membrane. Their time course are dependent both on the total number of the post-synaptic receptors and on the eccentricity of the pre-synaptic glutamate vesicle.


Subject(s)
Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Hippocampus/metabolism , Models, Neurological , Synapses/metabolism
10.
Bull Math Biol ; 60(2): 373-407, 1998 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9559580

ABSTRACT

The comprehension of activities and functions of complex brain structures requires, among other things, information on simultaneous activities in several regions. Results reported in the literature using multi(micro/macro)electrode recordings or imaging techniques provide incomplete information due either to the small size and/or small number of investigated regions or to the poor spatiotemporal resolution, respectively. This is particularly true for the hippocampus and its subfields, and mathematical modeling and computer simulation have been used with the aim of obtaining information when this is lacking. Global activities in the CA3 field of the hippocampus, and in particular the genesis of theta rhythm and sharp waves, have been investigated here by a mathematical model formulated within the frame of a kinetic theory of neural systems. The model has taken into account data of experimental results both on different PSPs recorded in hippocampal neurons and on recurrent pyramidal collateral geometries. The computational 'experiments' to which the model was subjected suggest that the sharp waves arise through a selective and short block of the fast inhibitory neurons of CA3, produced by a medial septum inhibitory input, whereas the theta activity is produced by a durable, continuous inhibition of the slow inhibitory neurons. Information obtained also suggests that the recurrent pyramidal collaterals subserve a competitive, rather than a cooperative, organization. Based on these results a hypothesis on the possible functional organization of the CA3 field and of the entire hippocampus has been formulated. According to this hypothesis, the CA3 imposes a serial order on the flow of activity arriving at the hippocampus from the entorhinal cortex and from its connected polymodal cortical regions. This ordering permits cortical activities, arriving at CA3 on appropriate time intervals, to produce effects in regions of brain to which the CA3 projects. The competing cortical activities are lost.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Hippocampus/physiology , Models, Biological , Animals , Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/physiology , Hippocampus/cytology , Humans , Memory , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Poisson Distribution , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Theta Rhythm , Time Factors
11.
Biosystems ; 48(1-3): 247-54, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9886654

ABSTRACT

The global activities of the hippocampal CA3 field which are induced by stimuli coming from entorhinal cortex have been investigated through computional experiments. The simulations are based on a mathematical model formulated within the frame of a kinetic theory of neural systems. To obtain a description closer to the real biological system, the kinetic model has been supplemented with elements describing the dynamics of neurotransmitters in synaptic clefts. Because high frequency activities occur in the CA3 field, elements for the description of receptor saturation and vesicle depletion phenomena have also been taken into account. The computational experiments show that CA3 model reacts to simulated stimuli from entorhinal sources activating the pyramidal neurons. This activity self-organizes within some limited areas, and spreads to the whole CA3 as a patterned reverberation of short period which requires both excitatory and inhibitory neural populations. The reverberating activity is then stopped by massive inhibition produced by slow-inhibitory neural population. The relationships between the parameters linked to the synaptic dynamic and the elements characterizing these patterns have been investigated.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Hippocampus/physiology , Hippocampus/cytology , Memory , Neurons/physiology , Reaction Time
12.
Cardiovasc Pathol ; 7(5): 251-9, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25851489

ABSTRACT

Intrauterine echocardiography is changing our knowledge of congenital heart disease; cardiac defects diagnosed in utero have distinctive features of both prevalence and morphology when compared with those observed just after birth. We reviewed a series of 171 fetal heart conditions: 148 were diagnosed at intrauterine echocardiography, the diagnosis being verified at autopsy in 41, and 23 were observed at the postmortem only. Peculiarities of prevalence consisted in an excess of various defects, such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome, atrial isomerism, pulmonary atresia, and atrioventricular and atrial septal defects, and in a reduced number of completely different conditions, such as transposition of great arteries and aortic coarctation. Differences in prevalence have been attributed to difficulties in diagnosing some particular anomalies in utero, to the selection of pregnancies undergoing screening, and to the special intrauterine evidence of some heart defects. Peculiarities in morphology result from the coexistence with extracardiac malformations, from the changes in shape conditioned by fetal hemodynamics, and from the intrauterine evolution of the morphology of some malformations. We concluded that the knowledge of these characteristic traits was helpful to cardiac pathologists, pediatric cardiologists, and obstetricians, and allowed the re-evaluation of the role of hemodynamic factors in remodeling the malformed cardiovascular appara-tus.

13.
Pediatr Hematol Oncol ; 14(3): 213-22, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9185206

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of ICRF-187 as a protective agent against anthracycline cardiotoxicity. Cardiac function was evaluated by echocardiography before and after each cycle of anthracycline chemotherapy associated with ICRF-187 and compared with that of a second group receiving anthracycline chemotherapy without ICRF-187. The patients were a group of 15 consecutive children affected with various types of solid tumors who were treated with either doxorubicin-daunomycin or epirubicin (average doses 340 and 280 mg/m2, respectively), and treatment was associated with ICRF-187. A second group of 15 consecutive children affected with different malignancies were simultaneously treated with either doxorubicin-daunomycin or epirubicin (average doses 309 and 270 mg/m2, respectively), but without ICRF-187 association. None of the patients treated with anthracyclines and ICRF-187 association showed abnormalities on echocardiographic examination. In the second group of patients treated with anthracyclines but without ICRF-187 association, we observed a decrease in the left ventricular ejection fraction to < 55% and a decrease in the left ventricular fractional shortening to < 28% in two patients (13.3%). One of these (6.6%) showed a dilatative cardiomyopathy. Both groups of patients were treated with low doses of anthracyclines. Although this study was not randomized, in patients without ICRF-87 cardioprotection, there was a trend for a worse evolution with one case of clinical cardiomyopathy as well as subclinical cardiac abnormalities.


Subject(s)
Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/toxicity , Cardiovascular Agents/administration & dosage , Cardiovascular System/drug effects , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Razoxane/administration & dosage , Adolescent , Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/therapeutic use , Cardiovascular System/physiopathology , Child , Child, Preschool , Daunorubicin/therapeutic use , Daunorubicin/toxicity , Doxorubicin/therapeutic use , Doxorubicin/toxicity , Drug Interactions , Epirubicin/therapeutic use , Epirubicin/toxicity , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Neoplasms/physiopathology
14.
Clin Ter ; 147(12): 627-33, 1996 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9296922

ABSTRACT

This study consists of a prevalence congenital heart disease (CHD) registered in the Pediatric Cardiology Department of Umberto I General Hospital in Rome between January 1st 1992 and December 31-th 1993. Cases recorded in this period have been taken part of a larger study called Italian Multicentric Study for recording and follow-up of congenital heart disease (IMS-CHD); the purpose is to determine the prevalence of CHD in Italy and discover the outcome of affected children. In this duration, 187 new cases have been recorded, in which 63.6% had a single defect while 36.4% had multiple defects. These isolated defects were most frequently occurred (51.9%) following the stenosis of the pulmonary artery (15.5% and the defects of the interatrial septum (15%).


Subject(s)
Heart Defects, Congenital/epidemiology , Cardiology Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnosis , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Italy/epidemiology , Male , Prevalence , Sex Distribution
15.
G Ital Cardiol ; 26(3): 249-59, 1996 Mar.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8690181

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Fetal echocardiography has achieved high sensibility and specificity rates and it has become a reliable tool to detect intra-uterine congenital heart defects. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of the present study was to clarify the potential of anatomo-clinical correlation in fetal echocardiography not only for diagnosing heart defects, but also for understanding and following their morphogenesis and natural history in utero. METHODS: Nine hundred pregnancies, referred by several first-level centers, have been followed up from the sixteenth week to birth, and the newborn baby has been studied, too. In case of either voluntary abortion, or intra-uterine or neonatal death, a post-mortem examination was performed whenever possible. RESULTS: Since 1982, 110 fetal heart defects have been detected: 94 were diagnosed by means of fetal echocardiography (in 21/94 an autopsy was carried out) and 16 were directly observed at the post-mortem (spontaneous or voluntary abortions not previously referred). The heart defects most commonly observed were the atrioventricular (14.5%), ventricular (9.0%), and atrial (7.2%) septal defects, the absent left atrioventricular connection (8.1%), and atrial isomerism (6.3%). The congenital heart defects diagnosed in utero vary from those observed in the newborn and infants in terms of distribution (because of difficulties in diagnosis, selection of pregnancies, and differences in manifestation) and morphology (because of the coexistence with other extracardiac malformations, the changes due to altered fetal hemodynamics, and the intrauterine evolution of the morphology of cardiac defects). CONCLUSIONS: Heart defects observed in utero have a peculiar prevalence and a different morphology in respect to their infantile counterparts and can be followed in their morphologic evolution.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnosis , Ultrasonography, Prenatal , Abortion, Induced , Abortion, Spontaneous , Autopsy , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Fetal Death , Heart Defects, Congenital/embryology , Heart Defects, Congenital/pathology , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy
16.
Tex Heart Inst J ; 23(3): 233-5, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8885109

ABSTRACT

We describe a case of protein-losing enteropathy after a Fontan operation, in the absence of high right atrial pressure. Although partial regression of protein-losing enteropathy was obtained with high doses of cortisone, complete resolution of the phenomenon was accomplished only after surgical closure of a left-to-right shunt through the pulmonary valve.


Subject(s)
Fontan Procedure , Hemodynamics , Protein-Losing Enteropathies/physiopathology , Protein-Losing Enteropathies/surgery , Child , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery , Humans , Male , Postoperative Complications/surgery , Protein-Losing Enteropathies/etiology , Pulmonary Valve
18.
Angiology ; 46(11): 1009-14, 1995 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7486221

ABSTRACT

Kawasaki disease (KD) is a systemic vasculitis syndrome of early childhood. It involves particularly the coronary arteries and may cause aneurysms and thrombotic occlusions. Echocardiography is the most useful method of detecting coronary aneurysms. Nevertheless, obstructive lesions are difficult to evaluate and often need invasive coronary angiography. An important feature of this disease is the possibility of finding coronary pathology several years after the onset. This characteristic makes KD an important cause of coronary artery disease (CAD) in young adults. Thus patients with KD and previously diseased coronary arteries should be kept under long-term control. However, coronary angiography is invasive and cannot be performed repeatedly, especially in young patients. As an alternative, thallium 201 scintigraphy has been employed, but its low-energy photons are suboptimal for standard gamma-camera imaging, particularly in children aged less than three years. To verify the usefulness of a noninvasive assessment of myocardial perfusion, the authors used rest and dipyridamole 99mTc-Sestamibi scan in 15 children (ranging from one to six years of age) with Kawasaki's cardiac involvement. Coronary aneurysms have been demonstrated by echocardiography in 12 patients; 8 patients were also submitted to cardiac catheterization. The sensitivity of 99mTc-Sestamibi imaging for detection of overall coronary lesions was 88% and the specificity was 93%. These data suggest that rest/dipyridamole 99mTc-Sestamibi scintigraphy is an accurate and noninvasive method for the detection and follow-up of Kawasaki's cardiac damage even in patients aged one year.


Subject(s)
Coronary Disease/diagnostic imaging , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Child , Child, Preschool , Coronary Disease/etiology , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/complications , Radionuclide Imaging , Sensitivity and Specificity , Technetium Tc 99m Sestamibi
20.
Prenat Diagn ; 14(4): 299-302, 1994 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8066040

ABSTRACT

A prenatal diagnosis of right atrial isomerism is often inferred through the recognition of a constellation of cardiac anomalies on the four-chamber view or by the detection of visceral heterotaxy and asplenia. However, the actual occurrence of discordance between the arrangement of the atria and thoracic and abdominal organs makes the identification of the morphology of both atrial appendages the only reliable way to make a final diagnosis of atrial isomerism. Three cases of right atrial isomerism with visceral heterotaxy and a complex cardiac defect, diagnosed in utero by cross-sectional and colour flow Doppler echocardiography, are reported. In all the patients, the right atrial isomerism was associated with an atrioventricular septal defect, a single aortic outlet from the right ventricle, and total anomalous venous return. The diagnosis of right atrial isomerism, always confirmed by neonatal re-evaluation and/or by post-mortem examination, was made through identifying two pyramidal atrial appendages in an echocardiographic transverse plane at the level of the atria and of the origin of the great arteries. This report demonstrates that a final intrauterine diagnosis of atrial isomerism is possible, whatever the visceral situs is.


Subject(s)
Echocardiography, Doppler , Heart Atria/abnormalities , Ultrasonography, Prenatal , Female , Gestational Age , Heart Atria/diagnostic imaging , Heart Septal Defects/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Pregnancy , Sensitivity and Specificity
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