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Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia, Volume: 72, Número: 4, Publicado: 1999
  • Pregnancy does not cause structural bioprosthesis alteration Editorial

    Avila, Walkiria Samuel; Grinberg, Max
  • Cardiogenic shock State Of The Art

    Knobel, Elias
  • Systematic overviews and meta-analyses in cardiology. Evidence-based cardiology VIII Lecture

    Avezum, Alvaro
  • Effects of protein-calorie restriction on mechanical function of hypertrophied cardiac muscle Original Articles

    Cicogna, Antônio Carlos; Padovani, Carlos Roberto; Georgette, José Carlos; Aragon, Flávio Ferrari; Okoshi, Marina Politi

    Resumo em Inglês:

    OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of food restriction (FR) on hypertrophied cardiac muscle in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). METHODS: Isolated papillary muscle preparations of the left ventricle (LV) of 60-day-old SHR and of normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were studied. The rats were fed either an unrestricted diet or FR diet (50% of the intake of the control diet) for 30 days. The mechanical function of the muscles was evaluated through monitoring isometric and isotonic contractions. RESULTS: FR caused: 1) reduction in the body weight and LV weight of SHR and WKY rats; 2) increase in the time to peak shortening and the time to peak developed tension (DT) in the hypertrophied myocardium of the SHR; 3) diverging changes in the mechanical function of the normal cardiac muscles of WKY rats with reduction in maximum velocity of isotonic shortening and of the time for DT to decrease 50% of its maximum value, and increase of the resting tension and of the rate of tension decline. CONCLUSION: Short-term FR causes prolongation of the contraction time of hypertrophied muscles and paradoxal changes in mechanical performance of normal cardiac fibers, with worsening of the shortening indices and of the resting tension, and improvement of the isometric relaxation.
  • Transmyocardial laser revascularization. Early clinical experience Original Articles

    Oliveira, Sérgio Almeida de; Dallan, Luis Alberto Oliveira; Lisboa, Luiz Augusto F.; Chavantes, Maria Cristina; Cesar, Luis Antonio Machado; Pardi, Miriam J.; Jatene, Adib D.

    Resumo em Inglês:

    OBJECTIVE: To analyze the initial clinical experience of transmyocardial laser revascularization (TMLR) in patients with severe diffuse coronary artery disease. METHODS: Between February, 1998 and February, 1999, 20 patients were submitted to TMLR at the Heart Institute (InCor), University of São Paulo Medical School, Brazil, isolated or in association with conventional coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). All patients had severe diffuse coronary artery disease, with angina functional class III/IV (Canadian Cardiovascular Society score) unresponsive to medical therapy. Fourteen patients were submitted to TMLR as the sole therapy, whereas 6 underwent concomitant CABG. Fifty per cent of the patients had either been previously submitted to a CABG or to a percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Mean age was 60 years, ranging from 45 to 74 years. RESULTS: All patients had three-vessel disease, with normal or mildly impaired left ventricular global function. Follow-up ranged from 1 to 13 months (mean 6.6 months), with no postoperative short or long term mortality. There was significant symptom improvement after the procedure, with 85% of the patients free of angina, and the remaining 15 % of the patients showing improvement in functional class, as well as in exercise tolerance. CONCLUSION: This novel technique can be considered a low risk alternative for a highly selected group of patients not suitable for conventional revascularization procedures.
  • Characteristics and identification of sites of chagasic ventricular tachycardia by endocardial mapping Original Articles

    Távora, Maria Zildany P.; Mehta, Niraj; Silva, Rose M. F. L.; Gondim, Fernando A. A.; Hara, Vanderlei M.; Paola, Angelo A. V. de

    Resumo em Inglês:

    OBJECTIVE: To study electrophysiological characteristics that enable the identification and ablation of sites of chagasic tachycardia. METHODS: Thirty-one patients with chronic Chagas' heart disease and sustained ventricular tachycardia (SVT) underwent electrophysiological study to map and ablate that arrhythmia. Fifteen patients had hemodinamically stable SVT reproducible by programmed ventricular stimulation, 9 men and 6 women with ages ranging from 37 to 67 years and ejection fraction varying from 0.17 to 0.64. Endocardial mapping was performed during SVT in all patients. Radiofrequency (RF) current was applied to sites of presystolic activity of at least 30 ms. Entrainment was used to identify reentrant circuits. In both successful and unsuccessful sites of RF current application, electrogram and entrainment were analyzed. RESULTS: Entrainment was obtained during all mapped SVT. In 70.5% of the sites we observed concealed entrainment and ventricular tachycardia termination in the first 15 seconds of RF current application. In the unsuccessful sites, significantly earlier electrical activity was seen than in the successful ones. Concealed entrainment was significantly associated with ventricular tachycardia termination. Bystander areas were not observed. CONCLUSION: The reentrant mechanism was responsible for the genesis of all tachycardias. In 70.5% of the studied sites, the endocardial participation of the slow conducting zone of reentrant circuits was shown. Concealed entrainment was the main electrophysiological parameter associated with successful RF current application. There was no electrophysiological evidence of bystander regions in the mapped circuits of SVT.
  • Aortic stenosis. Gender influence on left ventricular geometry and function in patients under 70 years of age Original Articles

    Rocha, Antonio Sérgio Cordeiro da; Pereira, Maria Auxiliadora Vellasco; Rocha, Nazareth de Novaes; Soares, Rita de Cássia Villela; Grandelle, Celso Garcia, Rosana; Silva, Paulo Roberto Dutra da

    Resumo em Inglês:

    OBJECTIVE: To verify if adaptive left ventricle (LV) characteristics are also present in individuals under 70 years of age with severe aortic stenosis (AS). METHODS: The study comprised 40 consecutive patients under 70 years of age with AS and no associated coronary artery disease, referred for valve surgery. Out of the 40 patients, 22 were men and 18 women, and the mean age was 49.8±14.3 years. Cardiac symptoms, presence of systemic hypertension (SH), functional class according to the New York Heart Association (NYHA), and valve lesion etiology were considered. LV cavity dimensions, ejection fraction (EF), fractional shortening (FS), mass (MS), and relative diastolic thickness (RDT) were examined by Doppler echocardiography. RESULTS: Fourteen (63.6%) men and 11 (61.6%) women were classified as NYHA class III/IV (p=0.70). There was no difference in the frequency of angina, syncope or dyspnea between genders. The incidence of SH was greater in women than in men (10 versus 2, p=0.0044). Women had a smaller LV end-diastolic diameter index (32.1±6.5 x 36.5±5.3mm/m², p=0.027), LV end-systolic diameter index (19.9±5.9 x 26.5±6.4mm/m², p=0.0022) and LV mass index (MS) (211.4±71.1 x 270.9±74.9g/m², p=0.017) when compared with men. EF (66.2±13.4 x 52.0±14.6%, p=0.0032), FS (37.6±10.7 x 27.9±9.6%, p=0.0046) and RDT (0.58±0.22 x 0.44±0.09, p=0.0095) were significantly greater in women than in men. CONCLUSION: It is the patient gender rather than age that influences left ventricular adaptive response to AS.
  • Mitral restenosis in the early postoperative period of a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus Case Reports

    Pomerantzeff, Pablo Maria Alberto; Corrêa, Jeanne D'Arc Honória; Brandão, Carlos Manuel de Almeida; Assis, Raimunda Violante Campos de; Jatene, Adib Domingos

    Resumo em Inglês:

    A forty eight year old woman, who had undergone mitral comissurotomy and subsequently developed early restenosis, presented with major comissural fusion and verrucous lesions on the cuspid edges of the mitral valve, with normal subvalvar apparatus. Patient did well for the first six months after surgery when she began to present dyspnea on light exertion. A clinical diagnosis of restenosis was made, which was confirmed by an echocardiogram and cardiac catheterization. She underwent surgery, and a stenotic mitral valve with verrucous lesions suggesting Libman-Sacks' endocarditis was found. Because the diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) had not been confirmed at that time, a bovine pericardium bioprosthesis (FISICS-INCOR) was implanted. The patient did well in the late follow-up and is now in NYHA Class I .
  • Paraplegia following intraaortic balloon circulatory assistance Case Reports

    Benício, Anderson; Moreira, Luiz Felipe P.; Auler Jr, Otávio Costa; Stolf, Noedir Antônio Groppo; Jatene, Adib Domingos

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Intraaortic balloon counterpulsation is frequently used in patients experiencing severe ventricular dysfunction following maximal drug therapy. However, even with the improvement of percutaneous insertion techniques, the procedure has always been followed by vascular, infectious, and neurological complications. This article describes a case of paraplegia due to intraaortic balloon counterpulsation in the postoperative period of cardiac surgery.
  • A 40-year-old woman with a pericardial effusion Clinicopathologic Session

  • Cellular and biomolecular mechanisms in dilated cardiomyopathy Update

    Mattos, Beatriz Piva e
  • Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Genetic characterization Update

    Tirone, Adriana Paula; Arteaga, Edmundo
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