Background and Purpose: Spontaneous echo contrast is a dynamic smokelike signal that is detected by transesophageal echocardiography in patients with stasis of blood in the left atrium. We designed this study to determine if spontaneous echo contrast is associated with an increased risk of previous stroke or peripheral embolism.Methods: Forty-two patients with spontaneous echo contrast were identified (34 had atrial fibrillation or
Background-Echocardiography is available in the most basic healthcare environments. Mitral repair is potentially curative and, when possible, recommended over replacement. The efficacy of echo-guided repair has not been established. Methods and Results-We developed a succinct set of precisely defined images observed to be highly concordant with intraoperative findings. These images guided intervention on 237 consecutive patients. None were lost to follow-up, and serial echocardiography was obtained on all repairs. This analysis includes 2037 echocardiograms.
The problems of population referral bias in the calculation of specificity in diagnostic testing for coronary artery disease have been previously described. Previous studies investigating the sensitivity and specificity of dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) have been subject to pretest and posttest referral biases, largely as a result of the requirement for coronary arteriography. This study determines the normalcy rate for DSE by examining a population at statistically low risk for coronary artery disease. The probability of significant coronary artery disease was determined for 828 consecutive patients referred for DSE at the University of Michigan, and groups were identified with< 10% and < 5% probability of disease. Four of 72 patients (5.6%) with a normal baseline echocardiogram and a probability of coronary artery disease of < 10%, and three of 38 (7.9%) with a probability of < 5% were found to have an abnormal DSE, yielding normalcy rates of 94.4% and 92.1%, respectively. The area of abnormality involved the posterior circulation in three of four patients (75%). This study demonstrates that DSE has a normalcy rate of 92% to 94% and is an accurate test for excluding the presence of significant coronary artery disease.
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