Complex antegrade and retrograde "Japanese style" PCI approaches can be applied in the U.S. practice environment with high technical success and low adverse event rates. Higher CTO-specific operator case volume is associated with improved technical success rates.
A balance study was conducted to determine the minimum requirement for manganese (Mn) and to examine the effects of Mn depletion. Seven male subjects, age 19-22, were fed a Mn-adequate diet of conventional foods (2.59 mg Mn/d, 135 mg cholesterol, and P:S ratio of 0.86) for 3 wk to establish base-line data. Then a purified diet containing 0.11 mg Mn/d was fed for 39 d (depletion), followed by two 5-d periods of 1.53 and 2.55 mg Mn/d (repletion). Diets, feces, urine, and integument were analyzed for Mn, and blood was analyzed for Mn, cholesterol, and other constituents. Plasma levels of cholesterol decreased from 170 to 152 mg/dL during the base-line period, and then to 142 mg/dL at the end of depletion, but did not respond to 10 days of repletion. A fleeting dermatitis, Miliaria crystallina, developed in five of the seven subjects at the end of depletion, but disappeared as repletion began. The minimum requirement for Mn on this purified diet, calculated by the factorial method using Mn balance at three levels of intake was 0.74 mg/d. This requirement would be increased to 2.11 mg/d if the obligatory loss was combined with the lowest individual percentage of retention.
Both transient and persistent postprocedural renal dysfunction are prognostically significant for mortality during extended follow-up. Renal dysfunction should be closely monitored before and after PCI.
Although left ventricular diastolic filling patterns can be examined by both Doppler velocity recordings and gated blood pool scintigraphy, few data exist regarding a comparison of these techniques. Therefore, Doppler echocardiography and scintigraphy were compared in 25 patients. Pulsed Doppler echocardiography was performed using an apical four chamber view with the sample volume at the level of the mitral anulus. Doppler measurements included peak velocity of the early diastolic filling wave, time to peak early diastolic velocity from both end-systole and end-diastole, diastolic time period and diastolic integrated velocity (early, atrial and total). The cross-sectional area of the mitral anulus and the left ventricular end-diastolic volume were estimated from measurements made on the apical four chamber view. Scintigraphic measurements included normalized peak filling rate, time to normalized filling rate from both end-diastole and end-systole, diastolic time period and relative diastolic filling during early and atrial filling. Doppler echocardiography and scintigraphy compared favorably in assessment of fractional filling during early diastole (r = 0.84) and atrial systole (r = 0.85), ratio of early to atrial filling (r = 0.83), diastolic filling period (r = 0.94) and interval from end-diastole to peak early diastolic flow (r = 0.88). Normalized peak filling rate and time to normalized peak filling rate from end-systole did not correlate closely by these two techniques. The differences in normalized peak filling rate may be explained by difficulties in estimating mitral anulus cross-sectional area and left ventricular end-diastolic volume.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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