Left atrial thrombus does occur in patients with acute atrial fibrillation < 3 days in duration. The frequency of left atrial thrombus in patients with recent emboli is comparable between those with acute and chronic atrial fibrillation. These data suggest that patients with acute atrial fibrillation for < 3 days require anticoagulation prophylaxis or evaluation by transesophageal echocardiography before cardioversion and should not be assumed to be free of left atrial thrombus.
A balloon-expandable (Palmaz-Schatz) stainless steel stent was utilized following balloon angioplasty (PTRA) to determine if the obstructive lesion, using quantitative methods (automated measuring the diameter stenosis, and transstenotic peak systolic and mean pressure gradients), was significantly further reduced or abolished. Hemodynamic transstenotic gradient and stenoses measurements were made during 21 renal artery stenting procedures; prior and following PTRA, and subsequent to stent deployment. The stent sizes placed in the renal arteries were 5 mm (19%), 6 mm (67%), and 7 mm (14%). The results were as follows: [table: see text] The balloon-expandable (Palmaz-Schatz) stent significantly further reduced, and in fact effectively abolished, the obstructive renal artery lesion in comparison to balloon angioplasty (PTRA). The stent's effectiveness with regard lesion recurrence, maintenance, and preservation of renal function; cure or improved management of hypertension; and survival will be determined by careful clinic follow-up.
In patients with mitral valve prolapse without mitral regurgitation at rest, exercise provokes mitral regurgitation in 32% of patients and predicts a higher risk for morbid events.
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