Patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) are believed to be at increased risk of atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease (CHD), although existing evidence for this association has not been persuasive. The risk of CHD among 142 persons with NS documented by protein-uria > or = 3.5 g daily was compared with that among 142 matched controls randomly selected from the membership of a large Northern California health plan. Controls were matched for sex, year of birth, and presence in the health plan when the referent case was diagnosed. No diabetics were included in this study. Mean follow-up for nonfatal CHD events was 5.6 years for NS subjects and 11.2 years for controls. Among the NS subjects myocardial infarction (MI) developed in 11, and there were 58 deaths, seven because of CHD. Among the controls, there were four MIs and 10 deaths, three because of CHD. In matched-pair analysis, there were 11 MIs among NS subjects and none among controls [P = 0.001, lower bound of 95% confidence interval for relative risk (CI), 2.8]. In an unmatched analysis adjusted for hypertension and smoking at diagnosis of NS, the relative risk of MI was 5.5 (95% CI 1.6 to 18.3) and the relative risk of coronary death was 2.8 (95% CI 0.7 to 11.3). Omitting data of NS subjects with minimal change disease and systemic lupus erythematosus yielded similar results. These data suggest that persons with NS are at increased risk of CHD.
A prototype ultrafast cine computed tomographic (CT) scanner, designed specifically for cardiac imaging, was used to evaluate a preliminary series of patients with prior myocardial infarction (n = 21) and a control group without coronary artery disease (n = 5). Multilevel 50-msec CT scan exposures were obtained during peripheral intravenous bolus injections of contrast medium. A comparison was made between cine-CT scans and standard left ventriculographic images in assessing segmental left ventricular motion. Results indicate that cine CT, performed at sufficiently rapid speeds (20 scans per second) to allow useful analysis of regional ventricular wall motion, can provide adequate image quality. Analysis of 110 segments revealed a good correlation (90.9%) between the two techniques in characterizing normal from abnormal regional wall motion. Cine CT, based on this initial study, demonstrates considerable potential for evaluating not only cardiac chamber dimensions but also segmental wall dynamics.
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