Women with the syndrome should be counseled before conception about the risks of pregnancy to both mother and fetus. Because preconceptual dilatation of the ascending aorta seems to be an important predictor for aortic dissection, it should be excluded before pregnancy. Transesophageal echocardiography seems to be preferable for noninvasive assessment of aortic dilatation before and during pregnancy. Prophylactic use of beta-blockers may be useful in preventing aortic dilatation. Surgery should be considered during gestation in patients with progressive aortic dilatation when or before the aortic root reaches 5.5 cm. Because of the potential risk of ionizing radiation to the fetus, noninvasive methods such as transesophageal echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging are preferred to contrast aortography for the diagnosis of aortic dissection during pregnancy. Vaginal delivery can be done in patients with the Marfan syndrome who do not have cardiovascular system abnormalities. In patients with aortic dilatation, aortic dissection, or other important cardiac abnormalities, cesarean section should be the preferred method of delivery.
The rationale for the use of calcium channel blockers in patients with chronic heart failure lies in their vasodilator action, antiischemic effect, ability to lessen left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and data showing their effect in preventing progression of myocardial dysfunction in animals with cardiomyopathy. Despite initial studies reporting improvement of the hemodynamic profile with nifedipine, further evaluation showed variable results, with hemodynamic worsening seen in up to 29% of patients. Longer-term controlled studies evaluating symptoms and clinical status demonstrated worsening chronic heart failure in approximately 25% of patients within 8 weeks of nifedipine therapy. Although diltiazem has a lesser myocardial depressant effect and its short-term use was associated with less frequent hemodynamic and clinical worsening, long-term exposure to the drug in a large group of patients with chronic heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction after myocardial infarction resulted in an increased incidence of cardiac events, with worsening heart failure and death. The use of verapamil in a similar patient cohort showed the loss of its demonstrated protective effect in patients with clinical evidence of heart failure. In an attempt to improve the safety of calcium channel blockers, the following approaches were suggested: 1) use of second-generation drugs with less myocardial depressant effect; 2) concomitant use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors to prevent reported neurohormonal activation; and 3) development of drugs with favorable neurohormonal effects. These approaches led to mixed results.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
One hundred eight-three men underwent stress-redistribution thallium-201 myocardial perfusion tomography. After evaluation of various preprocessing filters in a phantom study, the Butterworth filter with a frequency cutoff of 0.2 cycles/pixel, order 5 (which provided optimal filter power) was used in the back projection algorithm of the patient studies. All short-axis and apical portions of vertical long-axis images were quantified by dividing each myocardial slice into 60 equal sectors and displaying the maximal count per sector as a linear profile. In a pilot group consisting of 20 normal men (less than 5% likelihood of coronary artery disease) and 25 men with coronary artery disease (greater than or equal to 50% coronary stenosis by angiography), profiles representing the lowest observed value below the mean normal profiles provided the best threshold for defining normal limits. Abnormal portions of the patient profiles were plotted on a two-dimensional polar map. The polar map was divided into 102 sectors, and sectors with a probability of greater than or equal to 80% for disease of each one of the three major coronary arteries were clustered to represent specific coronary artery territories. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis for defect size showed that the optimal threshold for defining a definite perfusion defect was 12% for the left anterior descending and left circumflex and 8% for the right coronary artery territories. These criteria were prospectively applied to an additional 92 patients with angiographic coronary artery disease, 18 patients with normal coronary arteriograms and 28 patients with less than 5% likelihood of coronary disease. Sensitivity, specificity (in patients with normal coronary arteriograms) and normalcy rate (in patients with less than 5% likelihood of coronary artery disease) for overall detection of coronary disease were 96%, 56% and 86%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity for identification of individual diseased vessels were, respectively, 78% and 85% for the left anterior descending, 79% and 60% for the left circumflex and 81% and 71% for the right coronary artery. These results were not significantly different from those of the pilot group. An optimized quantitative method for interpretation of stress thallium-201 myocardial perfusion tomography has been developed. Prospective application of this method indicates that the technique is accurate for the overall detection of coronary artery disease and identification of disease in individual arteries.
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