These results suggest that infants with an atrial septal defect < 3 mm need not be followed up as 100% of these defects will be closed by age 18 months; those with a defect 3 to 5 or 5 to 8 mm should be evaluated by the end of the 12th and the 15th month, respectively, when > 80% of these defects will be closed. An atrial septal defect with a diameter > or = 8 mm may have little chance of closing spontaneously and the possibility of surgical correction should be considered. Defects < 3 mm probably do not constitute a cardiac malformation in light of their natural evolution and gender distribution.
A retrospective study was performed of 181 horses that underwent an exploratory celiotomy because of acute abdominal disease. Forty‐four horses died or were euthanized during surgery. Of the 137 horses that recovered from anesthesia, 72 died of associated diseases or complications, 86 were discharged from the hospital of which 60 survived at least 7 months. Horses with disorders affecting the small intestine had a significantly lower survival rate. Causes of death early in the postoperative period included long bone fracture, shock, ileus, gastric rupture, and peritonitis. After discharge from the hospital, deaths were attributed to colic of unknown cause, malabsorption syndrome, adhesive small bowel obstruction, small and large intestinal volvulus, perforated bowel, and laminitis. Of the 60 horses that were alive at the time of survey, 93.3% had returned to their previous use. A second occurrence of the initial acute abdominal disease was not documented in any horse.
A range-gated Doppler ultrasound system combined with a real-time imaging system was used to determine arterial blood velocity values from the fetal and placental ends of the umbilical cord in 269 normal pregnancies between 17 and 40 weeks, menstrual age. The systolic-diastolic ratio (S/D), pulsatility index (PI), and resistance index (RI) were higher at the fetal end compared to the placental end of the cord. The individual differences in these Doppler indices, obtained between the fetal and placental recording sites, were inversely related to menstrual age: S/D: r = -0.38, p < 0.001; PI: r = -0.25, p < 0.001; and RI: r = -0.15, p < 0.01. After normalization for the angle of insonation, the peak systolic velocity was higher and the end-diastolic velocity was lower at the fetal than at the placental end of the cord. It is concluded that routine recordings for Doppler velocimetric indices should take into account the recording site on the umbilical cord in order to reduce methodological sources of variance, especially during midgestation. Furthermore, the data presented here in the form of the median and percentile values are proposed as normal reference values to facilitate this procedure.
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