SUMMARY Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) was performed in 21 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) treated by intracoronary infusion of streptokinase within 8 hours after the onset of symptoms. Streptolysis therapy began a mean of 3.6 1.2 hours (±+ SD) after the onset of symptoms. The vessel was occluded in 14 patients and highly stenosed in seven. After the infusion of 67,300 + 63,200 IU of streptokinase over 26.1 21.5 minutes, patency of the occluded vessels was reached.PTCA as performed 20-60 minutes after the end of streptokinase treatment in 19 patients and 24 and 31 hours after treatment in two patients. The dilation was successful in 17 patients (81%). The degree of vessel obstruction was reduced from 90.2 + 7.3% to 58.6 19.5% (area method) and from 71.4 + 12.4% to 39.2 + 19.7% (diameter method). The improvement was 31.5 18.4% and 32.2 ± 19.3%, respectively. No reocclusion was induced by PTCA. Twenty patients were discharged. One died during hospitalization; at autopsy, the treated vessel was still patent. During the follow-up period, two reinfarctions and one asymptomatic reocclusion occurred.The clinical findings during the hospital course and the follow-up period were compared with those of a control group of 18 patients with AMI and comparable coronary stenoses who were treated only with streptokinase infusion. Four of these patients had a reinfarction during the hospital course, and three died during the follow-up period.PTCA can be performed safely and successfully immediately after intracoronary infusion of streptokinase in patients with AMI. By reducing the subtotal stenosis, this treatment contributes to the reperfusion of the ischemic myocardium, diminishes the risk of a reocclusion and seems to improve the prognosis.
SUMMARY A group of 111 patients with mitral valve disease was studied by M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography. Five left atrial thrombi were demonstrated, two of which had probably been the source of previous embolic events. Two-dimensional Despite these limitations, the information provided by echocardiography can be most helpful in patient management. M-mode, in combination with two-dimensional echocardiography, is therefore recommended in all patients with mitral stenosis before invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures are undertaken.The mobilisation of a left atrial mass with production of systemic emboli is a rare but justly dreaded complication during invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.'-3 M-mode echocardiography has now become an established non-invasive method for the early detection of myxomas prolapsing into the mitral orifice during diastole.4 5 But this method is supposed to be inadequate for the diagnosis of immobile masses, especially mural left atrial thrombi.6The advent of two-dimensional echocardiography with its ability to provide spatial orientation seems to give better diagnostic perspectives.This report describes experience with both M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography in the detection of left atrial thrombi in mitral stenosis.
Subjects and methods
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