Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy has been investigated mainly at referral institutions. Thus, the clinical history of the disease that emerges from published studies could be influenced by a bias in patient selection. In the present study, we compared the clinical features of an outpatient population of 25 patients who had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with those reported in 78 studies published during the past five years. In the 25 study patients, age, sex, and the extent of left ventricular hypertrophy, as well as the prevalence of diastolic filling abnormalities, subaortic obstruction, and ventricular arrhythmias, were similar to those in patients described in the literature. Cardiac symptoms, however, were much less severe in the study patients. Eighteen patients (72 percent) were asymptomatic, six (24 percent) had mild symptoms, and only one (4 percent) had moderate-to-severe symptoms. Of 24 patients followed for a mean period of 4.4 years (range, 2.9 to 5.7), none died or had clinical deterioration. Of 3404 patients described in the 78 studies we reviewed, 2483 (73 percent) came from only two referral institutions. Of the 1721 patients in whom severity of symptoms was reported, 757 (44 percent) had moderate-to-severe symptoms. However, 727 (96 percent) of these patients were studied at one of the same two referral institutions. We conclude that the natural history of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may be more benign than can be inferred from published reports.
Cardiologists follow published guidelines for congestive heart failure more strictly than internists, but treat a smaller number of patients who are younger, have more severe congestive heart failure and fewer co-morbidities than those managed by internists.
To investigate the relationship between diastolic abnornmalities and left ventricular hypertrophy, 52 patients with hypertrophic cardionmopathy (HCM) and 22 normal subjects were studied with digitized M mode echocardiography and two-dimensional echocardiography. Echocardio
Fifty-eight patients with transmural anterior myocardial infarction were prospectively studied with serial two-dimensional Circulation 72, No. 4, 774-780, 1985. TWO-DIMENSIONAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY has recently demonstrated that left ventricular thrombi are common in patients with acute anterior myocardial infarction.1-5 However, the clinical implications and prognostic significance of detection of thrombi during acute myocardial infarction, the incidence of systemic embolization, and the possible occurrence of spontaneous regression of left ventricular thrombus have not yet been investigated in prospective studies conducted
Left ventricular thrombus may develop both early and late after acute anterior myocardial infarction. To assess the possible prognostic implication of the time of thrombus appearance, 125 patients (87 males; age ranging from 35 to 92 years, mean: 65 +/- 10 years) consecutively admitted to our coronary care unit within 24 h of a first acute anterior myocardial infarction, untreated with antithrombotic drugs, underwent serial two-dimensional echocardiographic studies during hospitalization, then monthly for a follow-up of 1-48 (mean: 23 +/- 16) months among survivors. Left ventricular thrombi, detected in 71 patients (57%), appeared from 1 to 362 (mean: 13 +/- 44) days after acute infarction. In 40 patients (56%), early thrombus development, within 48 h of symptom onset, was noted. During the study period, 52 patients (42%) died. Global mortality rate was similar in patients with thrombi compared with those without thrombi (32/71: 45%, vs 20/54: 37%; P = ns). However, in-hospital mortality of patients who developed left ventricular thrombi within 48 h (17/40: 42.5%) was significantly higher compared with both patients with later thrombus appearance (4/31: 13%; P less than 0.008) and those without thrombi (10/54: 20%; P less than 0.01). Embolic events were more frequent in patients with thrombi (9/71, 13% vs 1/54, 2%; P less than 0.02), but there was no relationship with the time of thrombus appearance. The values of peak CPK levels and the degree of left ventricular wall motion abnormalities observed in patients with early left ventricular thrombus were significantly higher than the values detected in patients without thrombi, but similar to those obtained in patients with later thrombus occurrence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
We conclude that 1) the rate of left ventricular thrombi does not differ in patients with acute myocardial infarction treated either with streptokinase or rt-PA, 2) subcutaneous heparin, when begun 12 hours after intravenous thrombolysis, does not appear to further reduce the occurrence of thrombi but seems to influence the shape of left ventricular thrombi, and 3) during the predischarge period, embolic events are rare in patients treated by thrombolysis.
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