Long-term mortality following TLE is high, particularly in those with systemic infection, procedural complications, advanced age, and renal impairment. Retained fragments are a risk factor for CDI post extraction.
Exercise radionuclide angiography was used to assess the incidence of subclinical abnormalities of left ventricular function in 23 asymptomatic patients with thalassemia major. Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at rest was normal in 18 patients and abnormal in 5. A normal LVEF response during exercise was shown in only 5 of the patients with normal resting left ventricular function. A normal response during exercise occurred more often in those patients who had received a smaller transfusional iron load and had a lower serum ferritin level (p less than 0.05). Twelve of the twenty-three patients were receiving chelation therapy with subcutaneous deferoxamine. Ejection fraction at rest was normal in 11 of these patients. During exercise a normal ventricular response was shown in 4 patients. After 1 year of intensive chelation therapy in these 12 patients, left ventricular function was reassessed. A normal exercise response was seen in an additional 4 patients; 3 of these showed an increase in peak exercise LVEF, and in the remaining patient no change of peak exercise LVEF was shown. The response during exercise was unchanged in 3 patients and had deteriorated in 1 patient.
Stent deformation/pseudofracture of the 7 crown Endeavor/Micro Driver platform occurred in 1.8% of cases that were post-dilated. Of these, 36% experience MACE. Deformation can be reproduced on the benchtop. Operators should be aware of the complication, and develop strategies to deal with it.
Pacing and ICD leads can be safely extracted with mechanical techniques. The presence of device infection appears to be the major predictor of procedural complications.
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