Gemella is a genus of Gram-positive bacteria found in the digestive tract of humans. They rarely cause systemic illness but have been recently implicated in several serious infections. We report infective endocarditis caused by Gemella bergeri in a 23-year-old with a bicuspid aortic valve status post-intervention in infancy.
Background
Combined evaluation of coronary stenosis and the extent of ischemia is essential in patients with chest pain. Intermediate-grade stenosis on computed tomographic coronary angiography (CTCA) frequently triggers downstream nuclear stress testing. Alternative approaches without stress and/or radiation may have important implications. Myocardial strain measured from echocardiographic images can be used to detect subclinical dysfunction. The authors recently tested the feasibility of fusion of three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography–derived regional resting longitudinal strain with coronary arteries from CTCA to determine the hemodynamic significance of stenosis. The aim of the present study was to validate this approach against accepted reference techniques.
Methods
Seventy-eight patients with chest pain referred for CTCA who also underwent 3D echocardiography and regadenoson stress computed tomography were prospectively studied. Left ventricular longitudinal strain data (TomTec) were used to generate fused 3D displays and detect resting strain abnormalities (RSAs) in each coronary territory. Computed tomographic coronary angiographic images were interpreted for the presence and severity of stenosis. Fused 3D displays of subendocardial x-ray attenuation were created to detect stress perfusion defects (SPDs). In patients with stenosis >25% in at least one artery, fractional flow reserve was quantified (HeartFlow). RSA as a marker of significant stenosis was validated against two different combined references: stenosis >50% on CTCA and SPDs seen in the same territory (reference standard A) and fractional flow reserve < 0.80 and SPDs in the same territory (reference standard B).
Results
Of the 99 arteries with no stenosis >50% and no SPDs, considered as normal, 19 (19%) had RSAs. Conversely, with stenosis >50% and SPDs, RSAs were considerably more frequent (17 of 24 [71%]). The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of RSA were 0.71, 0.81, and 0.79, respectively, against reference standard A and 0.83, 0.81, and 0.82 against reference standard B.
Conclusions
Fusion of CTCA and 3D echocardiography–derived resting myocardial strain provides combined displays, which may be useful in determination of the hemodynamic or functional impact of coronary abnormalities, without additional ionizing radiation or stress testing.
This is the first study to comprehensively describe the influence of TAP on changes in regional RV shape in patients with rTOF. Understanding these differences may help guide therapeutic options for residual pulmonary valve regurgitation in rTOF patients.
Assessment of the systolic function of the right ventricle (RV) in patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is important. The asymmetric shape and heavy trabeculations make accurate assessment of RV systolic function challenging. Novel measures of RV function could be helpful in distinguishing reduced versus preserved function in HLHS and may also be worse in HLHS with preserved function compared to normal controls. These novel methods offer promise, but research and clinical applicability is hindered as no cut-off values for normal function have been established. We performed a retrospective comparison of functional assessments from echocardiograms of HLHS patients with preserved and reduced RV function along with a control group of normal patients. Measures of function included fractional area change (FAC), tissue motion annular displacement of the tricuspid (TMAD-TV) and pulmonary valves (TMAD-PV), myocardial performance index (MPI), tricuspid tissue Doppler S' velocity, and RV global longitudinal strain (RVGLS). Comparisons were made between three groups: normal patients, HLHS with preserved function, and HLHS with reduced function defined as FAC < 35%. FAC was chosen as the reference as it is a historical standard. 41 HLHS patients were studied. Of these patients, 20 had HLHS with reduced function, and 21 had preserved function. They were compared with 27 age-matched, normal, controls. Comparison between HLHS and normal controls: in HLHS with preserved RV systolic function, compared to normal controls, tissue Doppler S', MPI, and TMAD-TV were all abnormal (all p < 0.05). RVGLS was not statistically different (20.5 ± 3.6% for normal vs. 17.9 ± 2.6% for HLHS with preserved function). TMAD-PV was similar between groups (16.1 ± 4.6% vs. 16.7 ± 5.1%). All measures were significantly worse (all p < 0.05) in the HLHS with reduced function group compared to normal controls. Comparison between HLHS preserved vs reduced function: in HLHS with reduced function defined by FAC < 35%, all measures were significantly worse compared to HLHS with preserved function (all p < 0.05). The cut-off values that correspond to a FAC of > 35% were 14.5% for TMAD-TV and 16% for RVGLS. All measures except RVGLS and TMAD-PV estimated worse function than controls even for HLHS with preserved function. Each of the functional measures was able to identify preserved vs reduced function in HLHS with FAC as the reference standard. Cut-off values between preserved and reduced function in HLHS were estimated for TMAD-TV and RVGLS based on a relatively small cohort. These cut-off values will aid in the research design of future studies.
Cor triatriatum sinister is a rare congenital lesion encountered in children. It consists of a fibromuscular membrane that separates the left atrium into two chambers resulting in a triatrial heart and often occurs with other structural cardiac anomalies. The acquired form is uncommon and has only been reported after orthotopic heart transplantation or as a complication of infective endocarditis in adults. These cases were mostly because of hypertrophied atrial tissue or suture lines and torsion of the atrium. We describe the first case of acquired cor triatriatum late after the Fontan procedure with successful surgical resection in a child.
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