To assess the efficacy of prophylactic administration of anticoagulant and antiaggregant drugs to prevent venous thrombosis after long-term transvenous permanent pacemaker implantation, venograms were performed in 100 consecutive patients at the elective replacement of the pacemaker. Mean follow-up period after initial transvenous permanent pacemaker implantation was 6.0 years. The venograms demonstrated normal in 77 patients. The remaining 23 venograms showed venous stenosis in 11 patients and total obstruction in 12 patients. Twenty-one of these 23 patients had venous collateral circulation. No difference was found in the incidence of venous abnormalities according to the route of entry, the lead insulation, the total number of the implanted leads, and anticoagulant and antiaggregant drugs. All these patients have remained asymptomatic. In conclusion, the incidence of venous thrombosis after long-term transvenous pacing is 23% and the causes of venous thrombosis may be endothelial trauma and underlying venous stenosis. As this article describes a retrospective limited study, we cannot find the efficacy of prophylactic administration of anticoagulant and antiaggregant drugs to prevent venous thrombosis formation after transvenous permanent pacemaker implantation. Further prospective study will be needed to assess the efficacy of prophylactic administration of anticoagulant and antiaggregant drugs.
Coronary artery to pulmonary artery fistula (CA-PAF) is a rare congenital anomaly. The purpose of this retrospective study was to analyze 11 adult patients with CA-PAFs treated surgically, and to evaluate the surgical management and long-term results. There were no surgical deaths and all patients survived the follow-up periods (mean 7.2 years). All symptomatic patients improved their New York Heart Association functional class. As surgical correction is safe and effective, with good long-term results, all the patients with CA-PAF in adults can be candidates for surgery to prevent life-threatening complications.
We report herein the rare case of a 51-year-old Japanese woman who underwent thoracotomy for a mass in the mediastinum which was found to be a benign localized fibrous tumor, otherwise known as a mesothelioma. The clinical behavior of this tumor is thought to be unpredictable, and therefore we emphasize that long-term follow-up of patients with localized fibrous tumors is necessary, even if the histological features are benign.
We herein report the rare case of a 41-year-old Japanese woman in whom a venous aneurysm in the left cephalic vein was excised under local anesthesia. Histological examination revealed significant diminution in the number and size of muscle and elastic fibers in the aneurysm wall. Conceivably, a combination of endophlebohypertrophy and a congenital focal defect of the elastic and muscle fibers might have contributed to the development of this venous aneurysm.
The long-term results of primary closure for large ventricular septal defects (VSDs) in infants under 1 year of age with severe symptoms were studied over a period of more than 10 years. Between January, 1971 and March, 1982, 49 infants underwent primary closure of a VSD through a right ventriculotomy using complete cardiopulmonary bypass with mild hypothermia. There were four hospital deaths but no late deaths. Two of four infants with residual shunts had a left ventricular-right atrial shunt which necessitated reoperation. Surgical heart block occurred in two infants who recovered sinus rhythm in the late period. The cardiothoracic ratio decreased from 60.5% preoperatively to 50.6% in the late postoperative period. Examination by cardiac catheterization revealed that the pulmonary-to-systemic pressure ratio (Pp/Ps) of 23 patients with a Pp/Ps of over 0.75 fell from 0.89 +/- 0.09 preoperatively to 0.42 +/- 0.12 by 1 month postoperatively, then to 0.27 +/- 0.05 in the late postoperative period. The latest values for the cardiac index and left ventricular ejection fraction were 3.4 l/min per m2 and 64.4%, respectively. More than 10 years after their operation, all the survivors were growing normally and maintaining a good quality of life, which supports our recommendation that primary repair should be performed in the first year of life for infants with large VSDs.
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