The effect of right ventricular pacing on left ventricular relaxation was studied in 13 patients (age 62 +/- 3 years), with the atrial sensing ventricular pacing mode (VDD). A control group of similar age (64 +/- 4 years) consisted of 11 patients with atrial pacing (AAI). The timing of events was determined in both groups at similar R-R intervals (921 +/- 77 ms vs 967 +/- 37 ms). The loading conditions as estimated by peak systolic wall stress (afterload) and end-diastolic left ventricular dimensions (preload) were approximately the same in both groups. The ratio of late to early filling velocities were similar in both groups. Dominant changes were: increased preejection period (142 +/- 13 ms vs 95 +/- 15 ms); and higher velocities of isovolumic relaxation flow (60 +/- 34 cm/s vs 25 +/- 4 cm/s) in patients with ventricular pacing. The isovolumic relaxation time was longer in patients with VDD pacing (127 +/- 14 ms vs 108 +/- 12 ms). Anterior systolic interventricular septal motion (paradoxal motion) was recorded in nine patients with VDD pacing and in none of the patients with AAI pacing. Isovolumic relaxation flow was detected during atrial pacing in five (45%) patients and in 13 (100%) patients during atrial sensing ventricular pacing, indicating asynchronous left ventricular relaxation. This data shows that VDD pacing compared to atrial pacing resulted in an altered activation pattern of the left ventricle, associated with delayed onset, asynchronous contraction with interventricular septal motion abnormalities and prolonged asynchronous left ventricular relaxation with abnormal motion manifested by the presence of isovolumic relaxation flow.
Two biologically and genetically distinct hantaviruses were isolated from blood and urine specimens collected from four Yugoslavian patients with clinically severe hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). Viral isolates from three patients, designated strains Belgrade 1-3, were distinct from Hantaan, Seoul, Puumala, and Prospect Hill viruses as determined by plaque-reduction neutralization tests and restriction analysis of enzymatically amplified M-segment fragments. The fourth isolate, called Kraljevo, was indistinguishable from Hantaan virus. Strains Belgrade 1 and 2, like the Kraljevo strain, caused a fatal meningoencephalitis in newborn mice inoculated with 100 pfu of virus intracerebrally and intraperitoneally. Strain Belgrade 3 was much less neurovirulent, requiring 30,000 pfu of virus to cause fatal disease in mice. These data indicate that two distinct hantaviruses, one of which constitutes a new serotype, cause clinically severe HFRS in Yugoslavia.
A total of 46 patients with syncopal episodes after VVI pacemaker implantation were studied. Of these, 92% had one to three syncopal episodes and 8% more than three. All underwent a thorough clinical examination, which included chest X ray, echocardiogram, neurological exam, and the following protocol: 24-hour Holter monitoring, EEG, blood pressure (BP) measurement in three positions, Doppler exam of the carotid vessels, fasting blood glucose, and head-up tilt table test (60 minutes, 60 degrees). Holter monitoring showed exit block in two patients (4.3%) and failed sensing in one (2.1%). In two patients there was unilateral slowing on EEG. Orthostatic hypotension was found in four patients (8.6%), and hypoglycemia in three insulin-dependent diabetics. An occlusive atherosclerotic plaque in the carotid artery was found in three patients (6.5%). Syncope was induced in 17 patients (36.9%) by the tilt table test, after a mean standing time of 47 +/- 11 minutes. The mean resting systolic BP of these patients was 140 +/- 24 mmHg, and fell to a mean level of 56 +/- 8 mmHg (mean systolic BP drop was 79 +/- 8 mmHg). Sixteen of these 17 patients with positive tilt table were being paced at the time of syncope and one had a spontaneous heart rate of 73 beats/min. In 14 cases (30.4%) the cause of syncopal episodes after this extensive workup remained unexplained. These results indicate that pacemaker dysfunction is not a major cause of syncopal episodes in pacemaker patients and that these are most often due to vasovagal syncope. Long-term follow-up is warranted to determine the prognostic significance of various types of syncope in pacemaker patients.
STOJANOV, P., FT AL.: Absorbable Suture Technique: Solution to the Growth Problem in Pediatric Pacing with Endocardial Leads. Endocardia! pacing system implantation ims heen performed in 15 chiidren of mean age 37months (ranging from t day to 89 months). Endocardial lead fixation was performed by means of slowly resorhable suture (Dexon) to allow spontaneous lead migration as the child grows. During a mean follow-up period of 61 months (range 17-108 months), none of the patients needed reintervention for correcting the lead length to allow growth. (PACE 1998; 2l[Pt. I}:65-68} children pacing, endovenous lead, growth, resorbable suture
Permanent endovenous pacing is a feasible procedure, even in children of body weight less than 10 kg, with quite acceptable impact on venous system patency.
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