The purpose of this study was to collect information on the practice and patient doses in a major Greek cardiac centre, investigate differences between senior cardiologists of various levels of experience and compare results with the literature, in order to optimize angiographic and interventional cardiology procedures. Radiation doses from 292 patients have been studied, 195 of which had undergone coronary angiography and 97 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. All procedures were undertaken on a Siemens Angioscop X-ray equipment. The system performed under automatic exposure control using pulsed fluoroscopy of 12.5 pulses s(-1) and cine frame rate of 25 frames s(-1). Dose-area product values, fluoroscopy times, total number of cine frames as well as operator's name were collected for each patient. Only senior cardiologists have participated in the study. Median values for dose-area product were 39.1 Gy cm(2) for coronary angiography and 58.3 Gy cm(2) for percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Median fluoroscopy time was 5.0 min and 9.7 min and median number of frames was 1588 and 1823 for coronary angiography and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, respectively. Comparison showed that patient dose-area product values were lower than other studies and fluoroscopy time values were comparable. However, the total number of frames used was much higher than other published results. Differences between cardiologists with increased experience have been found. Analysis of the patient dose values obtained initiated a program of radiation protection optimization. The need for continuous training in radiation protection for interventionalists has been verified.
In a substantial number of patients, AF recurs after successful electrical cardioversion. The purpose of this study was to investigate if the atrial arrhythmias recorded immediately after cardioversion are associated with the risk of recurrence of the arrhythmia and to compare the prognostic significance of this parameter with that of other established risk factors. In a series of 71 patients, the risk factors for recurrence of AF during the first year after successful electrical cardioversion were analyzed. A new parameter that was investigated was the frequency of atrial premature beats and the presence of runs of supraventricular tachycardia in the Holter recording started immediately after the cardioversion. Age, left atrial size, left ventricular systolic function, duration of the arrhythmia before cardioversion, underlying cardiac disease, or medication taken were not found to be predictive of recurrence of the arrhythmia. However, the natural logarithm of the number of atrial premature complexes per hour of the Holter recording in the 37 patients in whom AF recurred was higher compared to that of the 34 patients who maintained sinus rhythm (P < 0.0005). The same was true if only the first 6 hours of the recording were analyzed (P < 0.0005). There was a trend for more frequent arrhythmia recurrence if runs of supraventricular tachycardia were present. The finding of > 10 atrial premature complexes per hour in the recording had a relative risk of 2.57 (1.51-4.37), a positive predictive accuracy of 76.5%, and a negative predictive accuracy of 70.3% for subsequent arrhythmia recurrence. We can conclude that frequent (> 10/hour) atrial premature complexes in the Holter recording after electrical cardioversion for AF is a significant risk factor for recurrence of the arrhythmia.
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