In a retrospective multicentre study, the diagnostic potential of transoesophageal 2D-echocardiography (TEE) as compared to precordial 2D-echocardiography (TTE) was determined in 154 patients with primary or secondary tumours of the heart. Additionally, the value of standard diagnostic parameters, such as symptoms, X-ray of the chest and electrocardiogram were evaluated. In 84 patients (24 male, 60 female; age 20-85, mean 56.6 years) intracardial tumours were present, and 70 patients (37 male, 33 female; age 18-79, mean 44.3 years) presented with peri- or paracardial tumours. The main symptoms of patients with intracardial tumours were dyspnoea (60.7%), vena cava syndrome (22.2%) and chest pain (20.2%). Embolization was found in 11.9%. Left or right atrial enlargement was observed on chest X-ray in 23 patients, and echocardiographic abnormalities in 17 cases. The patients with peri- or paracardial tumours presented with dyspnoea in 51.4% of cases, loss in body weight in 20.0% and with vena cava syndrome and chest pain in 17.1%. The chest X-ray was abnormal in 56 patients. Unspecific ST segment changes in the electrocardiogram were observed in five, and arrhythmias in seven cases. Diagnosis of atrial myxomas was achieved by TTE in 95.2%, by TEE in 100%, by angiography in 78.4%, by computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance tomography (NMR) in 70%. Identification of the attachment point was made by angiography in 8.1%, by TTE in 64.5% and by TEE in 95.2%. In 22 patients with intracardial tumours (myxomas excepted) diagnosis was achieved by TTE in 90.9%, by TEE in 100%, by CT or NMR in 88.9% and by angiography in 50%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
SUMMARY Two-dimensional echocardiography underestimates left ventricular volume compared with cineventriculography. To exclude the influence of difference in heart rate, blood pressure, respiration phases and any effect of the contrast material on left ventricular function, simultaneous studies of twodimensional echocardiography and cineventriculography-echoventriculography were performed in 46 patients. Apical two-dimensional echocardiograms in the right anterior oblique (RAO) equivalent view were recorded before and during cineventriculography in the 300 RAO projection. End-diastolic and end-systolic volumes (EDV and ESV) were calculated using a disc method with a semiautomatic computer system. The echo transducer position relative to the left ventricular apex and long axis was analyzed. For EDV determined by two-dimensional echocardiography and cineventriculography, the linear regression equation was radiologic methods.'4 Thus, patient-related problems could explain the systematic underestimation of left ventricular volume as determined by two-dimensional echocardiography. Differences in heart rate, blood pressure and respiration, and possible influences of contrast agents have been reported.4In this study we analyzed left ventricular volumes and ejection fractions from simultaneous recordings of two-dimensional echocardiograms in the apical right anterior oblique (RAO) equivalent view and cineventriculograms in the RAO plane, eliminating any perturbing influences on left ventricular volume.
Methods
PatientsThe study was performed in 46 patients, 39 males and seven females, who were undergoing catheterization for evaluation of clinically suspected coronary artery disease (table 1). The mean age (± SEM) was 51.2 + 6.9 years. Thirty-seven patients had significant coronary artery disease, nine showed features of primary congestive cardiomyopathy, two had arterial hypertension, four mitral regurgitation, one patient had mitral valve prolapse, one obstructive cardiomyopathy, and one aortic insufficiency. Three patients appeared to be normal. Fifteen of the 37 patients with coronary artery disease showed asynergy of the anterior wall and 13 asynergy of the posterior wall.
CatheterizationThe left ventricle was catheterized retrogradely through a percutaneous puncture of the right femoral artery. The patients were fasting and not premedicat-
To define patterns of infarction on computed tomography that are characteristic of embolism, as opposed to hemodynamically or microangiopathically induced brain lesions, a consecutive series of 60 patients with acute brain embolism were studied. Strokes were embolic in origin; that is, hemodynamic and in situ thrombotic stroke mechanisms had been excluded. Embolically active, cardiac disease was proved in 42 and was clinically evident in 13 patients. Five patients had suffered a stroke due to catheter-related embolism. Computed tomography revealed pial artery territorial infarction in 55 patients (92%). In 5, the infarction had the size or location (or both) characteristic of lacunes, although shape and lack of multiplicity raised questions about this interpretation. No patient showed a low-flow type of infarction pattern. These findings strongly support the view that (1) except for in situ thrombosis, pial artery territorial infarctions are indicative of an embolic mechanism, and (2) that the mechanism underlying lacunes is hardly, if ever, embolic.
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