Abstract:Background: While preprocedural statin treatment for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is widely regarded as beneficial, there has been no prospective randomized multicenter trial of patients with non-ST elevation ACS in the Japanese population to examine the efficacy of preprocedural aggressive statin use. The aim of this study was to confirm this effect by prospective randomized multicenter design. Methods: Fifty patients who presented with non-ST elevation ACS were enrolled, and randomly assigned to aggressive statin administration before percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Troponin-T (TnT), creatine phosphokinase (CK), CK-myocardial band (CK-MB), high-sense Creactive protein (hs-CRP), and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) were measured at baseline and/ or after procedure. Results: Three days after PCI, the statin group had significantly less CK elevation compared with the nonstatin group (84±17 IU/l versus 180±68 IU/l, respectively, p ¼ 0.02). CK-MB elevation also tended to be lower in the statin group than in the nonstatin group (3.2±1.9 versus. 7.0±3.0, respectively, p ¼ 0.07), as was BNP level (3.2±1.9 versus 7.0±3.0 pg/ml, respectively, p ¼ 0.07). The change of serum LDL cholesterol was significantly correlated with CK (p ¼ 0.01) and TnT (p ¼ 0.02) at 1 day after PCI. Conclusions: Aggressive statin usage before PCI to Japanese patients with non-ST elevation ACS appears to reduce myocardial damage after procedure. The degree of serum lipid level reduction may reflect the vulnerability of atheromatous plaques that could cause cardiac damage after PCI.
Background: The ankle-brachial pressure index (ABI) is widely used as a standard screening method for arterial occlusive lesion above the knee. However, the sensitivity of ABI is low in hemodialysis (HD) patients. Exercise stress (Ex-ABI) may reduce the false negative results. Patients and Methods: After measuring resting ABI and toe-brachial pressure index (TBI), ankle pressure and ABI immediately after walking (Post-AP, Post-ABI) were measured using one-minute treadmill walking in 52 lower limbs of 26 HD patients. The definition of peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAD) required an ABI value of less than 0.90, TBI value of less than 0.60, and decrease of more than 15% of the Post-ABI value and 20 mmHg of Post-AP in Ex-ABI. Computed tomographic angiography (CTA) was performed in 32 lower limbs of 16 HD patients. PAD is defined as presence of stenosis of more than 75% in the case of lesions from an iliac artery to knee on CTA. Results: The accuracy of Ex-ABI (Sensitivity, 85.7%; Specificity, 77.7%) was higher than those of ABI (Sensitivity, 42.9%; Specificity, 83.3%) or TBI (Sensitivity, 78.6%; Specificity, 61.1%). Conclusion: Ex-ABI with one-minute treadmill walking is the most useful tool for the screening of arterial occlusive lesions above the knee in maintenance HD patients.
A 77-year-old man was admitted with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS), severe heart failure (HF), and repeated ventricular fibrillation (VF) episodes. A single premature ventricular complex (PVC) induced ventricular tachycardia (VT), which degenerated to VF reproducibly. This PVC was eliminated by catheter ablation at the left ventricular posteroseptal region where double Purkinje potentials preceding the ventricular wave had been recorded. The electrical storm disappeared, and programmable stimulation failed to induce any tachyarrhythmias after the ablation. A Purkinje fiber network-related PVC served as a trigger and as a substrate for VT and VF in a case of ACS with HF.
A case with two different types of atrial reentrant tachycardia of superior vena cava (SVC) origin is presented. Recent clinical studies have shown that the origin of focal atrial tachycardia typically lies in the venous structures connecting to both atria--the coronary sinus, the superior and inferior vena cava, and the pulmonary vein. These foci have atrial muscle fiber extensions which have electrophysiological characteristics essential to generation of focal ectopic firing. However, little is known about reentrant mechanism of these venous structures. In this report, we present a case of two atrial tachycardias (SVT1 and SVT2) independently originating from the SVC. SVT1 had 430 ms of tachycardia cycle length, and SVT2 had 390 ms of tachycardia cycle length. Both of them showed the character of reentry, and their earliest activations were recorded in the SVC. They were successfully eliminated by focal radiofrequency ablation in the SVC.
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