Advanced heart failure is a growing epidemic that leads to significant suffering and economic losses. The development of left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) has led to improved quality of life and long-term survival for patients diagnosed with this devastating condition. This review briefly summarizes the short history and clinical outcomes of LVADs and focuses on the current controversies and issues facing LVAD therapy. Finally, the future directions for the role of LVADs in the treatment of end-stage heart failure are discussed.
Screening using a low-dose CT scan is associated with high cost, repeated radiation exposure, and low accrual. The high sensitivity, convenience, and low cost of breath analysis for carbonyl cancer markers suggests that it has the potential to become a primary screening modality for lung cancer.
The diaphragm is an inconspicuous fibromuscular septum, and disorders may result in respiratory impairment and morbidity and mortality when untreated. Radiologists need to accurately diagnose diaphragmatic disorders, understand the surgical approaches to diaphragmatic incisions/repairs, and recognize postoperative changes and complications. Diaphragmatic defects violate the boundary between the chest and abdomen, with the risk of herniation and strangulation of abdominal contents. In our surgical practice, patients with diaphragmatic hernias present acutely with incarceration and/or strangulation. Bochdalek hernias are commonly diagnosed in asymptomatic older adults on computed tomography; however, when viscera or a large amount of fat herniates into the chest, surgical intervention is strongly advocated. Morgagni hernias are rare in adults and typically manifest acutely with bowel obstruction. Patients with traumatic diaphragm injury may have an acute, latent, or delayed presentation, and radiologists should be vigilant in inspecting the diaphragm on the initial and all subsequent thoracoabdominal imaging studies. Almost all traumatic diaphragm injury are surgically repaired. Finally, with porous diaphragm syndrome, fluid, air, and tissue from the abdomen may communicate with the pleural space through diaphragmatic fenestrations and result in a catamenial pneumothorax or large pleural effusion. When the underlying disorder cannot be effectively treated, the goal of surgical intervention is to establish the diagnosis, incite pleural adhesions, and close diaphragmatic defects. Diaphragmatic plication may be helpful in patients with eventration or acquired injuries of the phrenic nerve, as it can stabilize the affected diaphragm. Phrenic nerve pacing may improve respiratory function in select patients with high cervical cord injury or central hypoventilation syndrome.
BackgroundQuantitative analysis of specific exhaled carbonyl compounds (ECCs) has shown promise for the detection of lung cancer. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the normalization of ECCs in patients after lung cancer resection.MethodsPatients from a single center gave consent and were enrolled in the study from 2011 onward. Breath analysis was performed on lung cancer patients before and after surgical resection of their tumors. One liter of breath from a single exhalation was collected and evacuated over a silicon microchip. Carbonyls were captured by oximation reaction and analyzed by mass spectrometry. Concentrations of four cancer-specific ECCs were measured and compared by using the Wilcoxon test. A given cancer marker was considered elevated at 1.5 or more standard deviations greater than the mean of the control population.ResultsThere were 34 cancer patients with paired samples and 187 control subjects. The median values after resection were significantly lower for all four ECCs and were equivalent to the control patient values for three of the four ECCs.ConclusionsThe analysis of ECCs demonstrates reduction to the level of control patients after surgical resection for lung cancer. This technology has the potential to be a useful tool to detect disease after lung cancer resection. Continued follow-up will determine whether subsequent elevation of ECCs is indicative of recurrent disease.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.