Immediate use of CPAP in out-of-hospital treatment of CPE and until CPE resolves after admission significantly improves early outcome compared with medical treatment alone.
Background-Resynchronization therapy by simultaneous pacing of the right and left ventricles has gained wide acceptance as a useful treatment for patients with severe congestive heart failure. Several short-term hemodynamic studies in humans and animals failed to demonstrate any benefit of biventricular pacing over left univentricular pacing, but long-term studies on this pacing mode are lacking. The objective of this study was to assess the outcome over a 1-year period of patients paced exclusively in the left ventricle. Methods and Results-Clinical, angiographic, echocardiographic, and ergometric data were collected at baseline and after 12 months in 22 patients (age, 69.3Ϯ6.5 years) with NYHA class III or IV (10 patients), sinus rhythm, left bundle-branch block, and no bradycardia indication for pacing. After 12 months, compared with baseline values, NYHA class improved significantly by 40% (PϽ0.0001), 6-minute walk distance by 30% (Pϭ0.01), peak V O 2 by 26% (Pϭ0.01), left ventricular end-diastolic diameter by 5% (Pϭ0.02), ejection fraction by 22% (Pϭ0.07), mitral regurgitation area by 40% (Pϭ0.01), and norepinephrine level by 37% (Pϭ0.04). Conclusions-In patients with severe congestive heart failure, sinus rhythm, and left bundle-branch block despite optimal pharmacological treatment, left univentricular pacing is feasible and results in significant midterm benefit in exercise tolerance and left ventricular function.
The results of this initial experience in relatively few patients suggest that MSCT-based coronary angiography may serve as an alternative to invasive coronary angiography to rule out significant coronary artery disease in patients scheduled for elective aortic valve replacement. Larger studies are necessary to fully explore the potential of coronary MSCT to improve preoperative risk stratification.
Objectives: Cardiac tamponade represents a life-threatening condition that may complicate almost any cause of pericarditis. We conducted a 10-year prospective survey on patients with cardiac tamponade requiring an emergency drainage. Methods: From 1996 to 2005, 114 consecutive patients were admitted to the University Hospital of Brest for medical cardiac tamponade. Data on medical history, and volume, characteristics and histology of the pericardial fluid as well as short- and long-term follow-up data were collected. Results: Malignant disease was the primary cause of medical tamponade (74 patients; 65%), followed by viral history (11; 10%) and intra-pericardial bleeding due to anti-coagulation treatment (4; 3%). In 12 cases, aetiology remained unknown (10%). Pericardiocentesis was immediately performed in 80 cases and surgical pericardiotomy in 34. The mean volume drained was 593 ± 313 ml. In-hospital mortality was 10% without any difference between malignant and non-malignant diseases (p = 0.8). One-year mortality was 76.5% in patients with malignant disease and 13.3% in those without malignant disease (p < 0.0001). Median survival in case of malignant disease was 150 days. Conclusion: Compared to previously published data, our survey shows a decrease in some historical causes of tamponade such as tuberculosis, myxoedema or uraemia. The leading cause is currently malignant disease, which carries a very poor prognosis.
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