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Scompenso cardiaco irreversibile con compromissione viscerale multipla. Al di quà e al di là delle possibilità del trapianto cardiaco: i problemi fisiopatologici, terapeutici, organizzativi ed etici.
[Echocardiography and nuclear medicine: complementary or alternative methods in the study of the ischemic myocardium?].
Stunned and hibernating myocardium: possibility of intervention.
There are several potential outcomes of myocardial ischemia. When ischemia is severe and prolonged, irreversible damage occurs and there is no recovery of contractile function. When myocardial ischemia is less severe but still prolonged, myocytes may remain viable but exhibit depressed contractile function. Under these conditions, reperfusion restores complete contractile performance. This type of ischemia, leading to a reversible, chronic left ventricular dysfunction, has been termed hibernating myocardium. The difference between this condition and that described before, i.e., prolonged ischemia, which results in further damage on reperfusion, is, most likely, related to residual coronary flow. In the hibernating myocardium, which is always supplied by a narrow coronary artery, blood flow is not low enough to cause progression toward tissue necrosis, but it is low enough to cause pH changes that, in turn, are responsible for the downregulation of myocardial contractility. The level of underperfusion is sufficient to maintain aerobic metabolism of the quiescient myocardium as demonstrated by the absence of lactate and creatine phosphokinase release. There are no doubts that revascularization is essential for hibernated myocardium, and the clinical goal to achieve is the possibility of accurately distinguishing viable from infarcted tissue. A third possible outcome of myocardial ischemia is a postischemic ventricular dysfunction or myocardial stunning. This term describes a transient mechanical dysfunction that persists on reperfusion after a short period of ischemia, despite the absence of irreversible damage. There are numerous clinical conditions in which stunning might manifest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS
The accuracy of echocardiography during the infusion of low-dose dobutamine in identifying vital myocardium in patients with obstructive coronary disease and chronic left ventricular dysfunction
The identification of viable myocardium has important therapeutic implications in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and chronic left ventricular dysfunction. To assess the accuracy of transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) during dobutamine infusion for identification of viable myocardium, we have analyzed 14 patients affected by CAD and chronic abnormalities of left ventricular wall motion (RWM), present at rest, referred for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG): 8 of 14 patients had a history of myocardial infarction with evidence of Q waves at the surface ECG. All patients had a clinical stable CAD. RWM response to dobutamine (5 mcg/kg/min and 10 mcg/kg/min) was evaluated using TTE and compared to RWM changes after CABG analyzed by intraoperative epicardial echocardiography (EE). RWM was analyzed qualitatively by dividing the left ventricle into 16 segments and a score index was assigned to each region (0: normal; 1: hypokinetic; 2: akinetic; 3: dyskinetic). Of 125 akinetic segments present at rest before CABG, 93 showed functional improvement after CABG at intraoperative EE. The RWM response to dobutamine infusion predicted intraoperative improvement after CABG in 85 of 93 segments (sensitivity: 91.3%) and identified 25 of the 32 segments which did not exhibit intraoperative improvement (specificity: 78.1%). The TTE performed 15 days after CABG showed no worsening or further improvement in RWM when compared with intraoperative EE study. Summed segment scores in 14 patients showed significantly improvement from 17.9 +/- 7, medium values at rest, to 5.1 +/- 4 after dobutamine infusion (p less than 0.001) and 5 +/- 7 after CABG (p less than 0.001)
Combination use of an automatic anti-tachycardia pacemaker and an automatic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator in sustained recurrent ventricular tachycardia resistant to drugs
We used the combination of an antitachycardia automatic ventricular pacemaker with the automatic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator in two patients with sustained, recurrent, drug-resistant ventricular tachycardias in whom a surgical ablation was not indicated. The indications for the combined use of the two systems were the possibility to control: a) the ventricular tachycardias with ventricular programmed stimulation; b) the arrhythmias which might eventually degenerate into ventricular flutter or fibrillation (as a result of anti-tachycardia pacing) with the defibrillator. To avoid any possible interference between the two systems we used the following protocol: a) endocardial bipolar pacing; b) the sensing electrodes of the defibrillator were placed as far as possible from the endocardial one; c) a suitable programming of the pacemaker output; d) a careful selection of the anti-tachycardia pacing programme (burst rate inferior to the cut-off rate of the cardioverter-defibrillator and/or a duration of the burst pacing inferior to the arrhythmia sensing time of the defibrillator); e) use of cardioverter-defibrillators with a high cut-off rate. We never observed, during the follow-up (11 and 4 months, respectively), interference between the two systems. Both patients had ventricular tachycardia recurrences (51 and 3 episodes, respectively). The arrhythmias were correctly detected and interrupted by the pacemaker without the intervention of the defibrillator. These data confirm the feasibility of the combined use of the two systems in patients with ventricular tachycardias and, in selected cases, this approach is preferable. The anti-tachycardia pacemaker counteracts some limitations of the defibrillators available at present. It offers a protection against bradyarrhythmias and allows a more precise storage of arrhythmic events. The anti-tachycardia pacemaker often controls ventricular tachycardias without the intervention of the defibrillator, thus giving the same a longer life-span and allowing patients to avoid the shock
Coronary revascularization and recovery of function: the ultimate target.
Recovery of contraction in the akinetic segments represents an important target of coronary revascularization, and the preoperative recognition of viable dyssynergic (hibernating) myocardium is a crucial point in the preoperative investigation of patients with chronically depressed left ventricular function. Dobutamine-echocardiography was utilized in 14 patients to study the contractile reserve retained by viable segments. Redistribution of thallium-201 after rest injection was also used to assess the viability of these areas. The wall motion response to dobutamine infusion predicted immediate postoperative improvement in 85 of 93 segments (sensitivity 91%) and identified 25 of 32 segments which did not exhibit early postoperative improvement (specificity 78%). Rest-redistribution of thallium-201 demonstrated high sensitivity (93%) but low specificity (44%) for predicting the early recovery of regional wall motion. When late recovery was also considered, the specificity of this method increased to 64%. Recovery of function following coronary revascularization can be predicted in patients in whom hibernating myocardium is recognized preoperatively
The effects of ruthenium red on mitochondrial function during post-ischaemic reperfusion.
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