A coronary angiographic view is said to be "optimal" when the directing radius of the X-ray beam is perpendicular to the long axis of a stenosis. The object was to fulfill two criteria: 1) the ...accurate calculation of the spatial orientation of the stenosis to obtain the optimal position, 2) rapid and optimal positioning of the angiographic material with easy rotation around the axis of the stenosis. Two combined solutions were proposed:the Advantx L/C (GE Medical systems) angiocardiographic system with three motorised axes of rotation and a specific software. This software takes into account two longitudinal axes of the stenosis traced by the operator in two conventional incidences and then determines the angles of optimal positioning (accuracy +/-5 degrees). During 97 consecutive coronary angiograms, the software was used in 23 cases (24%) and judged to be useful in 16 cases (70%). In 2 of the 23 cases (8%) the mechanical angles calculated could not be used, the incidences being incompatible with the patient's position. During the angiograms, the best two images of stenosis (one conventional, one optimal) were retained to form a pair of images. Eight observers analysed 37 pairs of images shown side by side. 65% of the images selected from each pair as being the best descriptive appearance of the stenosis came from the optimised system. During quantitative analysis, only the length of stenosis differed statistically between the two modes of acquisition (1.26 +/- 0.36 mm; p = 0.0014). This system is useful during coronary angiography for providing optimal views of stenosis free from any geometric distorsion and without superimposition of adjacent branches.
Recurrent infective endocarditis Delahaye, J P; Beuchot, T; Delahaye, F ...
Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux
82, Issue:
4
Journal Article
Between August, 1974 and May, 1987, 486 patients were treated for infective endocarditis. In 16 of these patients (12 men, 4 women, mean age 44.3 +/- 18.0 years at the time of the first episode) the ...endocarditis recurred: once in 14 patients, twice in 2 patients. The time elapsed between recovery from the first episode and onset of the recurrence varied from 6 to 159 months (mean 54.3 +/- 35.1 months). Among the 18 recurrences, 10 affected native valves (mitral 6, aortic 4) and 8 aortic prostheses. In all but one case the organism isolated during the recurrence (Streptococcus in 14 cases, Staphylococcus in 3 cases, Rickettsia in 1 case) was different from the organism responsible for the previous infection. The 16 patients were followed up for periods of 28 to 203 months (mean 107.0 +/- 58.0 months), counting from the onset of the first episode. Ten patients were treated medically during the second episode: 4 died and 2 had a second recurrence, lethal in one of them (time elapsed between the onset of the first episode and the date of death: 32 to 149 months). Six patients were operated upon (valve replacement in 5 cases, closure of a left aorto-ventricular fistula in 1 case) without deaths. Nine of the 11 survivors are now asymptomatic. The actuarial survival rate in recurrent endocarditis (75 p. 100, 10 years after the onset of the first episode) is not different from that observed in non-recurrent endocarditis.