To evaluate the occurrence of complications during diagnostic or interventional catheterization a retrospective analysis of catheterization procedures in 12 Italian laboratories using the nonionic ...contrast medium (CM) iopamidol (370 mgI/ml) was performed. Data obtained on 26,219 patients greater than or equal to 14 years are presented. The overall complication rate was 1.89% (485/26,219). The overall mortality rate was 0.1% (27/26,219). Procedure related complications were 389 (1.48%) and CM related complications were 106 (0.4%). No death was attributed to CM. Ventricular fibrillation (VF) rate was 0.11% comparable to the low rate observed with nonionic CM in other studies and less than the rate observed in surveys concerning the use of ionic CM. Fifty-seven thrombotic events were recorded (0.22%), a rate comparable with other surveys with ionic and nonionic CM. The total complication rate (6.1%), the rates of coronary occlusion (1.34%), myocardial infarction (0.37%) and urgent coronary artery by-pass grafting (0.5%) in 1,348 coronary angioplasties were lower than those recorded in previous surveys. These data confirm a good tolerability and no increased risk of VF and thrombotic events with iopamidol in cardiac catheterization.
Down patients frequently present congenital heart disease (CHD). Among these the most common is complete atrioventricular canal (CAV). The Authors studied by cardiac catheterization 2 groups of ...subjects with CAV:21 Down-patients, aged 5-48 months (mean = 24.7) and 17 non-Down patients aged 6-50 months (mean = 23.1). Hemodynamic data were compared and in particular pulmonary vascular resistances (PVR) were analysed. Mean pulmonary resistance was 11.1 UM2 for Down children and 4.6 UM2 for non-Down children. Considering the subjects under 2 years of age, PVR greater than or equal to 10 UM2 was present in 5 of 14 (35.7%). Down children, while none in the non-Down group. The cause of this behaviour is unknown; some Authors, in pathological studies, found in Down-patients primitive structural anomalies of the vascular bed with decrease of total vascular surface area. This fact might explain higher values of PVR in Down-patients than in non-Down patients.
Lamina propria mononuclear cells can be isolated from mucosal specimens of human colon. In the present study, we have explored whether both the phenotypes and functional properties can be studied in ...lamina propria mononuclear cell suspensions isolated from the same set of endoscopic biopsies in patients with ulcerative colitis. The counts of CD11b+ lamina propria mononuclear cells in mild active ulcerative colitis were significantly higher than those of both quiescent ulcerative colitis and controls. Similarly, the CD16+ and the CD19+ lamina propria mononuclear cells were significantly increased in mild ulcerative colitis patients in comparison to both quiescent ulcerative colitis and control lamina propria mononuclear cells. Lamina propria mononuclear cells from all the biopsy samples appeared to produce detectable amounts of immunoglobulins of the three classes. The production of IgG in mild ulcerative colitis cultures was significantly higher than that observed in quiescent ulcerative colitis and controls. In contrast, the production of IgA in active ulcerative colitis lamina propria mononuclear cell cultures appeared to be significantly lower than that of both quiescent ulcerative colitis and controls. This study shows that morphology, phenotypes, and functional properties can be assessed in lamina propria mononuclear cell suspensions obtained from the same set of endoscopic biopsy samples. We have also shown that changes in phenotypes and functional status of lamina propria mononuclear cells occurred in mild active ulcerative colitis while no significant abnormality of these parameters was found in quiescent ulcerative colitis. This indicates that a normalization of mucosal immune functions occurs in ulcerative colitis patients when complete clinical and histological remission is achieved.
The Authors report their experience in the surgical treatment of 19 patients under two years of age (75% under six months), with severe symptoms for the presence of a complete or incomplete vascular ...ring. Twelve patients had double aortic arch, two had a right aortic arch with a left ligamentum arteriosum, four a symptomatic retroesophageal right subclavian artery and one an abnormally placed innominate artery. Symptoms, methods of diagnosis, indications to the surgical treatment, surgical techniques and late results are considered. The Authors remark that even if correction of these rare congenital malformations may be simple and with a low operative mortality, many problems exist in the early diagnosis and in the post-operative treatment of these patients.