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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (
thinning
)
11,252
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 54
myocardial infarction
survivors and 20 normal subjects were examined echo- and polycardiographically. The movement of left ventricular wall was studied within and outside the affected area. A hypokinetic zone was identified in all the patients after the posterior
myocardial infarction
. The measurement of posterior wall movement amplitude before expulsion is over improves the chances of echocardiographic identification of the hypokinetic zone in patients with lower localization of
myocardial infarction
. Apart from reduced amplitude and rate of contraction, and myocardial
thinning
, the hypokinetic zone reveals paradoxical myocardial thickening during the early diastole, and shorter duration of affected area relaxation, while intact myocardium relaxes early. It is suggested that disorders relaxation in
myocardial infarction
survivors precedes contraction disorders, with hypokinetic myocardium relaxing mostly passively, and intact myocardium relaxation being of a more active nature and independent of the filling phase.
...
PMID:[Echocardiographic analysis of the regional function of the left ventricle in patients who have had a myocardial infarct]. 683 84
We investigated the effect of indomethacin, a widely used nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug, on the healing of
myocardial infarction
(MI). Experimental MI was produced in anesthetized, open-chest dogs by occluding the left anterior descending coronary artery. Ten dogs received indomethacin, 10 mg/kg i.v., and 11 received saline, 15 minutes and 3 hours after occlusion. After 6 weeks, the dogs were killed and their hearts were subjected to morphologic and biochemical analysis. The average thickness of the transmural scar and the noninfarcted left ventricular wall was measured at multiple sites in formalin-fixed left ventricular slices and the ratio of the thickness of the transmural scar to the noninfarcted wall determined. The average thickness of the noninfarcted wall was 8.80 +/- 0.19 mm (mean +/- SEM) in the control group and 8.44 +/- 0.26 mm in the indomethacin group (NS). The scar thickness was 7.24 +/- 0.64 mm in the control group and 3.56 +/- 0.40 mm in the indomethacin group (p less than 0.001). The ratio of scar to noninfarcted wall thickness was 0.83 +/- 0.07 in the control group and 0.43 +/- 0.04 in the indomethacin group (p less than 0.001). Scars in treated dogs did not differ from controls either by light microscopic histologic analysis or by analysis of hydroxyproline content per unit weight. We conclude that indomethacin results in marked scar
thinning
when given early after experimental MI.
...
PMID:Indomethacin-induced scar thinning after experimental myocardial infarction. 685 Oct 23
Myocardial infarction (MI)
was produced in 27 dogs by ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery. Two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiograms were performed through the closed chest before and serially after coronary ligation, in both the acute and healing stages of MI. Two-dimensional echocardiographic studies performed before the animals were killed were analyzed for left ventricular (LV) contraction defects by 2 algorithms--1 involving systolic myocardial thickening and
thinning
and the other by determining the extent of endocardial motion to derive cavity area shrinkage. Using the thickening algorithm, myocardial dysfunction was detected in 93% of the animals with MI; with the area shrinkage method, contraction abnormalities were detected in 96% of the animals with MI. When the heart was divided from base to apex into 3 short-axis sections, the thickening algorithm showed a trend toward better identification of normal regions than the area shrinkage algorithm. However, in predicting the circumferential extent of MI, the thickening-
thinning
method of analysis showed no advantage over the endocardial motion method (r = 0.77, standard error of the estimate = 0.16 versus r = 0.76, standard error of the estimate [SEE] = 0.16; p = not significant [NS]). These observations support the concept that either algorithm can be used effectively to detect the presence and quantify the circumferential extent of MI.
...
PMID:Quantitative detection of regional left ventricular contraction abnormalities by 2-dimensional echocardiography. Comparison of myocardial thickening and thinning and endocardial motion in a canine model. 685 83
Sixty-one cases with ischemic heart disease were examined with ECG-gated computed tomography (CT), and left ventricular (LV) wall properties were evaluated by the end-diastolic and end-systolic images of LV slices in terms of LV inner wall motion, LV wall thickness change in cardiac cycle and LV wall
thinning
. 1) Inner wall motion abnormalities of LV were detected by superimposing ED and ES images, and these coincided with angiocardiographic findings in 82% of LV segments, while assessment was difficult in the septal side because of its poor wall motion even in normal cases. In CT examination, both "hypokinesis" and "dyskinesis" in left ventriculography (LVG) were likely to be expressed as "akinesis" due to poor time resolution, causing difficulty in assessing the severity of abnormality. 2) In CT examination, changes in LV wall thickness during cardiac cycle were easily evaluated, especially in the septal segments. LV segments of a poor thickness change were well correlated with those of the abnormal wall motion assessed by LVG in 72% of LV segments. 3) In CT, LV wall contractility was finally evaluated by the combination of inner wall motion and wall thickness change, and the final assessments agreed with those observed in LVG in 84% of LV segments. 4) LV segments of abnormal motion evaluated by both inner wall motion and wall thickness change in CT image were well correlated with those observed by LVG (75%), and were thought to imply severe myocardial ischemia. 5) A great part of LV segments with wall
thinning
corresponded to the severely impaired wall motion observed in LVG (83%) and clinically identified
myocardial infarction
(87%). Wall
thinning
was well correlated with infarction.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of left ventricular wall characteristics in ischemic heart disease by cardiac CT examination]. 717 23
Usefulness of cardiac computed tomography (CT) in the evaluation of left ventricular (LV) morphology and function was studied in clinical practice. One hundred and forty-nine adult cases of various heart diseases were examined by GE scanner with ungated scans covering whole LV and ECG-gated scans. In gating examination, "long-axial" and "short-axial" slices were scanned and end-diastolic area (EDA), end-systolic area (ESA) and "mean" area (MA) were obtained in each slices. 1) With regard to LV morphology, wall thickening in HCM and wall
thinning
and mural thrombus in
myocardial infarction
were easily visualized. 2) LV "mean" volume (LVMV) was easily calculated from the sum of sliced LV volume of ungated scans. The LVMV was well correlated with end-diastolic volume (EDV) obtained by LV angiocardiography (LVG) (r = 0.91), though the former was somewhat smaller than the latter. EDV by CT obtained after the correction with MA/EDA from gating examination showed a better correlation (r = 0.95) and both EDV showed almost the same value. 3) LV ejection fraction (EF) was calculated by exchanging ESA/EDA to ESV/EDV in "long-axial" and "short-axial" gated slices, and "long-axial" EF, "short-axial" EF and mean of both were well correlated with LVEF of LVG (r = 0.73-0.79). 4) LVEF calculated from "long-axial" EDA and ESA by application of "area-length" method was also correlated with EF of LVG (r = 0.68), but these EDV and ESV were smaller than those of LVG due to shorter long-diameter of LV in CT. 5) LV muscle volume was calculated from sum of sliced muscle volumes of ungated scans covering LV, and LV mass was easily evaluated from LV muscle volume and specific gravity of LV muscle. This LV mass was well correlated with that of LVG (r = 0.90) and the absolute values were almost the same.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of left ventricular morphology and function by cardiac computed tomographic examination]. 717 27
The significance and usefulness of two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) in the evaluation of superacute phase of
myocardial infarction
were studied in 13 dogs with coronary occlusion, and 2DE findings were compared with the hemodynamic indices.
Myocardial infarction
was produced by the occlusion of anterior descending branch of the left coronary artery in 13 anesthetized adult mongrel dogs. In 6 dogs, the end-diastolic area and percent fractional shortening (%FS) in each short-axis view of the left ventricle at the level of the mitral valve, chordae tendineae, papillary muscles, low papillary muscles and apex were measured during 60 minutes, and end-diastolic wall thickness of infarct area situated in the transitional zone between the septum and the anterior wall were compared with that of non-infarct area immediately and subsequent 60 minutes after occlusion. Positive dP/dt/P, time constant T and cardiac output were measured simultaneously with an echocardiographic study. Severe enlargement and expansion of the left ventricular cavity (ballooning) and a decrease of %FS and
thinning
of the left ventricular wall perfused by the occluded artery occurred immediately after occlusion and persisted during subsequent 60 minutes. Time constant T was significantly prolonged, while positive dP/dt/P and cardiac output were decreased immediately and continued up to 60 minutes after occlusion. 2DE findings corresponded well with the changes of cardiac function and hemodynamics determined simultaneously. We concluded that the detection of the left ventricular ballooning is important in the diagnosis of superacute phase of
myocardial infarction
in dogs.
...
PMID:[Echocardiography in superacute phase of myocardial infarction: an experimental study]. 718 11
Experimental
myocardial infarction
was reproduced in large random-bred dogs by ligation of the left descending coronary artery. After 24 hours of ischemia, subendocardial Purkinje cells showed accumulations of lipid drops, development of foci of myofibril overcontraction with simultaneous accumulation in the cells of large lysosomes, disappearance of the external layer of sarcolemma,
thinning
of glycocalyx, and intact plasmalemma. Most contractile cardiomyocytes were changed irreversibly. Among them, however, there was a portion of viable cells with marked signs of lipid infiltration. These contractile cells lacked the external layer of sarcolemma, had thinned glycocalyx, plasmalemma in a number of cases was penetrable for colloid lanthanum. The ischemized cells with maximally thinned external layers of sarcolemma and intact plasmalemma may apparently be regarded as potential sources of ectopic activity. Overcontracted Purkinje cells are primarily among them.U
...
PMID:[Ultrastructure of the subendocardiac cardiomyocytes of the dog heart in acute experimental myocardial infarct]. 729 64
Location of infarct lesions (IL) demonstrated by two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) was correlated with electrocardiographic patterns of
myocardial infarction
and with the sites of obstructive lesions in the individual coronary arteries. The left ventricular wall was displayed by phased-array 2DE in 47 patients with healed
myocardial infarction
, 29 of whom underwent coronary arteriography. Segmental analysis of IL was performed on 14 segments, 10 of which were obtained by the parasternal short-axis recordings at the mitral (basal) and papillary muscle (mid) levels (each level containing the anterior septum, anterior wall, lateral wall, posterior wall, and posterior septum). The remaining 4 segments (septum, anterior wall, lateral wall, posterior wall) were obtained by the apical 2-chamber and 4-chamber recordings. IL were defined as akinesis,
thinning
, increased echo density, or absent systolic thickening of the left ventricular wall. All 22 patients with anterior infarction (Q in V1-V4) had IL in the mid anterior septum which was specific for the lesion of the left anterior descending artery (LAD). The presence or absence of the r wave in V1 could not predict the involvement of this segment. IL in the apical anterior wall and septum were observed in 21 of 22 patients. The presence of Q waves in V5, V6 suggested the additional involvement of the apical posterior wall. Additional Q waves in I, aVL indicated the extension of IL from the mild anterior septum to the basal anterior septum, anterior wall, and mid anterior wall. The basal and mid lateral walls appeared normal in most patients. This pattern of IL distribution was observed in 5 of 6 patients with a stenosis on the proximal LAD. All 14 patients with inferior infarction (Q in II, III, aVF) had IL in the mid posterior wall and posterior septum. In contrast, 5 patients with infero-posterior infarction (Q in II, III, aVF + R in V1) and 6 patients with posterior infarction (R in V1) had IL in the mid lateral as well as the mid posterior wall without an involvement of the posterior septum. Coronary arteriography revealed that all of the 10 patients with inferior infarction had a stenosis in the right coronary artery, whereas 6 patients with infero-posterior or posterior infarction invariably had a stenosis in the left circumflex coronary artery. It was concluded that 2DE provides a reliable method for detecting IL and anatomic location of
myocardial infarction
reflecting a specific coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:[Two-dimensional echocardiographic approach to the localization of myocardial infarction: echocardiographic, electrocardiographic, and coronary arteriographic correlations (author's transl)]. 732 May 55
Under basal conditions the echocardiographic findings in anginal patients (pts.) without previous
myocardial infarction
appears usually normal. Consequently, the usefulness of the ultrasounds evaluation in angina pectoris has been commonly considered poor and the utilization of this technique in coronary artery disease has been restricted to the detection of
myocardial infarction
in its acute phase or to its chronic mechanical alterations. The purpose of this study was to assess the possibility offered by M-mode echocardiography to detect changes caused by transient myocardial ischemia at rest in man, in view of the possible diagnostic application of this technique. The reported results were obtained from 25 ischemic attacks (13 spontaneous and 12 ergonovine induced) with ST segment elevation or pseudonormalization of a basally negative T wave at rest. The semiautomatic computerized analysis of echocardiograms continuously recorded during these attacks showed a reduction of motion and of systolic thickening, accompanied by a diastolic
thinning
of the wall involved by the ischemia. These changes occur very early: they appear few seconds before ECG changes and are accompanied by a reduction of contraction and relaxation dP/dt and precede the onset of chest pain; moreover, they are followed by an increase in left ventricular internal diameters. In conclusion M-mode echocardiography is a sensitive technique capable to detect transient myocardial ischemia in the course of spontaneous or induced angina with ST segment elevation or positivity of negative T wave. This approach could be helpful in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with atypical chest pain and/or aspecific ECG changes and it can be complementary to other non invasive techniques such dynamic ECG and nuclear cardiology techniques.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of transient acute myocardial ischemia in man by M-mode echocardiography (author's transl)]. 732 34
In the past, hypertensive heart disease was the principal cause of congestive heart failure, but currently ischemic heart disease is the major etiologic factor. In the last 20 years, the role of
myocardial infarction
(MI) and the subsequent alteration in ventricular architecture of the infarcted and noninfarcted myocardium have become increasingly associated with a phenomenon known as ventricular remodelling. This process consists of left ventricular wall
thinning
in the infarction area, ventricular chamber dilatation, and compensatory hypertrophy of the noninfarcted portion of the myocardium. This article describes the pathophysiologic transformation that begins with MI and ventricular remodeling and ends in congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:The pathophysiologic process of ventricular remodeling: from infarct to failure. 771 50
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