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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of a man aged 39 who died one year after aortic valve replacement by a Braunwald-Cutter prosthesis is reported. A massive aortic incompetence due to falling out of the plastic ball owing to the rupture of an arm of the cage, induced an intractable cardiac future. On necroscopy the ball was found in the aorta at the level of the renal arteries.
G Ital Cardiol 1977
PMID:[Death caused by acute cardiac insufficiency due to rupture of the metal cage of a Braunwald-Cutter prosthesis. Description of a case]. 59 40

Fourteen patients (18.5%) are presented from a total of 78 patients who received a Starr-Edwards prosthesis Model No. 2320 with a Telfon covering, in an aortic position. In the late post-operative period these patients developed complications which merited a surgical reintervention. Twelve of these were operated on to substitute this prosthesis for a distinct type and model. In the other two the teflon covering on the cage of the prosthesis was dried thoroughly. The most frequent complication which made it necessary to reoperate was hemolysis, which would not cede to intense medical treatment. The hemolysis appeared at an average of 20 months post-operatively. In all of the cases we found a rupture due to erosion of the telfon material. This is undoubtably an etiological factor of the hemolysis. Eleven of the 14 cases (78.5%) survived. Ten of which were possible to follow up on a long term basis. Seven of these (70%) are asymptomatic and the remaining 3 (30%) are evolving with data suggestive of peri-prosthetic aortic insuficiency. A review is made of the evolution of Starr-Edwards prosthesis and the causes of the post-operative hemolysis in valvular surgery.
Arch Inst Cardiol Mex
PMID:[Rupture of the teflon cover of valvular prosthesis in aortic position. Severe postoperative complication]. 69 71

A 36-yr-old man suffered from transmural anterior myocardial infarction almost immediately after being hit by a football on the chest. There were neither external signs of injury to the chest wall, nor fractures of the thoracic cage. Coronary angiography 6 wk later revealed no demonstrable obstruction in any vessel; therefore, coronary artery injury with subsequent platelet aggregates or thrombosis followed by lysis and recanalization was suspected. Myocardial contusion or coronary spasm are alternative explanations.
Eur J Cardiol
PMID:Traumatic myocardial infarction with subsequent normal coronary arteriogram. 92 21

The posteroanterior and lateral chest X-ray films of 64 consecutive patients with an isolated systolic click (55 patients) or a systolic click with a late systolic murmur (9 patients) showed a striking frequency of thoracic skeletal abnormalities. There were 50 female and 14 male subjects. The average age of the female subjects was 36.7 years (range 13 to 67), that of the male subjects 39.7 years (range 17 to 56). Seventy-two percent of the female and 78 percent of the male subjects had an anteroposterior/transverse thoracic ratio less than the mean ratio in a small population. Bony abnormalities such as pectus excavatum, straight thoracic spine and scoliosis occurred alone or in a combination in 31 of the 50 female patients (62 percent) and in 8 of the 14 male patients (57 percent). Overall, 39 of the 64 patients (61 percent) had at least one of the skeletal abnormalities. Scoliosis occurred in 25 subjects (39 percent) and was mild in 19. A "straight back" was found in 15 (23 percent) and pectus excavatum in 7 patients (11 percent). The explanation for these findings is not apparent. Thoracic cage abnormalities should be included as one of the nonauscultatory features of the systolic click-late systolic murmur syndrome.
Am J Cardiol 1975 Jul
PMID:Radiographic appearance of the thorax in systolic click-late systolic murmur syndrome. 114 94

The aim of this study was to investigate the propensity to develop cardiac arrhythmias during an acute period of ischemia between normal and hypertrophied (by means of a swimming training regimen) rat hearts. We used the coronary artery ligation in vivo technique which induced the occurrence of cardiac arrhythmias in rats that was followed by the determination of the occluded zone size. This study was coupled to an in vitro study using a two-compartment tissue bath in which half of the ventricular preparation was exposed to normal conditions and the other to ischemic conditions (low pH, hypoxia, and hyperkalemia). We also measured the collagen content and the DNA/protein ratio of the hearts. Twenty-eight male Wistar rats submitted to an eight-week swimming training (SWT) and twenty-eight cage-confined matched rats were used for the studies. SWT resulted in a 14% decrease in mean body weight and an 8% increase in absolute heart weight. We also observed a resting bradycardia in the trained animals and blood pressure remained unchanged between the two groups. Collagen content was unchanged and DNA/protein ratio was lower in the left ventricle of trained animals. During a 30-min period of coronary artery ligation, SWT rats demonstrated fewer ischemia-induced arrhythmias as compared to controls. The size of the zone affected by the vasal occlusion was lower in trained animals. Electrophysiological data recorded in the two-compartment bath showed a marked prolongation of action potential duration and refractory period in the SWT rat hearts. During the 15-min period of in vitro ischemia there was a global alteration of all electrophysiological parameters which did not differ between the two groups. Our data support the hypothesis that resting bradycardia and decrease in ischemic zone size may be involved in the arrhythmogenic protection observed in hypertrophied hearts of swimming rats after an acute ligation of the left coronary artery. Our results also indicate that cardiac hypertrophy, as defined by quantitative changes in cardiac mass or by the electrophysiological alterations that are related to its development, is not necessarily associated with an increased risk for the occurrence of arrhythmias.
Basic Res Cardiol
PMID:Decreased susceptibility to arrhythmias in hypertrophied hearts of physically trained rats. 141 4

A 38-year-old man with a Starr-Edwards mitral prosthetic valve presented with a Staphylococcus aureus septicemia. Twenty-four hours later, transthoracic echocardiography did not show obvious vegetations but Doppler examination of the prosthetic valve demonstrated a prolonged half pressure time and an elevated peak transmitral velocity. Seventy-two hours after the first septic event transesophageal echocardiography revealed a large annular pannus floating in the left atrium in systole and protruding in the prosthetic cage during diastole. This case report emphasizes the importance of transesophageal echocardiography in septic patients with prosthetic valves and underlines the possibility of extremely rapid pannus formation in these patients.
Acta Cardiol 1991
PMID:Illustration by transesophageal echocardiography of rapid and important pannus formation during infective endocarditis of a prosthetic valve. 178 54

It is widely believed but has never been proved that idiopathic supraventricular tachyarrhythmias beginning during or after weekends or winter holidays are frequently alcohol-related ("holiday heart" syndrome). The time of arrhythmia onset was therefore studied in relation to self-reported ethanol consumption and results of a screening test for alcoholism (CAGE questionnaire) in 289 patients aged less than 65 years admitted for supraventricular tachyarrhythmias. There were 102 patients having an etiologically idiopathic arrhythmia with a known time of onset. Among them, but not among those with disease-related arrhythmias, patients with arrhythmic episodes beginning on Saturdays or on Sundays were more often chronic alcohol abusers (9 of 19, 47%) than either patients with episodes beginning from Mondays through Fridays (18 of 83, 22%; p = 0.040) or control subjects from the out-of-hospital population (8 of 66, 12%; p = 0.002). In multivariate analysis, the time of arrhythmia onset was related to the CAGE response (G2 = 6.0, p = 0.014) but not to the most recent ethanol use. However, the increased frequency of problem drinkers among patients with weekend-onset idiopathic arrhythmias was only relative, and resulted from a decreased number of abstainers and non-problem drinkers. No conspicuous clustering of alcohol-related arrhythmias was seen after New Year's or May Day. Thus, although the present study confirms an association between heavy drinking and idiopathic arrhythmias beginning during weekends, it shows that the question may be of a relative rather than an absolute overrepresentation. The term holiday heart may also be somewhat misleading since no postholiday accumulation of alcohol-related arrhythmias was found.
Am J Cardiol 1991 Apr 01
PMID:Time of onset of supraventricular tachyarrhythmia in relation to alcohol consumption. 200 22

Male rats, aged 17 weeks at the end of experiments, were divided into four groups. Two groups lived in normal cage conditions with or without extra load (20% of the body weight) and two groups were trained by running with or without extra load for 8 weeks. Oxidation rates of succinate, glutamate + malate, palmitoylcarnitine, and pyruvate, and the activities of lactate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase were measured in homogenates of the right ventricle and in those of the subendocardial and subepicardial layers of the left ventricle. Oxidation rates of succinate and palmitoylcarnitine tended to be higher in the subendocardium than in the subepicardium of sedentary control animals (p less than 0.1 and p less than 0.05, respectively). Transmural differences of succinate and palmitoylcarnitine oxidation rates were even more clear after running training (p less than 0.01 and p less than 0.05, respectively), after carrying extra load (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.001, respectively) and after training carrying extra load (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.05, respectively). Training also enhanced pyruvate oxidation rate in the subendocardium. Oxidation rates of all substrates were lower in the right ventricle than in the left ventricle. In control animals there were no regional differences in the myocardial enzyme activities and the training- or extra-load-induced changes were modest compared with the changes in the oxidation rates. The most significant change was the training-induced enhancement in the lactate dehydrogenase activity of the subendocardium (p less than 0.001 vs subepicardium). These results show greater subendocardial than subepicardial oxidation rates of certain substrates in the normal heart. These results also suggest that the myocardium adapts to increased work by increasing the subendocardial oxidation rate of some but not all substrates, indicating further that there may be qualitative mitochondrial differences in the different regions of the heart.
Basic Res Cardiol
PMID:Regional differences of substrate oxidation capacity in rat hearts: effects of extra load and endurance training. 207 98

The role of alcohol in recurrences of atrial fibrillation (AF) was assessed in a consecutive series of 98 patients (75 men) aged less than 65 years. In addition to etiologic assessment using clinical and laboratory methods and echocardiography, the patients' drinking habits were evaluated by recording the amount of alcohol used during the week preceding AF, by responses to the CAGE (Cut, Annoying, Guilt, Eye; see below) questionnaire (a screening test for alcohol abuse) and by selected laboratory tests. Two groups of control subjects were studied: 98 sex- and age-matched patients admitted to the emergency ward for acute illnesses, and 50 subjects selected randomly from the local out-of-hospital population. The mean alcohol consumption among men during the study week was 186 g (median 45 g; range 0 to 2,100 g) among patients, whereas among male hospital and population control subjects it was 86 g (30 g; 0 to 1,050 g) and 94 g (35 g; 0 to 630 g), respectively. When the weekly alcohol consumption was analyzed in 3 categories (0; 1 to 210 g; greater than 210 g), there was a significant difference between AF cases and hospital control patients (p = 0.03), but not between AF cases and population control subjects. Multivariate analysis of data of AF cases and population control subjects showed that alcohol intake and a positive response to 1 or more of the CAGE questions were independently related to AF in men. Other independent risk factors were the presence of heart disease, low serum potassium and lack of sleep or experience of excess psychologic stress, or both.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Am J Cardiol 1990 Oct 15
PMID:Role of alcohol in recurrences of atrial fibrillation in persons less than 65 years of age. 222 Jun 18

Thrombotic obstruction is rare in bacterial endocarditis involving prosthetic heart valves. A 45-year-old man who had three intracardiac, ball-cage-type prosthetic valves, presented with streptococcal septicemia. Major obstruction of the tricuspid Smeloff-Cutter valve and normal function of the two other prostheses were documented by Doppler echocardiography. Emergency replacement of the tricuspid valve alone was decided on the one basis of this echocardiographic diagnosis, and successfully performed. Operative findings confirmed the noninvasive findings.
Acta Cardiol 1990
PMID:Late endocarditis-associated obstructive dysfunction of a tricuspid ball-cage-type valve. Doppler echocardiographic findings and therapeutic implications. 228 43


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