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Annals of Surgery Apr 1968
Topics: Angiocardiography; Blood Pressure; Embolism; Hemodynamics; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Pulmonary Embolism
PubMed: 5644734
DOI: 10.1097/00000658-196804000-00020 -
British Medical Journal Sep 1976
Topics: Angiocardiography; Echocardiography; Heart Atria; Heart Neoplasms; Humans; Myxoma
PubMed: 974562
DOI: No ID Found -
British Medical Journal (Clinical... Jun 1981
Topics: Angiocardiography; Heart Function Tests; Heart Ventricles; Humans; Mitral Valve Insufficiency
PubMed: 6788206
DOI: No ID Found -
California Medicine Jul 1970
Topics: Angiocardiography; Angiography; Cardiac Catheterization; Contrast Media; Fluoroscopy; Humans; Methods; Physician-Patient Relations
PubMed: 5520730
DOI: No ID Found -
Proceedings of the Royal Society of... Jun 1959
Topics: Angiocardiography
PubMed: 13667924
DOI: No ID Found -
Canadian Medical Association Journal Feb 1972
Topics: Angiocardiography; Coronary Angiography; Diagnosis, Differential; Electrocardiography; Heart Atria; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Myocardial Infarction
PubMed: 5061130
DOI: No ID Found -
Journal of the Royal College of... Jul 1981
Topics: Angiocardiography; Arrhythmias, Cardiac; Echocardiography; Electrocardiography; Embolism; Heart Auscultation; Heart Failure; Humans; Mitral Valve Prolapse
PubMed: 7252895
DOI: No ID Found -
British Heart Journal Sep 1970A case of cor triatrium dexter is described in which the patient had been independently assessed in two cardiological centres as having a form of Ebstein's anomaly. The...
A case of cor triatrium dexter is described in which the patient had been independently assessed in two cardiological centres as having a form of Ebstein's anomaly. The differential diognosis is discussed.
Topics: Adult; Angiocardiography; Cardiac Catheterization; Diagnosis, Differential; Ebstein Anomaly; Electrocardiography; Female; Heart Atria; Heart Defects, Congenital; Humans; Pulmonary Veins; Radiography, Thoracic
PubMed: 5470056
DOI: 10.1136/hrt.32.5.714 -
British Heart Journal Jan 1964
Topics: Angiocardiography; Blood Flow Velocity; Blood Pressure Determination; Cardiac Catheterization; Cardiac Surgical Procedures; Cardiomegaly; Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic; Electrocardiography; Heart Auscultation; Heart Function Tests; Radiography, Thoracic; Thoracic Surgery
PubMed: 14106120
DOI: 10.1136/hrt.26.1.16 -
European Heart Journal Aug 1987Angiographic techniques have been used for the quantification of mitral or aortic and rarely tricuspid regurgitation. Mitral or aortic regurgitant volume per beat and... (Review)
Review
Angiographic techniques have been used for the quantification of mitral or aortic and rarely tricuspid regurgitation. Mitral or aortic regurgitant volume per beat and the regurgitation fraction (fao and fm, respectively) are obtained from the angiographic determination of total left ventricular stroke volume (TSV) and forward stroke volume (FSV) estimated by a different technique. Although this procedure is generally accepted as the gold standard for quantification of left heart regurgitations, there are several limitations: In the presence of mitral and aortic regurgitation no separate quantification of fao and fm is feasible; heart rate at the time of determination of FSV (from Fick or dye dilution cardiac output) and of TSV (angio) may be different; there is a tendency to consistently overestimate stroke volume by angio techniques; repeated estimations of TSV by angio are influenced by the circulatory effects of the contrast dye. In contrast indicator dilution techniques, where upstream and downstream sampling allow the simultaneous estimation of forward and regurgitant flow, the accuracy of the determination of FSV is well established and repeated estimations of fao and fm are possible because the indicators do not have cardiovascular effects. These methods are, however, crucially dependent on thorough mixing of the regurgitant volume with the blood in the upstream chamber. In 23 patients with isolated aortic regurgitation there was a positive correlation between fao evaluated by thermodilution and fao determined by the biplane angio-Fick method (r = 0.59). fao by thermodilution averaged 0.40 and fao by angio-Fick 0.46 (NS).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Topics: Angiocardiography; Animals; Aortic Valve Insufficiency; Cineangiography; Heart Valve Diseases; Humans; Indicator Dilution Techniques; Mitral Valve Insufficiency; Stroke Volume; Thermodilution
PubMed: 3315666
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/8.suppl_c.1