Two hour ambulation after coronary angioplasty and stenting with 6 F guiding catheters and low dose heparin. (41/8584)

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility and safety of ambulation of patients two hours after elective coronary angioplasty or stenting, or both. METHODS: Coronary angioplasty and stenting were performed using 6 F guiding catheters by the femoral approach and a standard dose of heparin 5000 IU. There were no angiographic exclusion criteria except for planned atherectomy. Patients given oral anticoagulants or heparin were not eligible. All patients were given aspirin. Patients who underwent stent implantation also received ticlopidine 250 mg daily. The arterial sheath was removed immediately after the procedure. Haemostasis was achieved by manual compression and maintained with an inguinal compression bandage. Early ambulation was attempted after two hours of supine bed rest following removal of the bandage. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The incidence of bleeding at or during ambulation requiring compression and additional bed rest, and puncture site complications documented 48 hours after the procedure. RESULTS: 300 of 359 consecutive eligible patients were included for two hour ambulation. Stent implantation was performed in 32% of the procedures. The mean (SD) time to haemostasis was 9.6 (3.2) minutes. Bleeding at ambulation occurred in five patients (1.7%), and nine patients (3.0%) reached the secondary end point of haematoma > 5 x 5 cm at 48 hour follow up. All were treated conservatively without further sequelae. There was no late bleeding or vascular complications. CONCLUSION: Ambulation two hours after elective balloon angioplasty or stent implantation with 6 F guiding catheters by the femoral route and low dose heparin is feasible and safe, with a low incidence of puncture site complications. This early ambulation protocol facilitates a short hospital stay.  (+info)

Feasibility of endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms with local anesthesia with intravenous sedation. (42/8584)

PURPOSE: Local anesthesia has been shown to reduce cardiopulmonary mortality and morbidity rates in patients who undergo selected peripheral vascular procedures. The efforts to treat abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) with endovascular techniques have largely been driven by the desire to reduce the mortality and morbidity rates as compared with those associated with open aneurysm repair. Early results have indicated a modest degree of success in this goal. The purpose of this study was to investigate the feasibility of endovascular repair of AAAs with local anesthesia. METHODS: During a 14-month period, 47 patients underwent endovascular repair of infrarenal AAAs with local anesthesia that was supplemented with intravenous sedation. Anesthetic monitoring was selective on the basis of comorbidities. The patient ages ranged from 48 to 93 years (average age, 74.4 +/- 9.8 years). Of the 47 patients, 55% had significant coronary artery disease, 30% had significant chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and 13% had diabetes. The average anesthesia grade was 3.1, with 30% of the patients having an average anesthesia grade of 4. The mean aortic aneurysm diameter was 5.77 cm (range, 4.5 to 12.0 cm). All the implanted grafts were bifurcated in design. RESULTS: Endovascular repair of the infrarenal AAA was successful for all 47 patients. One patient required the conversion to general anesthesia to facilitate the repair of an injured external iliac artery via a retroperitoneal approach. The operative mortality rate was 0. No patient had a myocardial infarction or had other cardiopulmonary complications develop in the perioperative period. The average operative time was 170 minutes, and the average blood loss was 623 mL (range, 100 to 2500 mL). The fluid requirements averaged 2491 mL. Of the 47 patients, 46 (98%) tolerated oral intake and were ambulatory within 24 hours of graft implantation. The patients were discharged from the hospital an average of 2.13 days after the procedure, with 87% of the patients discharged less than 48 hours after the graft implantation. Furthermore, at least 30% of the patients could have been discharged on the first postoperative day except for study protocol requirements for computed tomographic scanning at 48 hours. CONCLUSION: This is the first reported series that describes the use of local anesthesia for the endovascular repair of infrarenal AAAs. Our preliminary results indicate that the endovascular treatment of AAAs with local anesthesia is feasible and can be performed safely in a patient population with significant comorbidities. The significant potential advantages include decreased cardiopulmonary morbidity rates, shorter hospital stays, and lower hospital costs. A definitive evaluation of the benefits of local anesthesia will necessitate a direct comparison with other anesthetic techniques.  (+info)

In vivo cytotoxicity of ovarian cancer cells through tumor-selective expression of the BAX gene. (43/8584)

The BAX proapoptotic protein is capable of inducing cell death either directly, through its effects on mitochondrial function, or indirectly, by lowering the apoptotic threshold in response to certain chemotherapy agents. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that selective expression of BAX in human ovarian cancer through adenoviral gene transfer might represent a novel approach to eradicating tumor cells in vivo. Two constructs were prepared using replication-deficient adenoviral vectors containing either the cDNA for beta-galactosidase (Ad.DF3.betaGAL) or hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged BAX (Ad.DF3.BAX) under the control of the DF3 promoter. The DF3 promoter was used to confer tumor-specific gene expression in view of its restricted pattern of expression in the majority of human ovarian cancers and its limited expression in normal peritoneal mesothelial cells. In vitro infection of up to seven different epithelial cancer cell lines with Ad.DF3.betaGAL or Ad.DF3.BAX resulted in expression of either beta-galactosidase activity or HA-BAX protein, respectively, which was highly correlated with DF3 levels. Furthermore, infection with Ad.DF3.BAX was capable of highly selective cytotoxicity of DF3-positive ovarian cancer clonogenic cells in vitro. The effect of i.p. administration of Ad.DF3.BAX was also assessed in nude mice inoculated with the DF3-positive 36M2 human ovarian cancer cell line. Expression of either beta-galactosidase activity (after Ad.DF3.betaGAL treatment) or HA-BAX transcripts (after Ad.DF3.BAX treatment) was restricted to tumor tissue in vivo. Importantly, administration of Ad.DF3.BAX on days 2 and 3 after tumor inoculation was capable of eradicating >99% of tumor implants. These results demonstrate the feasibility of tumor selective expression of a proapoptotic protein such as BAX through adenoviral gene transfer.  (+info)

Automatic border detection identifies subclinical anthracycline cardiotoxicity in children with malignancy. (44/8584)

BACKGROUND: Anthracycline drugs for cancer therapy often cause functional myocardial impairment even in relatively low doses. We investigated the left ventricular function in asymptomatic anthracycline-treated children by automatic border detection (ABD) to assess its clinical usefulness for unmasking latent anthracycline-induced myocardial damage. METHODS AND RESULTS: Thirty-four children (0.7 to 17.6 years old) during or after anthracycline chemotherapy (26 to 1100 mg/m2) for malignancy (Chemo group) were studied, and 40 children (2.8 to 15.6 years old) without cardiac involvement served as normal control subjects (Control group). All patients underwent complete echocardiographic examination, including M-mode, Doppler, and ABD. Conventional echocardiography disclosed no difference between groups with regard to ejection fraction and the ratio of early to late transmitral flow velocity. In marked contrast, an investigation using ABD revealed that the Chemo group appeared to have some anthracycline-induced myocardial damage. In the apical 4-chamber view, peak filling rate in the Chemo group [2.3+/-0.4 end-diastolic area (EDA)/s] was significantly lower than that in the Control group (3.1+/-0.5 EDA/s) (P<0.0001), and time to peak filling rate in the Chemo group (106+/-31 ms) was clearly prolonged compared with that in the Control group (74+/-22 ms) (P<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Echocardiographic ABD may be a sensitive and useful noninvasive approach for evaluating subclinical anthracycline cardiotoxicity.  (+info)

201Tl and 99mTc-MIBI gated SPECT in patients with large perfusion defects and left ventricular dysfunction: comparison with equilibrium radionuclide angiography. (45/8584)

Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) is a major prognostic factor in coronary artery disease and may be computed by 99mTc-methoxyisobutyl isonitrile (MIBI) gated SPECT. However, 201Tl remains widely used for assessing myocardial perfusion and viability. Therefore, we evaluated the feasibility and accuracy of both 99mTc-MIBI and 201Tl gated SPECT in assessing LVEF in patients with myocardial infarction, large perfusion defects and left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. METHODS: Fifty consecutive patients (43 men, 7 women; mean age 61 +/- 17 y) with a history of myocardial infarction (anterior, 26; inferior, 18; lateral, 6) were studied. All patients underwent equilibnum radionuclide angiography (ERNA) and rest myocardial gated SPECT, either 1 h after the injection of 1110 MBq 99mTc-MIBI (n = 19, group 1) or 4 h after the injection of 185-203 MBq 201Tl (n = 31, group 2) using a 90 degrees dual-head camera. After filtered backprojection (Butterworth filter: order 5, cutoff 0.25 99mTc or 0.20 201Tl), LVEF was calculated from reconstructed gated SPECT with a previously validated semiautomatic commercially available software quantitative gated SPECT (QGS). Perfusion defects were expressed as a percentage of the whole myocardium planimetered by bull's-eye polar map of composite nongated SPECT. RESULTS: Gated SPECT image quality was considered suitable for LVEF measurement in all patients. Mean perfusion defects were 36% +/- 18% (group 1), 33% +/- 17% (group 2), 34% +/- 17% (group 1 + group 2). LVEF was underestimated using gated SPECT compared with ERNA (34% +/- 12% and 39% +/- 12%, respectively; P = 0.0001). Correlations were high (group 1, r= 0.88; group 2, r = 0.76; group 1 + group 2, r = 0.82), and Bland-Altman plots showed a fair agreement between gated SPECT and ERNA. The difference between the two methods did not vary as LVEF, perfusion defect size or seventy increased or when the mitral valve plane was involved in the defect. CONCLUSION: LVEF measurement is feasible using myocardial gated SPECT with the QGS method in patients with large perfusion defects and LV dysfunction. However, both 201Tl and 99mTc-MIBI gated SPECT similarly and significantly underestimated LVEF in patients with LV dysfunction and large perfusion defects.  (+info)

High-resolution PET imaging for in vivo monitoring of tumor response after photodynamic therapy in mice. (46/8584)

The aim of this study was to investigate the use of [18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) and a small-animal PET scanner to assess early tumor response after photodynamic therapy (PDT) in mice. PDT consists of intravenous administration of a photosensitizer that accumulates preferentially in tumor tissue, followed by local illumination of the tumor with red light. Two different photosensitizers were used: Photofrin (PII), which has been approved for clinical use, and disulfonated aluminum phthalocyanine (AIPcS), which is a second-generation drug. These drugs have been shown to induce tumor necrosis through different action mechanisms, i.e., mainly initial vascular stasis (PII) or direct tumor cell kill (AIPcS). FDG PET was used to follow both perfusion and metabolic activity in the tumor tissue. METHODS: The study was performed using a mouse model implanted with two contralateral murine mammary tumors (5 mm diameter x 2.5 mm thickness) on the back. Only one tumor was subjected to PDT, whereas the other tumor served as a control. A total of 13 mice were studied, 1 without illumination, 3 at 30 min and 3 at 2 h after PDT with both PII-PDT and AIPcS-PDT. Dynamic PET imaging of the mice, which were placed in pairs in a prostate position parallel to the transaxial planes of the Sherbrooke animal PET scanner, was performed after a bolus injection of 11 MBq (300 microCi) FDG. Blood samples were collected concurrently from 1 mouse during each study using an automated microvolumetric blood sampler. RESULTS: Analysis of the tumor time-activity curves showed that (a) scans during the first 3 min provided an estimate of tumor perfusion, as confirmed by the blood samples; (b) the tumor FDG uptake after 15 min was a direct measurement of tumor metabolism clearly demonstrating the relative efficacy of the two PDT drugs; and (c) the tumor tracer concentration in the interval 3-15 min after FDG injection is an appropriate indicator of the different mechanisms of tumor necrosis through indirect vascular stasis (PII) or direct cell kill (AIPcS). CONCLUSION: This pilot study confirmed the feasibility of using dynamic in vivo PET imaging for assessing early tumor response to PDT in mice.  (+info)

Quality of care of patients with diabetes: collation of data from multi-practice audits of diabetes in primary care. (47/8584)

BACKGROUND: GPs are now playing a greater role in the care of patients with diabetes. The challenges described in the Saint Vincent Joint Task Force Report include achievement of a reduction in long-term complications by collecting key clinical information and systematically organizing care of patients with diabetes. The number of practices conducting audit and the number of primary care audit groups conducting multi-practice audits of diabetes have increased since the introduction of audit in 1991. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to determine the feasibility of collating data from multi-practice audits of diabetes in primary care and to describe the pattern of care for diabetes patients in primary care. METHODS: A confidential postal questionnaire was sent to all medical audit advisory groups that had completed a multi-practice audit of diabetic care. The main outcome measures studied were prevalence and treatment of known diabetes and annual compliance with key process measures. RESULTS: Data could be collated for 17 of the 25 audit groups that supplied data representing information from 495 practices with 38 288 diabetic patients. Seven audit groups supplied data from a population denominator comprising 1475512 patients giving a prevalence of 1.46% (range 1.1-1.7%), 50.7% (range 32.5-69.0%) were managed by general practice only, 19.1% (7.6-39.7%) by hospital care only and 30.2% (11.0-49.5%) by shared care. Annual mean compliance for process measures showed wide variations: glycated haemoglobin or fructosamine checked for 72.5% (range 25.3-89.3%), fundi checked for 67.5% (57.8-86.6%), urine checked for 65.8% (27.5-80.0%), blood pressure checked for 87.6% (76.9-96.5%), smoking checked for 71.45 (21.9-86.0%), feet checked for 67.7% (40.0-90.8%) and BMI checked for 52.5% (26.4-68.2%). CONCLUSION: This study shows the feasibility of collating audit data and the potential of this approach for describing patterns of care and highlighting general and local deficiencies. Information about levels of performance in large numbers of patients can be used to set standards or norms against which individual practitioners can compare their own activity. Comparison of the health needs of local populations with national data could be used to inform commissioning services. However, audits should employ uniform evidence-based criteria so as to facilitate collation and allow comparison.  (+info)

Laparoscopic tubal anastomosis and reversal of sterilization. (48/8584)

Fallopian tube interruption is a common form of contraception worldwide. For a variety of reasons (e.g. change in marital status, wish for additional children, psychological factors), many of these women seek restoration of fertility. Laparoscopic tubal anastomosis is one of the newest of these procedures by which this can be achieved. Sixteen women underwent laparoscopic microsurgical anastomosis. We used a three-stitches technique with tubal cannulation adapted from methods described in the literature. Five pregnancies occurred, giving an overall pregnancy rate of 31.2%. Surgical outcome depends on the patient's age, the method of tube interruption and the length of Fallopian tube segments being anastomosed. In this study, the feasibility of laparoscopic tubal sterilization reversal is confirmed, as well as the benefits offered by laparoscopic procedures in terms of quality of life. Further improvement of surgical outcome will be achieved not only through better laparoscopic techniques but also through careful screening for surgical indications.  (+info)