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Clinical articles

September 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:237-41

Non-invasive cardiac imaging: current and emerging roles for multi-detector row computed tomography. Part 2

Edward D Nicol, Simon PG Padley

Abstract

The demand for non-invasive diagnostic imaging in cardiology increases with the advancing age of the population. Whilst exercise testing and myocardial perfusion scintigraphy have provided non-invasive functional assessment of coronary artery disease there has been little alternative to invasive coronary angiography for anatomical assessment of the coronary tree.

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September 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:242-44

Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure due to simvastatin and amiodarone

Haroon Siddique, Maria Mushkbar, Adrian Walker, John Scarpello

Abstract

Rhabdomyolysis is an uncommon but potentially serious adverse reaction associated with the use of statins. Simvastatin is metabolised by cytochrome P450 CYP3A4 and amiodarone is an inhibitor of this enzyme. Concomitant use of these drugs, especially with high doses of simvastatinm may result in myopathy. Acute renal failure as a result of rhabdomyolysis due to this aetiology is rare with only a few cases reported previously. Here, we report a case of rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure secondary to concomitant use of simvastatin and amiodarone.

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September 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:293-95

The VentureTM wire control catheter

Peter O’Kane, Lucy Blows, Simon Redwood

Abstract

The presence of severe vessel tortuosity, extreme angulation of side-branch ostia, stent jail, or lack of control at the interface of chronic total occlusions can result in percutaneous coronary intervention failure or complications. The Venture™ wire control catheter is a new catheter system designed to facilitate tip direction of a standard 0.014” guidewire. The properties of this system are discussed in this article along with an example of its use in practice.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:143-50

Non-invasive cardiac imaging – current and emerging roles for multi-detector row computed tomography. Part 1

Edward D Nicol, Simon PG Padley

Abstract

The demand for non-invasive diagnostic imaging in cardiology increases with the advancing age of the population. Whilst exercise testing and myocardial perfusion scintigraphy have provided non-invasive functional assessment of coronary artery disease there has been little alternative to invasive coronary angiography for anatomical assessment of the coronary tree. In recent years technological advances have enabled improvements in both temporal and spatial resolution such that multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) is now able to reproducibly evaluate cardiac disease. The combination of this improved resolution with more advanced post-processing techniques now means that MDCT has the ability to perform both anatomical and functional assessment from a single study. This technique, therefore, not only provides a non-invasive alternative to conventional angiography but the same dataset allows concurrent assessment of cardiac function, assessment of aberrant vessels, graft patency studies and assessment of the coronary artery wall.

Cardiac CT has the potential to provide a much more complete assessment than conventional coronary angiography. It is likely to become the non-invasive imaging modality of choice to exclude significant coronary artery disease in those with intermediate risk of coronary artery disease.

This first part of a two-part article considers ECG-gated image reconstruction, image resolution, radiation dose, and post-processing protocols and limitations. The second part considers clinical applications and future developments.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:153-59

Baseline data from the UK arm of the REACH Registry

Jonathan M Morrell, George C Kassianos For The Reach Registry Investigators

Abstract

Atherothrombosis is a leading cause of death worldwide. The REduction of Atherothrombosis for Continued Health (REACH) Registry aims to evaluate the long-term risk of atherothrombotic events in a global at-risk population, to assess the importance of cross-risk and to define predictors of atherothrombotic events. Over 69,000 people in 44 countries were recruited, of which 618 were in the UK.

The majority (91%) of patients recruited in the UK had symptomatic disease (coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease or peripheral arterial disease) of which 14% had disease in more than one vascular bed. Classic cardiovascular risk factors were seen to be active and their management was found to be inadequate, albeit better in those with symptomatic disease than in those with risk factors only. UK data were in general typical of those found in the whole of the Western European sample.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:161-63

The European Working Time Directive: potential impact on cardiology specialist registrar training

Chris P Gale, Richard P Gale, Phil D Batin, John Wilson

Abstract

The European Working Time Directive (EWTD) ensures doctors do not work excessive hours. On 1st August 2004, junior doctors were no longer excluded from the EWTD and their working hours were limited by law to 58 hours per week. By 2009, this will be reduced to 48 hours. Although benefits include improved patient care,1 the EWTD has implications for service provision and specialist registrar (SpR) training.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:165-68

How safe is femoral access? Insights from an audit of contemporary practice

Helen C Routledge, Peter F Ludman, Sagar N Doshi, John N Townend, Nigel P Buller

Abstract

Complications of arterial access are an important cause of morbidity following percutaneous coronary intervention. Recently published data suggest a rate of around 3.5% of major vascular complications. We present an audit of vascular access site complications in a single centre over a 12-month period. Overall complication rates were low (1.2%) in a centre whose default strategy following femoral artery access is arterial closure using the Perclose™ device. Specific problems using the Starclose™ device in patients treated with abciximab are described. Infected femoral artery haematoma resulted in the most severe complications.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:169-70

Costs of aspirin should include treatment costs for dyspepsia

Yohan P Samarasinghe, Ian Purcell, Helen Rivas-Toro, Michael D Feher

Abstract

This short report describes a questionnaire study undertaken in two London teaching hospitals, addressing the true pharmacokinetic implications of aspirin use. It suggests that the real costs of aspirin treatment should include the cost of the therapies used for treatment of associated dyspepsia.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:171-73

Asymptomatic myocardial involvement in acute dengue virus infection in a cohort of adult Sri Lankans admitted to a tertiary referral centre

Ravindra L Satarasinghe, Kanagasinham Arultnithy, Neomali L Amerasena, Uditha Bulugahapitiya, Deshu V Sahayam

Abstract

Viral myocarditis is a well-recognised complication of many viruses leading to subsequent cardiomyopathies (dilated type). There are limited data available with respect to dengue virus involvement, an infection which can be asymptomatic and can lead to undifferentiated viral fever syndrome, dengue fever, dengue haemorrhagic syndrome or dengue shock syndrome. Dengue has probably been endemic in Sri Lanka for a long time although no cases of dengue haemorrhagic fever was reported until 1965. Now, several hundred cases a year have been reported annually from 1991.

The only two published articles from Sri Lanka on myocardial involvement described cardiac sequelae, diagnosed quite late, retrospectively, in the non-active phase of the illness. Recent epidemics of the disease in Sri Lanka led us to design a study to look at myocardial involvement in clinically and serologically confirmed cases of dengue infection.

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May 2007 Br J Cardiol 2007;14:175-78

Clinical trials versus the real world: the example of cardiac rehabilitation

Rod S Taylor, Hugh JN Bethell, David A Brodie

Abstract

Clinical practice should follow evidence-based medicine, which is derived from clinical trials. The outcomes of clinical practice, however, may not equal that of trials if there are differences in the patients or the quality of treatment they receive. We report the example of cardiac rehabilitation to illustrate this point, comparing the characteristics of patients and treatments offered in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in this area with those included in two large surveys of cardiac rehabilitation in the UK. We found that cardiac rehabilitation as currently practised in the UK is unlikely to be as effective as clinical trials may suggest.

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