26 results on '"Bialostozky, David"'
Search Results
2. Variability of serial same-day left ventricular ejection fraction using quantitative gated spect
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Vallejo, Enrique, Chaya, Hugo, Plancarte, Gerardo, Victoria, Diana, and Bialostozky, David
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- 2002
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3. Journal of Nuclear Cardiology Nuclear Cardiology News Update
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Verani, Mario S., Olea, Enrique, Massardo, Teresa, Batista, Juan F., Mavrogeni, Sophie, Chouraqui, Pierre, Alexanderson, Erick, Bialostozky, David, and Vansant, John P.
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- 1997
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4. Journal of Nuclear Cardiology Nuclear Cardiology News Update
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Iskandrian, Ami S., Vita, Nestor A., and Bialostozky, David
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- 1995
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5. Factorial phase analysis of ventricular contraction using equilibrium radionuclide angiography images
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Jiménez-Ángeles, Luis, Valdés-Cristerna, Raquel, Vallejo, Enrique, Bialostozky, David, and Medina-Bañuelos, Verónica
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- 2009
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6. Cardiovascular medicine at face value: a qualitative pilot study on clinical axiology.
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de Hoyos, Adalberto, Nava-Diosdado, Rodrigo, Mendez, Jorge, Ricco, Sergio, Serrano, Ana, Cisneros, Carmen Flores, Macías-Ojeda, Carlos, Cisneros, Héctor, Bialostozky, David, Altamirano-Bustamante, Nelly, and Altamirano-Bustamante, Myriam M.
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PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,BIOETHICS ,CARDIOLOGY ,ETHICAL problems ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
Introduction: Cardiology is characterized by its state-of-the-art biomedical technology and the predominance of Evidence-Based Medicine. This predominance makes it difficult for healthcare professionals to deal with the ethical dilemmas that emerge in this subspecialty. This paper is a first endeavor to empirically investigate the axiological foundations of the healthcare professionals in a cardiology hospital. Our pilot study selected, as the target population, cardiology personnel not only because of their difficult ethical deliberations but also because of the stringent conditions in which they have to make them. Therefore, there is an urgent need to reconsider clinical ethics and Value-Based Medicine. This study proposes a qualitative analysis of the values and the virtues of healthcare professionals in a cardiology hospital in order to establish how the former impact upon the medical and ethical decisions made by the latter. Results: We point out the need for strengthening the roles of healthcare personnel as educators and guidance counselors in order to meet the ends of medicine, as well as the need for an ethical discernment that is compatible with our results, namely, that the ethical values developed by healthcare professionals stem from their life history as well as their professional education. Conclusion: We establish the kind of actions, communication skills and empathy that are required to build a stronger patient-healthcare professional relationship, which at the same time improves prognosis, treatment efficiency and therapeutic adhesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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7. Importancia del binomio corazón-cerebro en el manejo integral de las cardiopatías congénitas.
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Pando-Orellana, Luis A., Buendía-Hernández, Alfonso, Calderón-Colmenero, Juan, Razo-Pinete, José Antonio, Patiño, Emilia J., Cervantes-Salazar, Jorge Luis, Meave-González, Aloha, Bialostozky, David, Corral-Mejorado, Iván, and Curi-Curi, Pedro José
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CONGENITAL heart disease ,INFANT diseases ,VENTRICULAR septal defects ,AORTIC coarctation ,HEART ,BRAIN ,CARDIOPULMONARY bypass ,CARDIAC tamponade ,AUTOPSY - Abstract
Copyright of Archivos de Cardiología de México is the property of Publicidad Permanyer SLU and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
8. Evaluación de la función y sincronía de la contracción ventricular en pacientes con enfermedad de Chagas en estadio de latencia.
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Sobrino, Ayax Nivardo, Jiménez-Ángeles, Luis, Bialostozky, David, Vázquez, Clara, Martínez, Irma, Salazar-Schettino, Paz Maria, Bucio-Torres, Martha, Ruiz-Hernández, Adela, and Cabrera-Bravo, Margarita
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CHAGAS' disease ,HEART ventricles ,SEROLOGY ,AUTONOMIC nervous system diseases ,DIGITAL angiography ,MUSCLE contraction ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Archivos de Cardiología de México is the property of Publicidad Permanyer SLU and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2009
9. Detección de apoptosis en enfermedades cardiovasculares mediante las imágenes SPECT de cardiología nuclear.
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Bialostozky, David, Rodríguez-Diez, Gerardo, and Zazueta, Cecilia
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APOPTOSIS , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *CARDIAC radionuclide imaging , *CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *MYOCARDITIS - Abstract
Apoptosis is a biological process of death or cellular suicide present in all the cells of the metazoans. It maintains the balance between the regeneration of pluripotential cells -or stem cells- and the elimination of cells that have already served their function, of cells that have reproduced in excess, or have been genetically damaged beyond repair. Apoptosis activation in cardiomyocytes is a common problem in a large variety of cardiomyopathies; it has been suggested that it is an important contributor ventricular hypertrophy and to the increase of the infarct size in patients with cardiac failure and cardiovascular disease. Clinical diagnosis of apoptosis is a reality in the medical science, its application in different aspects of cardiology includes from coronary cardiopathy to rhythm alterations. In this sense, the use of the non-invasive imaging, can be very useful for the in vivo detection of this type of cellular death in patients with myocardial necrosis, acute myocardial infarct, acute rejection of cardiac transplantation, myocarditis, intracardial malignant tumours, as well as in cardiotoxicity cases and other cardiomyopathies. Particularly, binding of Tc99m-labeled Annexin V, produces gammagraphic images that allow the identification of apoptotic cells in vivo in SPECT and SestaMiBi systems. In summary, the use of these techniques will be invaluable in the near future for anti-apoptosis therapy and intervention in the routine of the daily Cardiology practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
10. Myocardial Perfusion and Ventricular Function Assessed by SPECT and Gated-SPECT in End-Stage Renal Disease Patients before and after Renal Transplant
- Author
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Bialostozky, David, Leyva, Mayela, Villarreal, Teresa, Casanova, J. Miguel, Pérez-Grovas, Héctor, Lemus, Patricia, Jiménez, Guadalupe, Vallejo, Enrique, Jiménez-Angeles, Luis, Herrera, Jaime, and Altamirano, Javier
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CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *KIDNEY diseases , *HYPERTROPHY , *CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *ANGINA pectoris - Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular disease is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Renal transplant is known to improve left ventricle hypertrophy and systolic dysfunction in selected groups of patients. Methods: We assessed myocardial perfusion, wall motion and functional parameters by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and Gated-SPECT in 30 consecutive ESRD patients with normal coronary angiograms before and after renal transplantation. Results: Uremic cardiomyopathy improved significantly after the transplant. The proportion of patients with angina decreased from 26 to 0%; the frequency of cardiomegaly decreased from 57 to 20% (p <0.01); the frequency of segments with perfusion defects decreased from 42.7 to 10.2% (p <0.001); the proportion of patients with low left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) dropped from 53.3 to 20% (p <0.001); and mean LVEF increased from (48.0 ± 9.7% to 58.2 ± 8.2%). Similarly, the proportion of segments showing systolic wall thickening, hypokinesia and dyskinesia also decreased significantly after renal transplant (p <0.01). Conclusions: Uremic cardiomyopathy may be potentially reversible in patients with normal angiographic coronary arteries after renal transplant in a relatively short period of time. SPECT and Gated-SPECT are objective gateway methods to determine myocardial perfusion, hypokinesia, dyskinesia, and functional parameters (left ventricular ejection fraction and systolic wall thickening) and may be useful to establish diagnostic, coronariographic, prognostic, and therapeutic indications. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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11. Multiplane Transesophageal Echocardiography with Dobutamine in Patients with Biventricular Inferior Myocardial Infarction.
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ESPINOLA-ZAVALETA, NILDA, VARGAS-BARRÓN, JESÚS, ROMERO-CÁRDENAS, ANGEL, BIALOSTOZKY, DAVID, ALEXANDERSON, ERICK, MARTINEZ-SANCHEZ, CARLOS, PEÑA-DUQUE, MARCO, KEIRNS, CANDACE, RIJLAARSDAM, MARÍA, and LUPI-HERRERA, EULO
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- 1998
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12. Utility of Transesophageal Echocardiography in Diagnosis of a Left Atrial Myxoma with Regional Pulmonary Venous Obstruction.
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VARGAS-BARRÓN, JESÚS, ESPÍNOLA-ZAVALETA, NILDA, RODRÍGUEZ-CUERVO, JORGE, SANDOVAL-ZÁRATE, JULIO, BIALOSTOZKY, DAVID, MARTÍNEZ-SÁNCHEZ, CARLOS, KEIRNS, CANDACE, and CARDENAS, ANGEL ROMERO
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- 1997
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13. The Role of Isoproterenol in the Preoperative Evaluation of High-pressure, High-resistance Ventricular Septal Defect
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Lupi-Herrera, Eulo, Sandoval, Julio, Seoane, Mario, Bialostozky, David, and Attie, Fause
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- 1982
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14. Coronary insufficiency in children: Coronary arteriographic studies in two siblings from a family with hyperbetalipoproteinemia
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Bialostozky, David, Luengo, Martin, Magos, Clementina, and Zorrilla, Eduardo
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- 1975
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15. Gastrointestinal hemorrhagic necrosis: Report of ten cases
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Bialostozky, David, Contreras, Raul, Tinajeros, Carlos A., and Franco-Browder, Salvador
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- 1969
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16. Normality Index of Ventricular Contraction Based on a Statistical Model from FADS.
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Jiménez-Ángeles, Luis, Valdés-Cristerna, Raquel, Vallejo, Enrique, Bialostozky, David, and Medina-Bañuelos, Verónica
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CARDIAC contraction , *RADIONUCLIDE imaging , *FACTOR analysis , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *CONTROL groups , *PATIENT-ventilator dyssynchrony , *PROBABILITY density function - Abstract
Radionuclide-based imaging is an alternative to evaluate ventricular function and synchrony and may be used as a tool for the identification of patients that could benefit from cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). In a previous work, we used Factor Analysis of Dynamic Structures (FADS) to analyze the contribution and spatial distribution of the 3 most significant factors (3- MSF) present in a dynamic series of equilibrium radionuclide angiography images. In this work, a probability density function model of the 3-MSF extracted from FADS for a control group is presented; also an index, based on the likelihood between the control group's contraction model and a sample of normal subjects is proposed. This normality index was compared with those computed for two cardiopathic populations, satisfying the clinical criteria to be considered as candidates for a CRT. The proposed normality index provides a measure, consistent with the phase analysis currently used in clinical environment, sensitive enough to show contraction differences between normal and abnormal groups, which suggests that it can be related to the degree of severity in the ventricular contraction dyssynchrony, and therefore shows promise as a follow-up procedure for patients under CRT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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17. Evaluation of Ventricular Synchrony with Equilibrium Radionuclide Angiography: Assessment of Variability and Accuracy
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Vallejo, Enrique, Jiménez, Luis, Rodríguez, Gerardo, Roffe, Fernando, and Bialostozky, David
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CARDIAC contraction , *SYNCHRONIZATION , *BUNDLE-branch block , *HEART function tests , *LEFT heart ventricle , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *STANDARD deviations , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Background and Aims: Equilibrium radionuclide angiography (ERNA) has become an established method for assessing cardiac function. However, limited data are available to evaluate ventricular synchrony with ERNA. The aim of this study was to assess the variability and accuracy of ERNA to evaluate ventricular synchrony by means of phase images in healthy individuals and to compare them with a group of subjects with left bundle-branch block (interventricular dyssynchrony, LBBB) and with a group of patients with nonischemic, dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) (inter- and intraventricular dyssynchrony). Methods: The population was divided into groups as follows: group 1 included 22 healthy subjects, group 2 included 11 patients with LBBB and normal left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and group 3 included 14 DCM patients with LVEF <35% and LBBB. Interventricular synchrony was measured as the difference between LV mean phase angle (mPA) and RV mPA (LV−RV mPA). Intraventricular synchrony for each ventricle was measured as the standard deviation (SD) of the RV mPA and LA mPA blood pools. Results: Intra- and interobserver correlation coefficients were high for both inter- and intraventricular synchrony parameters. Area under the curve (AUC) was 0.98 for LV−RV mPA (p <0.001; 95% CI: 0.947–1.0). A cutoff value of 10° yielded 96% sensitivity and 99% specificity to identify interventricular dyssynchrony. AUC was high for SD RV mPA and SD LV mPA (AUC = 1.0, p <0.001; 95% CI: 1.0–1.0 and AUC = 0.99, p <0.001; 95% CI: 0.979–1.0). A cutoff value of 22° for SD LV mPA yielded 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity to identify LV intraventricular dyssynchrony. A cutoff value of 20° for SD RV mPA yielded 100% sensitivity and 99% specificity to identify RV intraventricular dyssynchrony. Conclusions: ERNA is an accurate and highly reproducible technique for evaluation of ventricular function and synchrony. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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18. Clinical Utility of 99mTc-Labeled Ubiquicidin 29–41 Antimicrobial Peptide for the Scintigraphic Detection of Mediastinitis after Cardiac Surgery
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Vallejo, Enrique, Martinez, Irma, Tejero, Alberto, Hernandez, Salvador, Jimenez, Luis, Bialostozky, David, Sanchez, Gustavo, Ilarraza, Hermes, and Ferro-Flores, Guillermina
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RADIOACTIVE tracers , *TECHNETIUM , *ANTIMICROBIAL peptides , *CARDIAC surgery , *DIAGNOSIS of bacterial diseases , *MEDICAL imaging systems , *BACTERIAL cultures , *QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: Previous studies demonstrated that 99mTc-labeled-ubiquicidin 29–41 (99mTc-UBI 29–41) imaging is an accurate method for detection of bacterial infections. This study was conducted to evaluate the clinical use of 99mTc-UBI 29–41 for detection of mediastinitis after cardiac surgery. Methods: Thirteen patients with suspected mediastinitis after cardiac surgery were included. Qualitative and semiquantitative analyses of 99mTc-UBI 29–41 images were performed. Mediastinitis was confirmed by bacterial culture. Results: Qualitative analysis correctly identified the infection in 5/6 patients with mediastinitis. For observer 1, there were five true-positive results, six true-negative results, one false-positive result and one false-negative result (sensitivity: 83%, specificity: 85%, positive predictive value: 83%, negative predictive value: 85%, and overall diagnostic accuracy: 84%). For observer 2, there were five true-positive results, five true-negative results, two false-positive results and one false-negative result (sensitivity: 83%, specificity: 71%, positive predictive value: 71%, negative predictive value: 83%, and overall diagnostic accuracy: 76%). Agreement between observers was 0.847 (SE=0.145, p =0.002). Semiquantitative analysis showed a higher mediastinum uptake of the 99mTc-UBI 29–41 in patients with mediastinitis than that derived from patients without mediastinitis. Mean uptake of 99mTc-UBI 29–41 was 60.4±10.3 counts/pixel and 47.4±5.5 counts/pixel, respectively (p =0.01). At the threshold value of ≥57 counts/pixel using ROC analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and overall diagnostic accuracy for detecting patients with mediastinitis were 83, 100, 100, 87, and 92%, respectively (p =0.02; 95% CI: 0.65–1.10%). Conclusions: 99mTc-UBI 29–41 imaging yielded fast and promising first results for patients with suspected mediastinitis after cardiac surgery and, as such, deserves further investigation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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19. Rest-stress one day Tetrofosmin myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography, a clinical validation study
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Alexanderson, Erick, Rodriguez, Humberto, Lechuga, Alejandro, and Bialostozky, David
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- 1995
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20. Combined assessment of myocardial perfusion and viability using one day separate acquisition rest Thallium-201/stress technetium 99M sestamibi dual-isotope. Initial experence in Mexico and Latin-America
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Alexanderson, Erick, Varguez, Victor, and Bialostozky, David
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- 1995
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21. [Cost-effectiveness of stress-only myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging].
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Vallejo E, Acevedo C, Varela S, Alburez JC, and Bialostozky D
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Perfusion Imaging economics, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon economics, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon methods
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging is widely used for diagnosing coronary artery disease (CAD). However, SPECT costs, imaging time, and radiation exposure, limit SPECT indications., Objective: Determine whether a stress-only SPECT imaging would be enough to obtain a diagnosis of CAD improving nuclear laboratory efficiency., Methods: 122 patients with unknown CAD were evaluated with stress-only SPECT imaging. In order to evaluate diagnostic accuracy and the prognostic value of the stress-only protocol, patients with abnormal SPECT underwent invasive angiography and patients with normal SPECT were followed-up during 3 years., Results: Diagnosis time, SPECT cost, and radiopharmaceutical dosage were significantly lower as compared with the conventional SPECT imaging protocol (30, 40 and 55%, respectively). Diagnostic accuracy and cardiac prognosis information were comparable to those obtained with the conventional imaging protocol (positive predictive value for CAD of 85% and negative predictive value for cardiac events of 97%)., Conclusions: In patients with intermediate risk for CAD, stress-only SPECT imaging will significantly improve nuclear laboratory efficiency, and with similar accuracy than that the one obtained with the conventional protocol.
- Published
- 2012
22. [Importance of the heart-brain binomial in the management of congenital heart disease].
- Author
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Pando-Orellana LA, Buendía-Hernández A, Calderón-Colmenero J, Razo-Pinete JA, Patiño EJ, Cervantes-Salazar JL, Meave-González A, Bialostozky D, Corral-Mejorado I, and Curi-Curi PJ
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- Brain pathology, Fatal Outcome, Humans, Infant, Male, Abnormalities, Multiple diagnosis, Brain abnormalities, Heart Defects, Congenital therapy
- Abstract
A case of a two month infant with complex congenital heart disease (aortic coarctation with ventricular septal defect) associated to a cellular brain migration failure is presented. The management strategy consisted on the correction of congenital heart disease by means of a two-stage surgery without a further preoperative evaluation of the neurological status. The patient developed several perioperative complications such as two episodes of cardiac arrest, reconnection to cardiopulmonary bypass, cardiac tamponade, chilothorax and septic shock. A neurological protocol consisting in electroencephalography, brain magnetic resonance and Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) was practiced during the postoperative period, which detected microgyria with paquigyria and a cellular brain migration failure was suspected. The final outcome was death due to multisystemic failure and the autopsy confirmed the neurological disease, as well as poor life function prognosis. Should the heart-brain binomial had been considered in an integral preoperative evaluation, the therapeutical approach could have been modified.
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- 2010
23. [Evaluation of the function and ventricular synchrony in patients with latency stage of Chagas' disease].
- Author
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Nivardo Sobrino A, Jiménez-Angeles L, Bialostozky D, Vázquez C, Martínez I, Salazar-Schettino PM, Bucio-Torres M, Ruiz-Hernández A, and Cabrera-Bravo M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Radionuclide Ventriculography, Time Factors, Chagas Cardiomyopathy diagnostic imaging, Chagas Cardiomyopathy physiopathology, Ventricular Function
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the left ventricular function and the ventricular synchrony in patients with Chagas disease in latency stage respect to a control group., Methods: We analyze a prospective, comparative, transversal and non randomized study of the left ventricular function (LVF) and the ventricular contraction synchronicity (VCS) in 36 subjects with positive serology for Chagas disease (18 males and 18 females), with mean of 15 +/- 5-years-old. The findings were compared with respect to 23 control volunteers (11 males and 12 females) with mean of 28 +/- 5-years-old. LVF and VCS were evaluated using equilibrium radionuclide angiography images (ERNA). The comparison of both Chagas and control populations was carried out by t Student test for independent samples, considering a statistically significant value of p < 0.05., Results: The parameters of the ventricular function and the ventricular synchronicity in subjects with positive serology for Chagas disease were not statistically different with respect to the parameters of the control group. However, although they have a homogeneous contraction, the mean time of contraction for the right and the left ventricle is statistically smaller with respect to the control group., Conclusions: In clinically incipient stages of Chagas disease we do not found abnormalities in the ventricular function and the ventricular synchronicity. It's necessary to consider the follow up of the studied populations using indices for the identification of abnormalities of the autonomic nervous system.
- Published
- 2009
24. Clinical utility of 99mTc-labeled ubiquicidin 29-41 antimicrobial peptide for the scintigraphic detection of mediastinitis after cardiac surgery.
- Author
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Vallejo E, Martinez I, Tejero A, Hernandez S, Jimenez L, Bialostozky D, Sanchez G, Ilarraza H, and Ferro-Flores G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Anti-Infective Agents chemistry, Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides chemistry, Mediastinitis diagnosis, Mediastinitis etiology, Organotechnetium Compounds chemistry, Peptide Fragments chemistry, Postoperative Complications, Thoracic Surgery
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies demonstrated that (99m)Tc-labeled-ubiquicidin 29-41 ((99m)Tc-UBI 29-41) imaging is an accurate method for detection of bacterial infections. This study was conducted to evaluate the clinical use of (99m)Tc-UBI 29-41 for detection of mediastinitis after cardiac surgery., Methods: Thirteen patients with suspected mediastinitis after cardiac surgery were included. Qualitative and semiquantitative analyses of (99m)Tc-UBI 29-41 images were performed. Mediastinitis was confirmed by bacterial culture., Results: Qualitative analysis correctly identified the infection in 5/6 patients with mediastinitis. For observer 1, there were five true-positive results, six true-negative results, one false-positive result and one false-negative result (sensitivity: 83%, specificity: 85%, positive predictive value: 83%, negative predictive value: 85%, and overall diagnostic accuracy: 84%). For observer 2, there were five true-positive results, five true-negative results, two false-positive results and one false-negative result (sensitivity: 83%, specificity: 71%, positive predictive value: 71%, negative predictive value: 83%, and overall diagnostic accuracy: 76%). Agreement between observers was 0.847 (SE=0.145, p=0.002). Semiquantitative analysis showed a higher mediastinum uptake of the (99m)Tc-UBI 29-41 in patients with mediastinitis than that derived from patients without mediastinitis. Mean uptake of (99m)Tc-UBI 29-41 was 60.4+/-10.3 counts/pixel and 47.4+/-5.5 counts/pixel, respectively (p=0.01). At the threshold value of > or =57 counts/pixel using ROC analysis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and overall diagnostic accuracy for detecting patients with mediastinitis were 83, 100, 100, 87, and 92%, respectively (p=0.02; 95% CI: 0.65-1.10%)., Conclusions: (99m)Tc-UBI 29-41 imaging yielded fast and promising first results for patients with suspected mediastinitis after cardiac surgery and, as such, deserves further investigation.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. [Apoptosis detection in cardiovascular diseases through nuclear cardiology SPECT images].
- Author
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Bialostozky D, Rodríguez-Diez G, and Zazueta C
- Subjects
- Coronary Disease diagnostic imaging, Coronary Disease pathology, Humans, Apoptosis, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnostic imaging, Cardiovascular Diseases pathology, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
- Abstract
Apoptosis is a biological process of death or cellular suicide present in all the cells of the metazoans. It maintains the balance between the regeneration of pluripotential cells -or stem cells- and the elimination of cells that have already served their function, of cells that have reproduced in excess, or have been genetically damaged beyond repair. Apoptosis activation in cardiomyocytes is a common problem in a large variety of cardiomyopathies; it has been suggested that it is an important contributor ventricular hypertrophy and to the increase of the infarct size in patients with cardiac failure and cardiovascular disease. Clinical diagnosis of apoptosis is a reality in the medical science, its application in different aspects of cardiology includes from coronary cardiopathy to rhythm alterations. In this sense, the use of the non-invasive imaging, can be very useful for the in vivo detection of this type of cellular death in patients with myocardial necrosis, acute myocardial infarct, acute rejection of cardiac transplantation, myocarditis, intracardial malignant tumours, as well as in cardiotoxicity cases and other cardiomyopathies. Particularly, binding of Tc99m-labeled Annexin V, produces gammagraphic images that allow the identification of apoptotic cells in vivo in SPECT and SestaMiBi systems. In summary, the use of these techniques will be invaluable in the near future for anti-apoptosis therapy and intervention in the routine of the daily Cardiology practice.
- Published
- 2008
26. [Chest pain syndrome in normal or non-diagnostic conventional ECG at the emergency service. Assessment with myocardial perfusion (SPECT) and ventricular function (Gated-SPECT)].
- Author
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Bialostozky D
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Chest Pain etiology, Clinical Trials as Topic, Emergency Service, Hospital, Exercise Test, Humans, Risk Factors, Ventricular Function, Chest Pain diagnostic imaging, Chest Pain physiopathology, Coronary Circulation, Electrocardiography, Gated Blood-Pool Imaging, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
- Abstract
The arrival of a patient with chest pain syndrome (precordial) to the emergency represents a diagnostic challenge for the physician. Around 6 million persons are seen each year at the Emergency units in the USA. More than half of the patients are admitted for their cardiac evaluation. Its cardiac origin is confirmed in 10 to 15%, and about 15% of them develop myocardial infarction. However, 5 to 10% of patients are dismissed and develop myocardial infarction during the next 48 h. The diagnosis of the infarct is inadvertent and/or patients is not hospitalized in 2 to 8%. The mortality rate is duplicated in none hospitalized patients. Frequently, a conservative observation conduct and/or diagnostic expectation is taken, with the consequent saturation of the intensive care unit that looses its critical character and avoids quick mobilization of the patient with an increase in costs. The clinical judgment, a meticulous clinical history, and careful physical examination play a key role in the differential diagnosis of the precordial pain syndrome; however, pain can be atypical, absent or manifest as an equivalent of pain, which does not exclude the diagnosis of myocardial infarction or ischemia. Likewise, chest pain in the presence of a normal conventional ECG at rest, non-diagnostic or with minimal variations, does not rule out the possibility of a coronary obstruction and does not mean that the pain is not of coronary origin. Other characteristics of the ECG, such as T wave and ST segment alterations, bundle branch block (BBB), LV hypertrophy, interpretation discrepancies, can pose doubts or mistakes in the diagnosis. Although its diagnostic information is essential, other non-invasive laboratory tests are needed, such as the treadmill stress ECG, serial bioenzymatic markers, and myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (SPECT and Gated-SPECT) at rest or under physical or pharmacologic stress. The advantages and disadvantages of the stress ECG, the echocardiography, magnetic resonance and PET are mentioned. The advantages of the SPECT and Gated-SPECT in the diagnosis and prognosis are: 1) great diagnostic objectivity; 2) high sensitivity and specificity; 3) diagnosis does not depend on evolution time of the ischemia and/or infarction, since SPECT diagnoses the initial primary modifications of ischemia; 4) diagnosis is achieved within the established limit of time, in less than 4 to 6 hours. The designed protocols allow to obtain the diagnosis between 30 min and 1:30 h; 5) assesses the myocardium at risk; 6) stratifies the risk and prognosis; 7) defines the site and 8) the involved coronary artery(les); 9) provides the functional significance of the anatomic obstruction; 10) quantifies the ventricular function, i.e., ejection fraction, systolic and diastolic volumes, systolic thickening, ventricular failure signs; 11) provides three-dimensional visualization of the mobility of the left ventricular wall; 12) diagnoses simultaneously the associated presence of ischemia and/or infarction of the right ventricle; 13) its high negative predictive value allows to dismiss immediately and with a great safety margin those patients in whom SPECT revealed normal perfusion; 14) costs are reduced without adversely compromising the safety of the patients. We describe the algorithm used as guideline for the early diagnosis in the presence or absence of ischemic heart disease in the patient with precordial or chest pain syndrome with normal or non-diagnostic ECG at arrival to the emergency ward. It is necessary to modified the clinical educational patterns and to revaluate the advantages and limitations of the clinical history, physical exploration, as well as of the conventional ECG at rest and other diagnostic methods used specifically in relation to the chest pain syndrome with a normal or non diagnostic conventional ECG. SPECT and Gated-SPECT scintigraphy is considered as the best individual and isolated non-invasive test for the diagnostic solution of the precordial syndrome at the Emergency Unit.
- Published
- 2004
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