4221. Profile of high risk in people known to have coronary heart disease: A review.
A review of the current literature of the high-risk factors associated with cardiac morbidity and mortality in patients with established coronary heart disease is presented. Univariate risk factors include age, comorbidity, characteristics of the index coronary event, electrocardiographic findings including ventricular premature beats and response to exercise tests, angiographic severity of the coronary disease, cigarette smoking, psychosocial status, and the chronometric interval after the index coronary event. Multivariate analysis of risk factor combinations is discussed. Risk reduction requires not only an understanding of the clinical course of a disease process, but also, modification of the amenable factors which contribute to excess risk of death.
4222. The status of cardiac transplantation, 1975.
作者: A K Rider.;J G Copeland.;S A Hunt.;J Mason.;M J Specter.;R A Winkle.;C P Bieber.;M E Billingham.;E Dong.;R B Griepp.;J S Schroeder.;E B Stinson.;D C Harrison.;N E Shumway.
来源: Circulation. 1975年52卷4期531-9页
Since December 1967, 263 human cardiac transplant operations have been performed throughout the world. Eighty-two of these were performed at Stanford University Medical Center, In 1974, 27 such operations were performed, 15 at Stanford Survival rates for the entire Standford series are 48% at one year and 25% at three years; survival rates at one and three years for patients surviving the first three critical months after transplantation are 77% and 42%, respectively. Recipients under the age of 55 years, with New York Heart Association Class IV cardiac disability, are selected for transplant procedures according to criteria dictated by experience over the past seven years. A routine immunsuppressive regimen for organ transplantation, incorporating prednisone, azathioprine, and antithymocyte globulin is employed early postoperatively, and prednisone and azathioprine are used for indefinite maintenance therapy. Acute cardiac graft rejection in nearly all recipients is diagnosed by clinical signs, electrocardiographic changes, and percutaneous transvenous endomyocardial biopsy. Ninety-five percent of acute rejection episodes are reversible with appropriate immunosuppressive treatment, but infectious complications are common and have accounted for 56% of all postoperative deaths. The Stanford experience in cardiac transplantation has demonstrated the potential therapeutic value of this procedure. Maximum survival now extends beyond five years. Satisfactory graft function has been documented in long-term surviving patients, the majority of whom have enjoyed a high degree of social and physical rehabilitation.
4232. Surgical treatment of hyperlipidemia. 3. Clinical status of the partial ileal bypass operation.4233. Surgical treatment of hyperlipidemia. I. Apologia.4234. Surgical treatment of hyperlipidemia. II. The laboratory experience. |