Relationship between septal perfusion, viability, and motion before and after coronary artery bypass surgery☆
References (30)
- et al.
Estimation of right and left ventricular size by ultrasound
Am J Cardiol
(1969) - et al.
Echocardiographic analysis of the ventricular septum
Prog Cardiovasc Dis
(1974) - et al.
Prognostic value of echocardiographic evaluation of septal function in acute anteroseptal myocardial infarction
Am Heart J
(1979) - et al.
Ventricular septal motion and left ventricular dimension during abnormal ventricular activation
Am J Cardiol
(1977) - et al.
Ventricular septum in right ventricular volume overload: an echocardiographic study
Am J Cardiol
(1972) - et al.
Paradoxical septal motion in a patient with pulmonic stenosis
Chest
(1975) - et al.
Correlation of echocardiographic and clinical findings in patients with pericardial effusion
Am J Cardiol
(1976) - et al.
Echocardiographic studies of left ventricular wall motion and dimensions after valvular heart surgery
Am J Cardiol
(1975) - et al.
Interventricular septal motion and left ventricular function after coronary artery bypass surgery: evaluation with echocardiography and radionuclide angiography
Am J Cardiol
(1977) - et al.
Abnormal interventricular septal motion following cardiac surgery: clinical, surgical, echocardiographic and radionuclide correlates
Am Heart J
(1979)
Postoperative abnormalities of interventricular septal motion: two-dimensional and M-mode echocardiographic correlations
Am Heart J
(1982)
Effect of cardiac surgery on ventricular septal motion: assessment by intraoperative echocardiography and cross-sectional two-dimensional echocardiography
Am Heart J
(1982)
Preservation of interventricular septal function in patients having coronary artery bypass grafts without cardiopulmonary bypass
Am Heart J
(1984)
Improved diagnostic accuracy of thallium-201 stress test using multiple observer and criteria derived from interobserver analysis of variance
Am J Cardiol
(1980)
The relationship between abnormal echocardiographic septal motion and myocardial perfusion in patients with significant obstruction of the left anterior descending artery
Circulation
(1977)
Cited by (20)
Mechanism of Paradoxical Ventricular Septal Motion After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
2009, American Journal of CardiologyCitation Excerpt :The parietal pericardium was not closed in our cohort of patients, and loss of parietal pericardial restraint may be a contributing factor.5 Although previous research has shown normal perfusion in patients with PSM,19,20 impaired contractility of the ventricular septum has been considered a possible cause.7 In our patients, systolic wall thickening of the ventricular septum was maintained, thus making myocardial ischemia less likely.
Assessment of Diastolic Function with Doppler Tissue Imaging After Cardiac Surgery: Effect of the "Postoperative Septum" in On-Pump and Off-Pump Procedures
2006, Journal of the American Society of EchocardiographyThe structure and function of the helical heart and its buttress wrapping. VII. Critical importance of septum for right ventricular function
2001, Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular SurgeryRecovery of regional left ventricular dysfunction after coronary revascularization. Impact of myocardial viability assessed by nuclear imaging and vessel patency at follow-up angiography
1996, Journal of the American College of CardiologySeptal structure and function relationships parallel the left ventricular free wall ascending and descending segments of the helical heart
2006, European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery
- ☆
Work performed during tenure as Established Investigators of the American Heart Association (Dr. Okada). Supported in part by National Institutes of Health Cardiovascular Nuclear Medicine Training Grant HL07416, by Ischemic SCOR HL26215, by Thallium Grant HL21751, and by grants HL12322 and HL12777.
Copyright © 1992 Published by Mosby, Inc.