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Dive into the research topics where Arthur E. Weyman is active.

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Featured researches published by Arthur E. Weyman.


Circulation | 1978

Recommendations regarding quantitation in M-mode echocardiography: results of a survey of echocardiographic measurements.

David J. Sahn; A DeMaria; Joseph Kisslo; Arthur E. Weyman

SUMMARY Four hundred M-mode echocardiographic surveys were distributed to determine interobserver variability in M-mode echocardiographic measurements. This was done with a view toward examining the need and determining the criteria for standardization of measurement.Each survey consisted of five M-mode echocardiograms with a calibration marker, measured by the survey participants anonymously. The echoes were judged of adequate quality for measurement of structures. Seventy-six of the 400 (19%) were returned, allowing comparison of interobserver variability as well as examination of the measurement criteria which were used.Mean measurements and percent uncertainty were derived for each structure for each criterion of measurement. For example, for the aorta, 33% of examiners measured the aorta as an outer/inner or leading edge dimension, and 20% measured it as an outer/outer dimension. The percent uncertainty for the measurement (1.97 SD divided by the mean) showed a mean of 13.8% for the 25 packets of five echoes measured using the former criteria and 24.2% using the latter criteria.For ventricular chamber and cavity measurements, almost one-half of the examiners used the peak of the QRS and one-half of the examiners used the onset of the QRS for determining end-diastole. Estimates of the percent of measurement uncertainty for the septum, posterior wall and left ventricular cavity dimension in this study were 10-25%. They were much higher (40-70%) for the right ventricular cavity and right ventricular anterior wall. The survey shows significant interobserver and interlaboratory variation in measurement when examining the same echoes and indicates a need for ongoing education, quality control and standardization of measurement criteria. Recommendations for new criteria for measurement of M-mode echocardiograms are offered.


Circulation | 1980

Report of the American Society of Echocardiography Committee on Nomenclature and Standards in Two-dimensional Echocardiography.

W L Henry; Anthony N. DeMaria; R. Gramiak; D. King; Joseph Kisslo; Richard L. Popp; David J. Sahn; N. Schiller; A. Tajik; L. Teichholz; Arthur E. Weyman

The Committee recommends that when the transducer is placed in the suprasternal notch that it be referred to as in the suprasternal location. When the transducer is located near the midline of the body and beneath the lowest ribs, the transducer should be referred to as in the subcostal location. When the transducer is located over the apex impulse, the Committee recommends that this be referred to as the apical location. If the term apical is used alone, it will be assumed that this refers to a left-sided apical position. The area bounded superiorly by the left clavicle, medially by the sternum and inferiorly by the apical region will be referred to as the parasternal location. If the term parasternal is used alone, it will be assumed to be the left parasternal location. In those unusual situations in which the apex impulse is palpated on the right chest, a transducer placed over the right-sided apex impulse will be referred to as in the right apical location. The region bounded superiorly by the right clavicle, medially by the sternum and inferiorly by the right apical region will be referred to as the right parasternal location.


Heart | 1988

Percutaneous balloon dilatation of the mitral valve: an analysis of echocardiographic variables related to outcome and the mechanism of dilatation.

Gerard T. Wilkins; Arthur E. Weyman; Vivian M. Abascal; Peter C. Block; Igor F. Palacios

Twenty two patients (four men, 18 women, mean age 56 years, range 21 to 88 years) with a history of rheumatic mitral stenosis were studied by cross sectional echocardiography before and after balloon dilatation of the mitral valve. The appearance of the mitral valve on the pre-dilatation echocardiogram was scored for leaflet mobility, leaflet thickening, subvalvar thickening, and calcification. Mitral valve area, left atrial volume, transmitral pressure difference, pulmonary artery pressure, cardiac output, cardiac rhythm, New York Heart Association functional class, age, and sex were also studied. Because there was some increase in valve area in almost all patients the results were classified as optimal or suboptimal (final valve area less than 1.0 cm2, final left atrial pressure greater than 10 mm Hg, or final valve area less than 25% greater than the initial area). The best multiple logistic regression fit was found with the total echocardiographic score alone. A high score (advanced leaflet deformity) was associated with a suboptimal outcome while a low score (a mobile valve with limited thickening) was associated with an optimal outcome. No other haemodynamic or clinical variables emerged as predictors of outcome in this analysis. Examination of pre-dilatation and post-dilatation echocardiograms showed that balloon dilatation reliably resulted in cleavage of the commissural plane and thus an increase in valve area.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

Preload dependence of doppler-derived indexes of left ventricular diastolic function in humans

Christopher Y. Choong; Howard C. Herrmann; Arthur E. Weyman; Michael A. Fifer

To determine the effect of filling pressure on the pattern of left ventricular filling in humans, the mitral flow velocity profile was measured by pulsed wave Doppler echocardiography during right and left heart catheterization in 11 patients before and during nitroglycerin infusion. Nitroglycerin reduced mean arterial pressure from 90 +/- 9 to 80 +/- 11 mm Hg (p less than 0.001) and mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure from 9 +/- 4 to 4 +/- 2 mm Hg (p less than 0.001). Cardiac output fell from 6.6 +/- 1.5 to 5.5 +/- 1.4 liters/min (p less than 0.001) and heart rate increased from 60 +/- 13 to 65 +/- 14 beats/min (p less than 0.002). The time constant of isovolumic relaxation (TI.) decreased from 51 +/- 9 to 46 +/- 8 ms (p less than 0.01), indicating faster left ventricular relaxation. Nitroglycerin altered the Doppler characteristics of the early filling (E) wave but not those of the atrial contraction (A) wave. Peak velocity of the E wave decreased from 56 +/- 14 to 44 +/- 9 cm/s (p less than 0.001), peak velocity of the A wave did not change and the ratio of peak velocities of the E and A waves decreased from 0.97 +/- 0.33 to 0.77 +/- 0.20 (p less than 0.02). The deceleration of the E wave decreased from 289 +/- 138 to 186 +/- 71 cm/s2 (p less than 0.02). The ratio of velocity-time integral of the A wave to total velocity-time integral (that is, contribution of atrial contraction to total filling) increased from 0.31 +/- 0.09 to 0.36 +/- 0.08 (p less than 0.03).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation | 1990

Atrial enlargement as a consequence of atrial fibrillation. A prospective echocardiographic study.

Anthony J. Sanfilippo; Vivian M. Abascal; M Sheehan; L B Oertel; Pamela Harrigan; R A Hughes; Arthur E. Weyman

To test the hypothesis that atrial enlargement can develop as a consequence of atrial fibrillation, left and right atrial dimensions were measured echocardiographically at two different time points in patients with atrial fibrillation. Patients were selected who initially had normal atrial sizes and who had no evidence of significant structural or functional cardiac abnormalities other than atrial fibrillation either by history or two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography. Fifteen patients were studied (12 men and three women; mean age, 67.3 years). Average time between studies was 20.6 months. Three orthogonal left atrial dimensions and two right atrial dimensions were measured, and all were found to increase significantly between studies. Also, highly significant increases in calculated left atrial volume (from 45.2 to 64.1 cm3, p less than 0.001) and right atrial volume (from 49.2 to 66.2 cm3, p less than 0.001) were observed. The relative extents of left and right atrial volume increase did not differ, and left ventricular size did not change significantly between studies. These results indicate that atrial enlargement can occur as a consequence of atrial fibrillation. The maintenance of sinus rhythm, therefore, may prevent atrial enlargement and its adverse clinical effects.


Circulation | 1989

Three-dimensional echocardiographic reconstruction of the mitral valve, with implications for the diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse.

Robert A. Levine; Mark D. Handschumacher; Anthony J. Sanfilippo; Albert Hagège; Pamela Harrigan; Jane E. Marshall; Arthur E. Weyman

Mitral valve prolapse has been diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiographic criteria with surprising frequency in the general population, even when preselected normal subjects are examined. In most of these individuals, however, prolapse appears in the apical four-chamber view and is absent in roughly orthogonal long-axis views. Previous studies of in vitro models with nonplanar rings have shown that systolic mitral annular nonplanarity can potentially produce this discrepancy. However, to prove directly that apparent leaflet displacement in a two-dimensional view does not constitute true displacement above the three-dimensional annulus requires reconstruction of the entire mitral valve, including leaflets and annulus. Such reconstruction would also be necessary to explore the complex geometry of the valve and to derive volumetric measures of superior leaflet displacement. A technique was therefore developed and validated in vitro for three-dimensional reconstruction of the entire mitral valve. In this technique, simultaneous real-time acquisition of images and their spatial locations permits reconstruction of a localized structure by minimizing the effects of patient motion and respiration. By applying this method to 15 normal subjects, a coherent mitral valve surface could be reconstructed from intersecting scans. The results confirm mitral annular nonplanarity in systole, with a maximum deviation of 1.4 +/- 0.3 cm from planarity. They directly show that leaflets can appear to ascend above the mitral annulus in the apical four-chamber view, as they did in at least one view in all subjects, without actual leaflet displacement above the entire mitral valve in three dimensions, thereby challenging the diagnosis of prolapse by isolated four-chamber view displacement in otherwise normal individuals. This technique allows us to address a uniquely three-dimensional problem with high resolution and provide new information previously unavailable from the two-dimensional images. This new appreciation should enhance our ability to ask appropriate clinical questions relating mitral valve shape and leaflet displacement to clinical and pathologic consequences.


Circulation | 1988

Combined influence of ventricular loading and relaxation on the transmitral flow velocity profile in dogs measured by Doppler echocardiography.

Christopher Y. Choong; Vivian M. Abascal; James D. Thomas; J L Guerrero; Shawn McGlew; Arthur E. Weyman

The relation of the Doppler transmitral flow velocity profile to left ventricular loading conditions and diastolic properties remains poorly described. We studied seven adult mongrel dogs with an open-chest right heart bypass model in which left atrial pressure, representing preload, was varied by controlling blood flow into the pulmonary artery and left ventricular systolic pressure, representing afterload, was controlled independently by pumping blood into or from the femoral arteries. Heart rate was kept constant by crushing the sinus node and pacing the right atrium. Mitral inflow velocity profiles were measured by pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography at multiple left atrial and left ventricular systolic pressures. In individual dogs, the peak E-wave velocity increased linearly with increasing left atrial V-wave pressure at constant left ventricular systolic pressure and decreased with increasing left ventricular systolic pressure at constant left atrial pressure. Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis of data pooled from all experimental stages in all dogs identified left atrial V-wave pressure, the time constant of relaxation (TL), and left ventricular systolic pressure, in order of decreasing significance, as predictors of the peak E-wave velocity (n = 82, multiple r = 0.87, p less than 0.0001). Multivariate analysis with the same three factors in individual dogs yielded higher r values (mean r = 0.89; range, 0.85-0.97), suggesting the presence of important interdog differences that were not accounted for by these three factors alone. When the values of codeterminant hemodynamic factors were kept within narrower limits, correlations between peak E-wave velocity and left atrial V-wave pressure (n = 35, multiple r = 0.83, p less than 0.0001), TL (n = 76, multiple r = -0.54, p less than 0.0001) and left ventricular systolic pressure (n = 20, multiple r = -0.59, p less than 0.005) improved substantially. In the pooled data, the relation of the peak E-wave velocity to left atrial V-wave pressure was shifted downward by an increase in TL (reduced relaxation rate), and the relation of the peak E-wave velocity to TL was shifted upward by an increase in left atrial V-wave pressure. Multivariate analysis also selected left atrial V-wave pressure and TL as the two most significant correlates of the velocity-time integral and deceleration rate of the E wave.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Circulation | 1991

Echocardiographic Doppler evaluation of left ventricular diastolic function. Physics and physiology.

James D. Thomas; Arthur E. Weyman

D iastolic dysfunction of the left ventricle is an important cause of cardiac morbidity and appears to be one of the earliest detectable abnormalities in a number of disorders.1-6 Left ventricular diastolic performance has been described conceptually by two distinct and occasionally discordant parameters-relaxation and compliance.7-9 To date, the only definitive methods for assessing these parameters have required direct measurement of intracardiac pressures, which can only be obtained by cardiac catheterization. Because direct measurements of ventricular function are complex and require invasive data, many have sought noninvasive methods of assessing diastolic function that do not require the use of intracardiac pressure. In general, these methods have used the time course of ventricular filling to infer information about ventricular relaxation and compliance. The ventricular filling pattern was initially obtained from ventricular volumes obtained from radionuclide ventriculograms10l1 and M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiograms.12,13 These sequential volumes were time-differentiated to yield filling rate throughout diastole.


Heart | 1997

Assessing atherosclerotic plaque morphology: comparison of optical coherence tomography and high frequency intravascular ultrasound.

Mark E. Brezinski; Guillermo J. Tearney; Neil J. Weissman; Stephen A. Boppart; Brett E. Bouma; Michael R. Hee; Arthur E. Weyman; Eric A. Swanson; James F. Southern; James G. Fujimoto

BACKGROUND: OCT can image plaque microstructure at a level of resolution not previously demonstrated with other imaging techniques because it uses infrared light rather than acoustic waves. OBJECTIVES: To compare optical coherence tomography (OCT) and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) imaging of in vitro atherosclerotic plaques. METHODS: Segments of abdominal aorta were obtained immediately before postmortem examination. Images of 20 sites from five patients were acquired with OCT (operating at an optical wavelength of 1300 nm which was delivered to the sample through an optical fibre) and a 30 MHz ultrasonic transducer. After imaging, the microstructure of the tissue was assessed by routine histological processing. RESULTS: OCT yielded superior structural information in all plaques examined. The mean (SEM) axial resolution of OCT and IVUS imaging was 16 (1) and 110 (7), respectively, as determined by the point spread function from a mirror. Furthermore, the dynamic range of OCT was 109 dB compared with 43 dB for IVUS imaging. CONCLUSIONS: OCT represents a promising new technology for intracoronary imaging because of its high resolution, broad dynamic range, and ability to be delivered through intravascular catheters.


Circulation | 1979

Cardiovascular and humoral responses to extremes of sodium intake in normal black and white men.

Friedrich C. Luft; L I Rankin; Richard Bloch; Arthur E. Weyman; L R Willis; R H Murray; Clarence E. Grim; Myron H. Weinberger

To examine possible racial differences in the relationship between urinary sodium excretion (UNaV) and blood pressure in whites and blacks, and to characterize cardiovascular, renal and humoral responses, we studied 14 normotensive men (seven white and seven black) at six levels of sodium intake from 10–1500 mEq/24 hrs. Systolic and diastolic pressure increased from 113 ± 2/69 ± 2 mm Hg (SEM) at the 10 mEq/24 hr level of sodium intake to 131 ± 4/85 ± 3 mm Hg at the 1500 mEq/24 hr level of sodium intake (p < 0.001). Cardiac index increased concomitantly from 2.6 ± 0.1 to 3.6 ± 0.3 I/min/M2 (p < 0.001). Linear and quadratic regression analysis of the relationship of UNaV and blood pressure revealed that blacks had higher blood pressures with sodium loading than whites. Sodium loading caused a significant kaliuresis that was greater in whites than blacks. Six subjects were restudied while receiving potassium replacement. Compared with initial responses, blood pressure was elevated to a lesser degree (p < 0.02) and a greater natriuresis appeared at a level of 1500 mEq/24 hr of sodium intake (p < 0.02). The data suggest that blacks have an intrinsic reduction in the ability to excrete sodium compared with whites. The increases in blood pressure with acute sodium loading can be attributed to an increase in cardiac index. Potassium balance appears to influence the responses in blood pressure that occur with sodium loading

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