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Featured researches published by Brian P. Griffin.


Circulation | 1992

Immediate and long-term outcome of percutaneous mitral valvotomy in patients 65 years and older.

Tuzcu Em; Peter C. Block; Brian P. Griffin; John B. Newell; Igor F. Palacios

BackgroundWe analyzed the immediate and long-term outcome of percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy (PMV) in 99 patients who were ≥65 years of age (81 women and 18 men; mean±SEM age, 72±0.5 years). Methods and ResultsThere were 84 patients in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III or IV; 26 patients had previous surgical commissurotomy, 64 had one or more comorbidities; 73 had fluoroscopically visible mitral valve (MV) calcification; and 63 had echocardiographic score >8 (mean±SEM score, 9.2±0.2). There were three procedural deaths, all occurring in our early experience. Pericardial tamponade occurred in five patients, thromboembolism in three, and transient atrioventricular block in one. After PMV, MV area was 1 cm2 in 86 patients and 1.5 cm2 in 56. A successful outcome (defined as MV area 1.5 cm2 without a ≥2-grade increase in mitral regurgitation and without left-to-right shunt with a pulmonary-to-systemic flow ratio of ≥1.5:1) was achieved in 46 patients. The best multivariate predictor of success was the combination of echocardiographic score, NYHA functional class, and inverse of MV area. Mean follow-up was 16±1 months. Actuarial survival (79±7% versus 62±10%, p = 0.04), survival without MV replacement (71±8% versus 41±8%, p = 0.002), and survival without MV replacement and NYHA class III or IV (54±12% versus 38±8%, p = 0.01) at 3 years were significantly better in the successful group of 46 patients than in the unsuccessful group of 53 patients. Low echocardiographic score was the only independent predictor of survival. Lack of MV calcification and low NYHA class, low mean left atrial pressure, and low pulmonary artery pressure were the independent predictors of event-free survival. ConclusionsPMV can be performed safely in selected patients ≥65 years old with good immediate and long-term results. In addition to clinical examination, echocardiographic evaluation of the mitral valve and fluoroscopic screening for valvular calcification are the most important steps in patient selection for successful outcome.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1994

Percutaneous mitral balloon valvotomy in patients with calcific mitral stenosis: Immediate and long-term outcome

E. Murat Tuzcu; Peter C. Block; Brian P. Griffin; Robert E. Dinsmore; John B. Newell; Igor F. Palacios

OBJECTIVES This study analyzed the immediate and long-term outcome of percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy in patients with and without fluoroscopically visible mitral valve calcification. BACKGROUND Mitral valve calcification has been shown to be an important factor in determining immediate and long-term outcome of patients undergoing surgical mitral commissurotomy. Patient selection has an important impact on the outcome of percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy. METHODS The immediate and long-term results of percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy were compared in 155 patients with and 173 patients without mitral valve calcification. The patients with calcified valves were assigned to four groups according to severity of calcification. RESULTS Patients with calcified mitral stenosis more frequently were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV and more frequently had atrial fibrillation, previous surgical commissurotomy, echocardiographic score > 8, higher pulmonary artery and left atrial pressures, higher pulmonary vascular resistance and mean mitral valve gradient and lower cardiac output and smaller mitral valve area. Mitral valve area after valvotomy was significantly smaller in patients with calcified valves (1.8 +/- 0.06 vs. 2.1 +/- 0.06 cm2) and was > or = 1.5 cm2 in 65% of patients with and 83% of patients without calcified valves (p = 0.004). A successful outcome, defined as mitral valve area > 1.5 cm2 without significant mitral regurgitation and left to right shunting, was achieved in 52% of patients with and 69% of patients without uncalcified valves (p = 0.001). The success rate was 59%, 48%, 35% and 33% in subgroups with 1+, 2+, 3+ and 4+ calcification, respectively. The rates of significant left to right shunting and mitral regurgitation after valvuloplasty were similar in the two groups. Estimated survival rate (80% vs. 99%, respectively, p = 0.0001), survival rate without mitral valve replacement (67% vs. 93%, respectively, p < 0.00005) and event-free survival rate (63% vs. 88%, respectively, p < 0.00005) at 2 years were significantly better in the patients with uncalcified valves. Survival rate curves became progressively worse as the severity of calcification increased. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that immediate and long-term results of mitral valvuloplasty are not as successful in patients with fluoroscopically visible mitral valve calcification as in those without calcification.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Late (two-year) follow-up after percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy

Peter C. Block; Igor F. Palacios; Elizabeth H. Block; E. Murat Tuzcu; Brian P. Griffin

Percutaneous balloon mitral valvotomy (PBMV) compares well with surgical commissurotomy, showing comparable improvement in symptoms and catheterization-proven valve area early after the procedure. This study reports the New York Heart Association class, mitral valve area calculated by echocardiography, and the results of transseptal cardiac catheterization 2 years after PBMV. The data are compared with the status immediately before and after PBMV. Forty-one patients returned to enter the study (mean follow-up time 24 +/- 3 months). All patients were evaluated clinically by the same investigator who had seen them at the time of PBMV. Transseptal cardiac catheterization and echocardiographic analysis (2-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography) were performed on the same day. At follow-up, 17 patients were class I, 20 were class II, and 4 were class III. Although the mitral valve area calculated by cardiac catheterization increased significantly from immediately before to immediately after PBMV there was a decrease in the calculated mitral valve area at 2-year follow-up. Echocardiographic analysis did not show as large an increase in mitral area, immediately after PBMV, and no significant decrease in mitral valve area at 2 years (before PBMV planimetry 1.1 +/- 0.1 cm2; immediately after 1.8 +/- 0.1 [p less than 0.05]; follow-up 1.6 +/- 0.1 [p = not significant compared with immediately after PBMV]). Doppler halftime measurements were similar. PBMV is effective therapy with good midterm results for selected patients with mitral stenosis.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1991

Patterns of normal transvalvular regurgitation in mechanical valve prostheses

Frank A. Flachskampf; John P. O'Shea; Brian P. Griffin; Luis Guerrero; Arthur E. Weyman; James D. Thomas

The magnitude and spatial distribution of normal leakage through mechanical prosthetic valves were studied in an in vitro model of mitral regurgitation. The effective regurgitant orifice was calculated from regurgitant rate at different transvalvular pressure differences and flow velocities. This effective orifice area was 0.6 to 2 mm2 for three tilting disc prostheses (Medtronic-Hall sizes 21, 25 and 29) and 0.2 to 1.1 mm2 for three bileaflet valves (St. Jude Medical sizes 21, 25 and 33). In the single disc valves, Doppler color flow examination disclosed a prominent central regurgitant jet around the central hole for the strut, accompanied by minor leakage along the rim of the disc (central to peripheral jet area ratio 3.3 +/- 1.2). The bileaflet prostheses showed a peculiar complex pattern: in planes parallel to the two disc axes, convergent peripherally arising jets were visualized, whereas in orthogonal planes several diverging jets were seen. Mounting the disc and bileaflet valves on a water-filled tube allowed reproduction and interpretation of this pattern: for the bileaflet valve, the jets originated predominantly from valve ring protrusions that contained the axis hinge points and created a converging V pattern in planes parallel to the leaflets and a diverging V pattern in orthogonal planes. Similar patterns were observed during transesophageal echocardiography in 20 patients with a normally functioning St. Jude prosthesis. In 10 patients with a Medtronic-Hall valve, a dominant central jet was observed with one or more smaller peripheral jets. The median central to peripheral jet area ratio was 5 to 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Heart Journal | 1991

The effects of regurgitant orifice size, chamber compliance, and systemic vascular resistance on aortic regurgitant velocity slope and pressure half-time

Brian P. Griffin; Frank A. Flachskampf; Samuel Siu; Arthur E. Weyman; James D. Thomas

The determinants of the aortic regurgitant velocity profile have been investigated using computer and in vitro simulations in which regurgitant orifice area, ventricular and aortic compliance, and systemic vascular resistance could be independently varied. In the study, regurgitant fraction was altered, either by changing the size of the regurgitant orifice or by holding the regurgitant orifice constant and changing chamber compliance or systemic vascular resistance. Upon increasing regurgitant fraction by increasing the size of the regurgitant orifice, the slope got steeper and the pressure half-time shortened, the response anticipated in current clinical practice. However, when the regurgitant orifice was kept constant and regurgitation fraction was increased by increasing the systemic vascular resistance or by increasing the compliance of the left ventricle, slope became less steep and pressure half-time lengthened. Multivariate analysis was used to quantify the relationship of regurgitant fraction to slope and pressure half-time. When orifice area was allowed to vary, slope was related directly (multiple r = 0.78, p less than 0.001) and half-time was related inversely (multiple r = 0.66, p less than 0.001) to regurgitant fraction. With the orifice area fixed, however, directionally opposite responses were seen; slope varied inversely (multiple r = 0.87, p less than 0.001), whereas half-time varied directly (multiple r = 0.88, p less than 0.001) with regurgitant fraction. This study suggests that the utility of the slope and pressure half-time of the regurgitant velocity tracing in clinical practice relates to their ability to discriminate regurgitant orifices of differing sizes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 1997

Effects of anesthetic technique on myocardial wall motion abnormalities during abdominal aortic surgery

Thomas M. Dodds; A.Keith Burns; Daniel DeRoo; Jonathan F. Plehn; Michael Haney; Brian P. Griffin; Julia E. Weiss; Therese A. Stukel; Mark P. Yeager

OBJECTIVE To assess the impact of regional supplemented general anesthesia (RSGEN) on regional myocardial function during abdominal aortic surgery (AAS). DESIGN Prospective randomized study. SETTING Single academic medical center. PARTICIPANTS Seventy-three patients scheduled for infrarenal aortic aneursymectomy. INTERVENTIONS Patients received standardized intraoperative anesthetic management consisting of either general anesthesia (GA; n = 37) or general anesthesia supplemented by epidural anesthesia (RSGEN; n = 36). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Hemodynamic measurements and transesophageal echocardiograms (TEE) were obtained at eight intraoperative times. The electrocardiogram (ECG) was continuously recorded using Holter monitoring. Of the 56 patients with interpretable TEE recordings, 8 of 30 (27%) GA patients and 7 of 26 (27%) RSGEN patients developed new segmental wall motion abnormalities (SWMAs). There was no treatment effect on either the incidence (p = 0.23) or the intensity (p = 0.34) of SWMAs. Cross-clamping of the aorta was associated with the onset of new SWMAs (odds ratio, 8.2; 95% CI, 1.1 to 64; p = 0.04). Among the 63 patients with interpretable Holter recordings, 9 of 34 (26%) GA patients and 9 of 29 (31%) RSGEN patients exhibited intraoperative ischemia. There was no treatment effect on the incidence (p = 0.22) or intensity (p = 0.67) of ECG ischemia. CONCLUSION Despite providing modest hemodynamic depression, RSGEN did not reduce the incidence or intensity of either regional myocardial dysfunction or ECG ischemia. New SWMAs were temporally associated with cross-clamping of the aorta and tended to resolve with unclamping.


Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 1992

Left atrial V waves following mitral valve replacement are not specific for significant mitral regurgitation

S. Clay Risk; Michael N. D'Ambra; Brian P. Griffin; Richard Fine; John P. O'Shea

Left atrial or pulmonary capillary wedge pressure V waves are used immediately after mitral valve replacement to evaluate valve competence. However, their correlation with hemodynamically significant regurgitation has not been established. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) was used to prospectively examine whether left atrial V waves represented significant mitral regurgitation in 11 patients undergoing mitral valve replacement. Left atrial pressure V waves were measured in the immediate postcardiopulmonary bypass period by direct cannulation of the right superior pulmonary vein and recorded on a paper chart recorder. In each patient, three evaluations of mitral regurgitation by Doppler TEE were made at 15-minute intervals. In 22 of 33 evaluations, left atrial V waves with peak V wave height more than 5 mm Hg above the mean left atrial pressure were present. However, only in 3 of these periods did transesophageal echocardiography show evidence of more than trace mitral regurgitation by pulsed Doppler and color flow mapping. As indicators of mild-to-severe mitral regurgitation diagnosed by TEE, left atrial V waves had a specificity for the three evaluation periods of 40%, 30%, and 40%. Left atrial V waves with peak height greater than 5 mm Hg above mean left atrial pressure frequently appear following mitral valve replacement, but these V waves are nonspecific signs of mitral regurgitation.


European Heart Journal | 1994

Relationship of aortic regurgitant velocity slope and pressure half-time to severity of aortic regurgitation under changing haemodynamic conditions

Brian P. Griffin; Frank A. Flachskampf; Sharon C. Reimold; Richard T. Lee; James D. Thomas


Archive | 2018

Simulation of Percutaneous Structural Interventions

Serge Harb; Brian P. Griffin; L. Leonardo Rodriguez


ASVIDE | 2018

Grayscale video of patient shown in Figure 1 —displaying clockwise right ventricular rotation

Patrick Collier; Bo Xu; Kenya Kusunose; Dermot Phelan; Andrew Grant; Paaladinesh Thavendiranathan; Brian P. Griffin; Richard A. Grimm; Thomas H. Marwick; Zoran B. Popović

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