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Dive into the research topics where Carlos M. DeCastro is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos M. DeCastro.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1977

Congenital bicuspid aortic valve after age 20.

John J. Fenoglio; Hugh A. McAllister; Carlos M. DeCastro; James E. Davia; Melvin D. Cheitlin

The bicuspid aortic valve is recognized as a frequent cause of aortic stenosis in adults. Aortic stenosis has been reported to occur in as many as 72 percent of adults with a congenital bicuspid aortic valve, with peak incidence occurring in the 5th and 6th decades of life. Review of the clinical records of 152 patients aged 20 years and older found to have a bicuspid aortic valve at autopsy revealed aortic stenosis in only 28 percent. The incidence of aortic stenosis increased progressively with age; 46 percent of patients over age 50 years and 73 percent over age 70 years had some degree of stenosis. The stenotic valves were obstructed by nodular, calcareous masses but commissural fusion was present in only eight cases. The largest group of patients in the series (40 percent) died of infective endocarditis; 77 percent of these were under age 50 years. Primary aortic regurgitation without infective endocarditis was uncommon. Thirty-two percent of the patients in this series had an apparently normally functioning aortic valve, and this rate remained relatively constant with increasing age; 37 percent of patients over age 50 years and 27 percent over age 70 years had an apparently normal valve. The bicuspid aortic valve in patients over age 20 does not invariably become stenotic or insufficient.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

Congenital aortic stenosis secondary to dysplasia of congenital bicuspid aortic valves without commissural fusion

Melvin D. Cheitlin; John J. Fenoglio; Hugh A. Mc Allister; James E. Davia; Carlos M. DeCastro

The hearts of nine children with clinical evidence of congenital valve stenosis and a congenital bicuspid aortic valve were reviewed. Aortic stenosis was diagnosed on the basis of cardiac catheterization data in four patients, operative findings in two and auscultatory findings in three. The patients were 1 month to 9 years old; six were male and three female. In each patient the two commissures of the valve were free to the aortic wall. The cusps were thickened, rolled and redundant; microscopic studies revealed that they consisted of immature loose connective tissue consistent with a dysplastic or incompletely differentiated valve. The valve orifice was obstructed by the dysplastic cusps, and dysplastic changes rather than the commissural fusion were responsible for the observed aortic stenosis. These valves do not appear amenable to valvotomy because obstruction is due to the abnormal valve tissue. These findings may explain the occasional poor results of valvotomy in infants and children with congenital aortic valve stenosis.


American Heart Journal | 1977

Determinants of left ventricular function following aorto-coronary bypass surgery

Bruce H. Brundage; Warren T. Anderson; James E. Davia; Melvin D. Cheitlin; Carlos M. DeCastro

Ventricular function was evaluated by the development of ventricular function curves from the vulumes stress of angiographic contrast media in 30 patients before and an average of 5 months after coronary bypass surgery. Patients were grouped according to preoperative operative indications, perioperative events, and postoperative status to determine the most important factors affecting postoperative ventricular function. Progression of lesions in the native coronary circulation correlated most significantly with a decrease in postoperative ventricular function. In 18 of 19 patients the changes in native coronary circulation were progression to complete occlusion. Seventy-three per cent of these changes were associated with a patent graft distal to the change. Patients with very ischemic ventricles as evidenced by a markedly positive stress test (greater than 2 mm. ST depression) and/or main left coronary obstruction maintained or improved postoperatively ventricular function. Increase in postoperative ejection fraction was often associated with decrease in aortic mean pressure, making it difficult to use this parameter to evaluate postoperative ventricular function.


American Heart Journal | 1970

Salivary gland hemorrhage—An unusual complication of Coumadin anticoagulation

Carlos M. DeCastro; Robert J. Hall; Stephen P. Glasser

Abstract A case of submandibular gland hemorrhage which occurred spontaneously in a patient on anticoagulants is presented. This represents an unusual hemorrhagic complication.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984

Two-dimensional echocardiographic assessment of complications involving the ionescu-shiley pericardial valve in the mitral position

Luis G. Solana; Leonard W. Pechacer; Carlos M. DeCastro; Denton A. Cooley

The function of the Ionescu-Shiley bovine pericardial xenograft in the mitral position was investigated in 70 patients by two-dimensional echocardiography. Echocardiographic data from 21 patients with suspected bioprosthetic dysfunction and 49 patients with normal clinical findings were analyzed in a double-blind fashion. Confirmation of cardiovascular status was obtained by means of cardiac catheterization, surgery, autopsy or other techniques in 19 of the 21 symptomatic patients. Two-dimensional echocardiography correctly evaluated bioprosthetic function in 98% of the patients. Six of the seven patients with proven xenograft dysfunction demonstrated echocardiographic evidence of malfunction. There was one false negative evaluation but no false positive results. Valve dysfunction included endocarditic mass lesions, mitral regurgitation resulting from dehiscence of a leaflet or the sewing ring or mitral stenosis due to calcification or malposition of the valve. This experience indicates that two-dimensional echocardiography is useful for assessing the Ionescu-Shiley mitral bioprosthesis, particularly in those patients who develop nonspecific symptoms.


American Heart Journal | 1984

Anomalous left coronary artery origin from the right coronary sinus

James E. Davia; David C. Green; Melvin D. Cheitlin; Carlos M. DeCastro; Walter H. Brott


American Heart Journal | 1975

Clinical pathologic conference: heart neoplasm.

Cheitlin; Carlos M. DeCastro; Daniel M. Knowles; John J. Fenoglio; Hugh A. McAllister


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1990

Twenty years of coronary artery bypass surgery

Mac Arthur; A. Elayda; Robert J. Hall; Efrain Garcia; Virendra S. Mathur; Carlos M. DeCastro; Albert G. Gray; Luceli Cuasay; Denton A. Cooley


Texas Heart Institute Journal | 1982

Noninvasive Assessment of the Ionescu-Shiley Pericardial Xenograft in the Mitral Position: Preliminary Experience

Leonard W. Pechacek; Luis G. Solana; Carlos M. DeCastro; Sidney K. Edelman; Efrain Garcia; Robert J. Hall


Chest | 1978

Electrocardiographic Artifact Caused by Pacemaker Pulse-Width Controller

James E. Davia; Carlos M. DeCastro; Thomas E. Bowen; Paul L. Shetler; David C. Green

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James E. Davia

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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David C. Green

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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Paul L. Shetler

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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Thomas E. Bowen

Walter Reed Army Medical Center

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Hugh A. McAllister

Armed Forces Institute of Pathology

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