David M. McCarthy
University of Pennsylvania
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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983
Scott R. Spielman; J. Sanford Schwartz; David M. McCarthy; Leonard N. Horowitz; Allan M. Greenspan; Laura M. Sadowski; Mark E. Josephson; Harvey L. Waxman
To identify predictors of the success or failure of medical therapy in chronic recurrent sustained ventricular tachycardia, univariate and multivariate statistical techniques were used to retrospectively analyze data in 84 patients with this arrhythmia. By univariate analysis, four factors were associated with successful medical treatment: age less than 45 years, ejection fraction greater than 50%, hypokinesia as the only contraction abnormality and the absence of organic heart disease. Four other findings, the induction of ventricular tachycardia with a single ventricular extrastimulus, an HV interval greater than 60 ms, the presence of a left ventricular aneurysm and Q waves on a baseline electrocardiogram, correlated with medical failure. However, none of these variables alone accurately predicted treatment results in more than 75% of cases. By discriminant analysis, a function incorporating eight variables was constructed which correctly classified 81% of patients. Moreover, three-quarters of the patients could be classified into groups with a high or low probability of success where accuracy increased to 90%. When the discriminant function was tested prospectively in 31 similar patients, 25 (81%) fell into the groups with a high or low probability of success. In the latter group, of 20 patients predicted to fail medical therapy, 19 (95%) did fail a complete trial of medical therapy. The overall accuracy remained a high 92%. In clinical application this function would allow patients with a high probability of responding to medical therapy to be selected for serial electrophysiologic drug testing. In patients with a low probability of responding to medical therapy, serial studies could be avoided and alternate forms of therapy explored.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1994
L. Henry Edmunds; Howard C. Herrmann; Verdi J. DiSesa; Mark B. Ratcliffe; Joseph E. Bavaria; David M. McCarthy
A method to provide left ventricular circulatory assistance without thoracotomy was developed and implemented in 2 patients. The left atrium is cannulated from the neck by passing a catheter across the interatrial septum (Dennis technique) using fluoroscopic and echocardiographic imaging. To facilitate ambulation, the arterial catheter is connected to the right axillary artery. Left atrial to axillary arterial flow is produced by a centrifugal pump. Two patients were perfused at 2.7 to 3.5 L/min for 5 and 6.5 days. One patient had successful coronary angioplasty during perfusion and remains alive 1 year later. The other patient died of sepsis and anuria that preceded implementation of circulatory assistance. The Dennis method of continuous left ventricular circulatory assistance avoids thoracotomy, requires a minimal operation, is portable and inexpensive, uses widely available equipment, and is particularly suitable for patients in cardiogenic shock after acute myocardial infarction. The method is safe and cost-effective, and merits wider application in selected patients.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1983
Thomas M. McFarland; David M. McCarthy; P.Todd Makler; Mark E. Josephson
To assess the relation between the site of origin of ventricular tachycardia (VT) and relative myocardial perfusion and wall motion, 18 patients with a history of recurrent sustained VT underwent cardiac catheterization, invasive electrophysiologic study with endocardial mapping, and resting radionuclide ventriculography. In addition, 6 patients had exercise and redistribution thallium-201 scintigraphy, whereas the remaining 12 patients had resting thallium scans. The site of origin of VT (determined by catheter and intraoperative endocardial mapping) was correlated with relative myocardial perfusion (thallium) and left ventricular (LV) wall motion. All patients had significant (greater than 50% narrowing) coronary artery disease and 16 had LV aneurysms. Twenty sites of origin of VT (28 morphologies) were identified in these 18 patients. Of the 9 patients with multiple VT morphologies, the VT originated at disparate sites in 2 patients. All 18 patients had thallium defects at rest and 3 patients had additional reversible (ischemic) defects on exercise. Of the 20 sites of origin of VT, 16 were at the periphery of the thallium defect, 1 was adjacent to it, and 3 were in the center of it. In the 16 patients with LV aneurysm, there were 18 sites of origin: 15 at the border of the aneurysm, 1 adjacent to it, and 2 within it. The data suggest that in patients with VT and coronary artery disease the site of origin is usually the periphery of a resting thallium defect, and in patients with LV aneurysm the site is the border of the aneurysm.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1985
David M. McCarthy; P.Todd Makler
Although the nuclear stethoscope, a nonimaging probe, accurately determines left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF), its reliability in patients with LV aneurysm has not been established. Accordingly, LVEF was determined using the nuclear stethoscope and compared with that determined by equilibrium gated blood pool scanning in 29 patients, 1 studied on 2 separate occasions, for a total of 30 patient studies. Patient studies were separated into 2 groups. Patients in group I (n = 20) had no gated blood pool evidence for aneurysm, and those in group II (n = 10) had discrete focal akinesia or dyskinesia. Nineteen patients (13 in group I and 6 in group II) had 2 separate nuclear stethoscope acquisitions. In group I, EF determined by gated blood pool scanning (53 +/- 4%, mean +/- standard error) did not differ from that determined by nuclear stethoscope (51 +/- 4%). EF determined using either gated blood pool scanning (32 +/- 6%) or nuclear stethoscope (35 +/- 5%) was significantly lower in group II than in group I, although nuclear stethoscope and gated blood pool scanning did not differ. Reproducibility was excellent (r = 0.96). Overall, nuclear stethoscope and gated blood pool EFs correlated closely (r = 0.93), and the correlation coefficients were similar in groups I (r = 0.92) and II (r = 0.92). The slopes of the regression curves for group I (0.97) and group II (0.92) were not statistically different. These results confirm the accuracy and reproducibility of LVEF determination by nuclear stethoscope and specifically demonstrate its reliability in patients with LV aneurysm.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984
P.Todd Makler; David M. McCarthy; Joseph P. Kleaveland; John U. Doherty; Michael Velchik
It has previously been shown that patients with valvular regurgitation can be identified by the ratio of left and right ventricular amplitude values obtained from first harmonic Fourier analysis of the gated blood pool scan. The present study was designed to validate the accuracy of this technique for quantifying the amount of valvular regurgitation. In a blinded analysis of 19 patients who underwent cardiac catheterization, there was a close correlation between the radionuclide and hemodynamic determination of the amount of regurgitation (r = 0.84). The interobserver agreement for calculating the radionuclide data was also high (r = 0.88). These results suggest that the Fourier ventricular amplitude ratio is an accurate and reproducible technique for quantifying valvular regurgitation by gated blood pool scanning.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1983
Todd P. Makler; David M. McCarthy; Michael G. Velchik; Harold A. Goldstein; Abass Alavi
American Journal of Cardiology | 1985
David M. McCarthy; P.Todd Makler
International Journal of Cardiology | 1981
David M. McCarthy
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1984
David M. McCarthy; J.P. Kleaveland; P.T. Makler; Abass Alavi
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 1985
P. T. Makler; David M. McCarthy; Philip Bergey; Kenneth Marshall; Mark Bourne; Michael G. Velchik; Abass Alavi