Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Eliot Corday is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Eliot Corday.


American Heart Journal | 1981

Early phase acute myocardial infarct size quantification : Validation of the triphenyl tetrazolium chloride tissue enzyme staining technique

Michael C. Fishbein; Samuel Meerbaum; Jacob Rit; Ulf Lando; Katsuo Kanmatsuse; Jean C. Mercier; Eliot Corday; William Ganz

Gross histochemical delineation of myocardium which has lost dehydrogenase enzyme activity has been shown to facilitate macroscopic recognition of necrotic myocardium. The present study was undertaken to assess the accuracy of the triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) technique for quantitating myocardial infarct size very early after coronary occlusion. In 16 closed-chest dogs the left anterior descending coronary artery was occluded with an intra-arterial balloon. Twelve dogs were killed 6 hours after occlusion, their hearts excised, cut from apex to base into 1 cm thick slices, and incubated in TTC. Whole-mount histologic sections of each slice were prepared. Myocardial infarct size was measured by planimetry of photographs of each gross slice and histologic section using classical criteria of necrosis. Myocardial infarct size determined in 54 slices by the TTC technique and histologically was similar (25 +/- 16% vs 27 +/- 16% of the left ventricular mass, mean +/- SD) with close correlation between the two methods (r = 0.91). Four dogs were killed 3 hours after occlusion and TTC stained and unstained myocardium was studied by electron microscopy. When the TTC technique identified necrosis so did electron microscopy. Areas identified by the TTC technique as non-necrotic were either normal or only ischemic by electron microscopy. Thus, using TTC, necrosis can be quantitated reliably 6, and even 3 hours after coronary occlusion, before histologic changes are clearly diagnostic. This technique represents a reliable, practical means for quantitation of recent infarction and for studying the evolution of ischemic injury in its early phase.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1974

Consequences of reperfusion after coronary occlusion: Effects on hemodynamic and regional myocardial metabolic function

Tzu-Wang Lang; Eliot Corday; Herbert Gold; Samuel Meerbaum; Steven Rubins; Costantino Costantini; Shigeru Hirose; Jules Osher; Victor J. Rosen

Abstract Hemodynamic and regional metabolic measurements were obtained in seven closed chest dogs during a control period, 3 hours of coronary occlusion and 5 hours of reperfusion. Reperfusion resulted in intermittent ectopic arrhythmias in five dogs and severe shock in two. It usually caused increases in heart rate, coronary sinus flow and maximal isovolumetric rate of rise in left ventricular pressure (dP/dt), which were associated with a decrease in systemic pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, systemic vascular resistance and stroke work. A transitory increase in cardiac output occurred. Global myocardial oxygen consumption, which was reduced during occlusion, increased with reperfusion. Reperfusion induced abnormal lactate metabolism and myocardial potassium loss in the previously occluded area and often in the nonoccluded segment as well. Histopathologic changes of accelerated necrosis, reactive hyperemia and hemorrhage were often noted after reperfusion. These studies indicate that reperfusion after 3 hours of occlusion caused serious abnormalities in hemodynamic states, metabolic function and morphologic features of the heart.


Circulation | 1980

Cross-sectional echocardiography. II. Analysis of mathematic models for quantifying volume of the formalin-fixed left ventricle.

H.L. Wyatt; M K Heng; Samuel Meerbaum; Pascal Gueret; J Hestenes; E Dula; Eliot Corday

Cross-sectional echocardiography was used to quantify volume in 21 canine left ventrides that were fixed in formalin and immnersed in mineral oil. Area, length and diameter measurements were obtained from short and long-axis cross-sectional images of the left ventricle and volume was calculated by seven mathematic models. Calculated volume was then compared, by linear regression and percent error analyses, with fluid volume of the left ventricle, obtained by filling the chamber with a known amount of fluid. Volumes ranged from 13-146 ml. Mathematic models using short-axis area and long-axis length gave higher correlation coefficients (r = 0.982 and r = 0.969) and lower mean errors (10-20%) than standard formulas previously used with M-mode echo and angiography. Thus, short-axis area analysis with cross-sectional echocardiography is well-suited for quantifying left ventricular volumes in dogs.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1975

Revascularization after 3 hours of coronary arterial occlusion: Effects on regional cardiac metabolic function and infarct size

Costantino Costantini; Eliot Corday; Tzu-Wang Lang; Samuel Meerbaum; John Brasch; Leo Kaplan; Steven Rubins; Herbert Gold; Jules Osher

Two experimental series of closed chest dogs were compared: Group A (five dogs with 7 days of continuous occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery); and Group B (six dogs with 7 days of reperfusion after 3 hours of acute occlusion of the same artery). Hemodynamic measurements, ventricular wall motion, coronary sinus blood flow and regional metabolism in both coronary occluded and nonoccluded segments of the left ventricle were measured sequentially. The infarct size was characterized by detailed histopathologic analysis. In the control dogs (Group A), mechanical and metabolic function remained severely depressed after 7 days of occlusion, and mean infarct size was 31.6 percent. In Group B, significant mechanical and metabolic dysfunction developed during 3 hours of occlusion and did not improve during the 1st hour of reperfusion. However, after 7 days of reperfusion, function returned to near preocclusion level. Mean infarct size was 14.2 percent, but in two of the six dogs infarct size was 43 percent and 23 percent, respectively. The study confirmed the unstable character of the early phase of reperfusion, attributed to cell swelling, edema and hemorrhages that resulted in inadequate coronary reflow, arrhythmias and functional derangements. Prolonged reperfusion for 7 days reduced mean infarct size and improved cardiac function.


American Heart Journal | 1980

Cross-sectional echocardiography III. Analysis of mathematic models for quantifying volume of symmetric and asymmetric left ventricles

H.L. Wyatt; Samuel Meerbaum; Ming K. Heng; Pascal Gueret; Eliot Corday

Cross-sectional echocardiography was utilized for quantification of volume in 19 formalin-fixed left ventricles in the presence or absence of ventricular symmetry, defined by the ratio of septal-lateral to anterior-posterior diameter. In 10 symmetric ventricles this ratio was 1.23 +/- 0.06 (mean +/- SEM), whereas in nine asymmetric ventricles the ratio was 1.80 +/- 0.07. Area, diameter, and length measurements were obtained from short- and long-axis cross-sectional images of the left ventricle and volume was calculated by five mathematical models previously described. To evaluate the reliability of each model, echocardiographic left ventricular volume was compared by linear regression and percent error analyses to directly measured fluid volume. In symmetric ventricles, excellent correlations (r = 0.996 to 0.967) and reasonable mean percent errors (6% to 31%) were observed for all models. In asymmetric ventricles, models utilizing short-axis area or two short-axis diameters retained high correlation coefficients (r = 0.985 to 0.956) and similar mean percent errors, but standard formulas previously used with M-mode echo and angiography showed lower correlations (r = 0.886 to 0.873) and higher mean percent errors (52% to 54%). Thus, in the presence of ventricular asymmetry, analysis of short-axis areas or diameters with cross-sectional echocardiography is well suited for quantification of left ventricular volumes.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2005

Overview of acutely decompensated congestive heart failure (ADHF): a report from the ADHERE registry.

Gregg C. Fonarow; Eliot Corday

Acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) has emerged as a major public health problem, and HF has become the leading cause of hospitalization in persons over 65 years of age. It is estimated that there are 6.5 million hospital days attributed to ADHF each year. Patients hospitalized with ADHF face a substantial risk of readmission, as high as 50% by 6 months after discharge. Despite the large number of patients hospitalized and this substantial risk, data on these patients have been limited and there has been little effort to improve the quality of care for patients hospitalized with ADHF. The Acute Decompensated Heart Failure National Registry (ADHERE®) was designed to bridge this gap in knowledge and care by prospectively studying the characteristics, management, and outcomes of a broad spectrum of patients hospitalized with ADHF. Participating community and university hospitals identified patients with a primary or secondary discharge diagnosis of HF and collected medical history, management, treatments, and health outcomes via secure Web browser technology. As of October 2004, more than 160,000 patients from 281 hospitals have been enrolled. These patients differ substantially from those typically enrolled in randomized clinical trials. Initial data from the ADHERE registry have provided important insights into the clinical characteristics, patterns of care, and outcomes of patients with ADHF. ADHERE has documented significant delays in diagnosis and initiation of ADHF therapies as well as a substantial under-use of evidenced-based, guideline-recommended chronic HF therapies at hospital discharge. As such, there are substantial opportunities to improve the quality of care for ADHF patients in the nation’s hospitals.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1983

Assessment of quantitative methods for 2-dimensional echocardiography.

H.L. Wyatt; Roberto V. Haendchen; Samuel Meerbaum; Eliot Corday

Several 2-dimensional echocardiographic (2-DE) methods were tested in vitro for accuracy of linear and cross-sectional measurements and in vivo for left ventricular (LV) volume reconstruction. With 2-DE instrument settings at low and high gains and with precise in vitro calibrations, we studied myocardial slice thickness (3.0 to 10.0 mm). The 2-DE myocardial thickness was measured by leading-trailing, trailing-leading, and leading-leading methods. Regression analysis of 2-DE versus direct measurements yielded excellent correlations for all 3 methods (r greater than 0.985), with interobserver variability less than 3%. Accuracy of measurement was satisfactory only for the leading-leading method (3 and 6% error at low and high gains, respectively); other methods substantially over- or underestimated thickness. Thin myocardial slices (less than 1 mm thick) were applied to cylinders and fixed in formalin to produce precise cavity areas (1.8 to 7.0 cm2). Regression analysis of 2-DE versus actual cavity area gave high correlations (r greater than 0.970), and low interobserver variability (less than 4%) for the inner edge and leading edge methods, but the leading edge method was the most accurate (1.3 to 2.5% error). In vivo LV volumes in 7 anesthetized dogs were compared with 2-DE and cineangiography. Good correlations (r = 0.92) were obtained, but the inner edge method underestimated angiographic volume, whereas the leading edge method reduced the magnitude of underestimation. Thus, the leading edge method for 2-DE is most accurate not only for linear and cross-sectional measurements of the myocardium, but also for application to in vivo LV volumes.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1976

Diastolic retroperfusion of acutely ischemic myocardium

Samuel Meerbaum; Tzu-Wang Lang; Jules Osher; Keiichi Hashimoto; Gilbert W. Lewis; Cyril Feldstein; Eliot Corday

The effectiveness of coronary venous retroperfusion treatment of an ischemic myocardial segment was assessed by measurements of regional and global myocardial function in 16 dogs. The left anterior descending coronary artery was acutely occluded for 75 minutes. After the first 30 minutes of occlusion, diastolic retroperfusion was instituted for 45 minutes by synchronized pumping of arterial blood from the brachial artery into the anterior interventricular coronary vein. Data collected in the preocclusion control period, during occlusion and the subsequent retroperfusion period included simultaneous measurement os ischemic and border zone myocardial forces, epicardial electrocardiographic S-T segments, intracoronary pressure, coronary blood flow and oxygen pressure (PO2) sampled distal to the site of occlusion. Retroperfusion resulted in significant improvement from the level of regional dysfunction observed after 30 minutes of occlusion: Ischemic zone myocardial force increased 106%, epicardial S-T elevation decreased 46%, normalized peripheral left anterior descending coronary arterial flow increased 50% and distal left anterior descending PO2 decreased 44%. These regional improvements were significant when compared with findings in an untreated series of 12 dogs with 75 minutes occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery. Diastolic-augmented coronary venous retroperfusion with arterial blood provided significant but not complete restoration of function in the ischemic segment. Therefore, in the earliest phase of acute myocardial infarction, retroperfusion might represent a useful temporary support to an otherwise inaccessible jeopardized zone of the heart. Regional retroperfusion may constitute an effective emergency procedure, particularly when the occlusive lesions are diffuse and other medical or surgical emergency procedures are inadvisable, unavailable or ineffective.


Circulation | 1980

Two-dimensional echocardiographic quantitation of left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction. Importance of accounting for dyssynergy in short-axis reconstruction models.

Pascal Gueret; Samuel Meerbaum; H.L. Wyatt; T Uchiyama; T W Lang; Eliot Corday

Two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) was used to measure left ventricular (LV) enddiastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV) and LV ejection fraction (EF). Thirty closed-chest dogs were studied in the control state and, of these, 11 were restudied 1 hour after proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) occlusion. Two basic left ventricular volume reconstruction models were used, using 2DE-derived LV long-axis length (L) and short-axis cross-sectional areas (A): (1) Simpsons rule with five short-axis areas and (2) a simplified formula (LVV = 5/6 AL) using a single short-axis area, at either the mitral valve (MV) or mid-papillary muscle (MP) level.In the control state, correlations of 2DE against cineventriculography were satisfactory regardless of the reconstruction procedure, but Simpsons rule gave the highest correlation coefficients. With segmental LV dyssynergy distal to the LAD occlusion, correlations for EDV, ESV and EF were good with the comprehensive Simpsons reconstruction (r = 0.89, 0.86 and 0.92, respectively) as well as with the 5/6 AL formula using the MP level area (r= 0.82, 0.87, and 0.92, respectively). However, there was no significant correlation for ESV and EF when the MV short-axis area was used. Thus, in the presence of significant regional asymmetry, satisfactory 2DE quantitation of LV volumes may be obtained with the simplified model 5/6 AL, but the single cross-section being used must adequately reflect the deranged LV geometry. This formula appears particularly suited for clinical 2DE studies in the presence of regional dysfunction, including beat-to-beat or sequential assessment of spontaneous events and evaluation of the effects of interventions.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

Synchronized retroperfusion of coronary veins for circulatory support of jeopardized ischemic myocardium

Jean C. Farcot; Samuel Meerbaum; Tzu-Wang Lang; Leo Kaplan; Eliot Corday

A retroperfusion system was developed that augments retrograde delivery of arterial blood into an acutely ischemic myocardial region during diastole and facilitates coronary venous drainage in systole. An electrocardiogram-synchronized, gas-actuated bladder pump propels retroperfusate through an autoinflatable balloon catheter whose tip is placed within the regional coronary vein that drains the ischemic myocardium. Experiments were performed in 26 closed chest dogs with 4 hour intracoronary balloon occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery. An untreated control series consisted of 13 dogs; the remaining 13 dogs were treated with retroperfusion, which was initiated after the first hour of acute coronary occlusion. Synchronized retroperfusion resulted in a significant 37 +/- 10 per cent (mean +/- standard error of the mean) decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure from 11 +/- 2 to 5 +/- 21 mm Hg, a 20 +/- 4 percent decrease in peak systolic pressure (140 +/- 7 to 110 +/- 6 mm Hg) and a 25 +/- 6 percent reduction in systemic vascular resistance (3,880 +/- 340 to 2,380 +/- 300 dynes sec cm-5). Ischemic region intracoronary S-T segment elevation decreased 40 +/- 15 percent, and potassium loss was reduced 92 +/- 22 percent. Partial pressure of oxygen measured distal to the coronary occlusion decreased 36 +/- 2 percent, suggesting oxygen delivery to and extraction by the jeopardized ischemic myocardium. Ventriculography in four dogs revealed an increase in left ventricular ejection fraction and reversal of ischemic segment dyskinesia by synchronized retroperfusion. A nitro-blue tetrazolium study of 10 excised hearts indicated that 3 hours of synchronized retroperfusion significantly reduced the size of ischemic injury to 3.3 +/- 2 percent of the left ventricle (versus 16.2 +/- 5 percent in the untreated control group). In addition, retroperfusion appeared to correct ischemic arrhythmias. The experimental data suggest that this treatment is capable of improving cardiac function and salvaging jeopardized myocardium. Clinical application is envisioned as a prompt temporary emergency support for acute and profound ischemic dysfunction not readily treatable by other interventions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Eliot Corday's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tzu-Wang Lang

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Herbert Gold

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H.L. Wyatt

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John K. Vyden

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jules Osher

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge