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Dive into the research topics where Eric H. Stern is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric H. Stern.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

Left ventricular to left atrial communication secondary to a paraaortic abscess: Color flow doppler documentation

Edward A. Fisher; Manuel R. Estioko; Eric H. Stern; Martin E. Goldman

Aortic root abscess occurs frequently in aortic prosthetic valve infective endocarditis. The present echocardiographic report documents a ruptured abscess that led to a direct communication between the left ventricular outflow tract and the left atrium confirmed by real-time (color flow) Doppler imaging.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984

Spontaneous contrast in the inferior vena cava in a patient with constrictive pericarditis

Craig E. Hjemdahl-Monsen; Jeffrey Daniels; David Kaufman; Eric H. Stern; Louis E. Teichholz; Richard S. Meltzer

A 66 year old black man was examined because of fatigue and progressive right heart failure. A striking finding on his echocardiogram was intense and slow-moving contrast in the inferior vena cava. Cardiac catheterization revealed constrictive pericarditis, and pericardiectomy was performed. Postoperatively, spontaneous contrast was no longer present. This case helps explain the origin of spontaneous inferior vena cava contrast.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1984

Myopotential interference with DDD pacemakers: Endocardial electrographic telemetry in the diagnosis of pacemaker-related arrhythmias

Jonathan L. Halperin; Jorge Camunas; Eric H. Stern; Elizabeth B. Rothlauf; Joel Kupersmith; Manuel R. Estioko; Robert C. Mace; Marilyn Y. Steinmetz; Louis E. Teichholz

Skeletal myopotentials may inhibit the output of unipolar demand ventricular pacemakers, resulting in protracted episodes of asystole in susceptible patients. The new DDD-mode pacemakers have, in addition to a unipolar ventricular lead, a unipolar atrial lead to enable atrioventricular sequential or atrial synchronous function. During clinical investigation of a new dual-unipolar cardiac pacing system programmed to operate in the DDD mode (Pacesetter AFP models 281 and 283), 6 patients were noted (5 men and 1 woman, aged 22 to 68 years) who manifested paroxysmal acceleration of ventricular pacing rate approaching the maximal tracking rate. Two patients also had abrupt slowing or cessation of ventricular output. With the use of atrial electrographic recordings (obtained with telemetry), the following mechanisms of rate change were found: myopotential tracking, myopotential inhibition, interference-mode asynchronous operation, sudden increases in sinus rate, and pacemaker-mediated reentrant tachycardia. In all patients, reprogramming of the implanted devices, based on telemetered atrial electrography, resulted in disappearance of the arrhythmias and loss of symptoms while maintaining the DDD pacing mode. Thus, several mechanisms of rhythm disturbances are peculiar to dual-chamber cardiac pacing systems that use unipolar electrodes. Endocardial telemetry combined with extensive programming capability offers the best opportunity for proper diagnosis and management of these problems.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1984

Long-term antiarrhythmic therapy: Problem of low drug levels and patient noncompliance

Anthony Squire; Martin E. Goldman; Joel Kupersmith; Eric H. Stern; Valentin Fuster; Paul Schweitzer

Maintenance of adequate serum blood levels is crucial to successful antiarrhythmic therapy. Serum levels of four antiarrhythmic agents (long-acting procainamide, quinidine sulfate, quinidine gluconate, and disopyramide) were determined in 98 consecutive ambulatory patients receiving long-term oral therapy. Medication dosages, dosing intervals, and time elapsed from last dosage until blood sampling were determined. Seventy-five patients (76.5 percent) had subtherapeutic blood levels (with mean levels less than 50 percent of the suggested minimum), and only 22 patients (22.5 percent) had therapeutic levels. Even among the 61 patients who claimed to have taken their medications within the six hours prior to blood sampling, 43 (70 percent) had subtherapeutic levels. These ratios held among all subgroups studied. Physicians should be aware of the high proportion of patients receiving long-term oral antiarrhythmic therapy with inadequate serum blood levels when planning therapeutic regimens.


Chest | 1982

Clinical Use of Oral Verapamil in Chronic and Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation

Eric H. Stern; Roberta Pitchon; Bernard D. King; Juan Guerrero; Richard R. Schneider; Isaac Wiener


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1983

Impotence During Therapy With Verapamil

Bernard D. King; Roberta Pitchon; Eric H. Stern; Pavol Schweitzer; Richard R. Schneider; Isaac Weiner


Archive | 1984

Problem of Low Drug Levels and Patient Noncompliance

Anthony Squire; Martin E. Goldman; Eric H. Stern; Valentin Fuster; Paul Schweitzer; Gustave L. Levy


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2010

LEFT VENTRICULAR SYSTOLIC AND DIASTOLIC INTERDEPENDENCE DEMONSTRATED BY LEFT VENTRICULAR EMPTYING AND FILLING RATES BY GATED SPECT MPI

William Duvall; Lori B. Croft; Samantha Buckley; Eric Ginsberg; Tapan Godiwala; Thomas Klein; Eric H. Stern; Milena J. Henzlova; Martin E. Goldman


Circulation | 2009

Abstract 576: Can Doppler Echocardiography Define Diastolic Heart Failure?

William Duvall; Lori B. Croft; Adam Zucker; Ziad Sergie; Eric H. Stern; Samantha Buckley; Martin E. Goldman


Circulation | 2009

Abstract 748: Left Ventricular Dysfunction of Aging Despite Preserved LVEF Detected by 3D Echocardiography

William Duvall; Lori B. Croft; Samantha Buckley; Eric H. Stern; Martin E. Goldman

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Martin E. Goldman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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