Gregory Gabliani
Saint Louis University
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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1989
Morton J. Kern; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Michel Vandormael; Arthur J. Labovitz; Calapathirao V. Gudipati; Gregory Gabliani; Joseph Bodet; Yogesh Shah; Harold L. Kennedy
The ratio of peak hyperemic/basal mean coronary flow velocity, an index of coronary vasodilator reserve, immediately after coronary angioplasty normalizes in less than 50% of patients. To evaluate other indexes of coronary vasodilator capacity, both intracoronary arterial velocity and cardiac venous efflux were measured at rest and during vasodilator-induced coronary hyperemia (intracoronary nitroglycerin and papaverine) before and after angioplasty in 27 patients; 17 patients had measurements of intracoronary velocity alone and 10 had thermodilution measurements of great cardiac vein flow. Coronary flow velocity responses were also measured in 6 angiographically normal segments in patients undergoing angioplasty and in 10 normal left coronary artery segments in patients with normal coronary arteries or isolated right coronary artery disease. Despite significant angiographic (72 +/- 12 to 23 +/- 11% diameter narrowing) and hemodynamic (49 +/- 12 to 19 +/- 12 mm Hg aortocoronary gradient) improvement, coronary vasodilator reserve ratios for both arterial velocity and venous flow after angioplasty were only minimally affected. Angioplasty did not significantly increase rest coronary vein flow or artery flow velocities, but did result in significantly higher papaverine responses after angioplasty. Mean and phasic coronary velocity, diastolic coronary flow velocity integral and measured great cardiac vein flow ratios were significantly lower when compared with those in 16 angiographically normal coronary artery segments. These data indicate that maximal hyperemic coronary flow velocity is increased after angioplasty, but the reserve ratios, calculated by any of several flow velocity indexes, remain minimally improved. Angiographic correlations (percent coronary diameter, absolute diameter or cross-sectional area) with variables of coronary blood flow or velocity suggest that no single variable is useful in assessing angioplasty results. However, postangioplasty arterial mean velocity and diastolic flow velocity integral are nearly normalized in most patients, whereas relative changes remain attenuated. These findings are important in studies assessing coronary vasomotor responses in patients with atherosclerotic coronary disease, especially after angioplasty.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987
James D. Alderman; Gregory Gabliani; Carolyn H. McCabe; Cynthia C. Brewer; Beverly H. Lorell; Richard C. Pasternak; John J. Skillman; Michael L. Steer; Donald S. Baim
In 103 patients who underwent placement of 106 percutaneous wire-guided intraaortic balloon catheters between August 1983 and January 1986, all placements were successful and the average duration of counterpulsation was 3.4 +/- 1.6 days. During counterpulsation, 45 patients developed limb ischemia that required premature balloon removal in 29 patients. The development of limb ischemia was significantly related to the presence of diabetes (risk ratio 2.0), peripheral vascular disease (risk ratio 1.9), female gender (risk ratio 1.8) and the presence of a postinsertion ankle-brachial pressure index less than 0.8 (risk ratio 7.9). There was no association between the development of limb ischemia and age, body surface area, balloon size (10.5F/12F) or adequacy of anticoagulation. Fifteen patients underwent vascular surgery for treatment of balloon-related limb ischemia, which was associated with one operative death. Nine patients had persistent limb ischemia (seven asymptomatic, two symptomatic) at the time of hospital discharge. Improvements in wire-guided balloon technology have increased the probability of successful balloon placement over that of surgical placement and have reduced the incidence of major aortic injury, but there is no evidence that these improvements have reduced the incidence of limb ischemia or its sequelae. This should be borne in mind before proceeding with balloon insertion in patients with one or more risk factors for developing limb ischemia.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1988
Morton J. Kern; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Kathy Galan; Robert Zelman; Gregory Gabliani; Stephen T. Bell; Joseph Bodet; Keith S. Naunheim; Michel Vandormael
Abstract Extensive data are available on the results of nonoperative coronary revascularization using percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in patients over the age of 65, 1–3 but few data are available in the subgroup of patients in their octogenarian years. We attempted to ascertain clinical data and results in patients older than 80 years of age undergoing PTCA in our hospital.
American Heart Journal | 1988
Gregory Gabliani; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Morton J. Kern; Michel Vandormael
The incidence and prognosis of acute coronary reocclusion occurring after patients had left the catheterization laboratory following a successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) procedure and the temporal relation of this event to the discontinuation of systemic heparin administration were analyzed in a series of 1238 consecutive patients. Acute reocclusion, 1 to 96 hours after successful PTCA, occurred in 22 of 1238 patients (1.8%). Patients undergoing PTCA in the setting of acute myocardial infarction were excluded. Out of 22 patients, 15 had a nonocclusive dissection and four had evidence of small intracoronary thrombus immediately post-PTCA, with no evidence of flow disturbance. Acute reocclusion occurred within 5 hours of heparin discontinuation in 12 patients or while they were receiving inadequate anticoagulation (four patients). In 16 of 22 (73%) patients, acute reocclusion was temporally related to a time of diminished anticoagulation. Redilation was attempted in 14 patients and was ultimately successful in five patients (36%). Ten patients required coronary artery bypass surgery and three patients died. Our findings suggest that acute reocclusion after an initially successful PTCA has a poor outcome and seems to be temporally related to the loss of effective anticoagulation in most of these patients. It is advisable to discontinue heparin infusion at a time when facilities for urgent revascularization are available.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1988
Ubeydullah Deligonul; Gregory Gabliani; Dennis G. Caralis; Morton J. Kern; Michel Vandormael
Abstract Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) in the presence of intracoronary thrombus carries a risk of occlusive thromboembolism during or after the procedure. 1–3 The purpose of this study was to assess the incidence of and analyze the factors associated with coronary thromboembolic complications during PTCA in patients with intracoronary thrombus detected on the baseline angiogram.
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1988
Ubeydullah Deligonul; Gregory Gabliani; Morton J. Kern; Michel Vandormael
American Heart Journal | 1988
Morton J. Kern; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Arthur J. Labovitz; Gregory Gabliani; Michel Vandormael; Harold L. Kennedy
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1988
Michel Vandormael; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Gregory Gabliani; Bernard R. Chaitman; Morton J. Kern
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1988
Ubeydullah Deligonul; Morton J. Kern; Stephen T. Bell; Gregory Gabliani; Arthur J. Labovitz; Michel Vandormael
American Heart Journal | 1987
Morton J. Kern; Ubeydullah Deligonul; Michel Vandormael; Gregory Gabliani