John R. Windle
University of Nebraska Medical Center
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Featured researches published by John R. Windle.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1995
M. Asad Karim; Marlene Shinn; Helgi Oskarsson; John R. Windle; Ubeydullah Deligonul
Abstract In conclusion, this study demonstrates a very high diagnostic sensitivity of troponin T versus CK in the detection of minor myocardial injury after PTCA.
American Heart Journal | 1988
Toby R. Engel; Nancy Vallone; John R. Windle
The signal-averaged QRS complex that is prolonged because of low amplitude late potentials predicts ventricular tachycardia. This study investigated if signal-averaged low amplitude atrial potentials predict atrial fibrillation or flutter (AFF). Low amplitude potentials were considered to be high-frequency, high amplitude P (HiFP) duration recorded between 50 and 250 Hz at 1.0 mm/microV amplitude minus unfiltered P (UnFP) duration at 0.1 mm/microV. In nine normals, HiFP averaged 115.6 msec +/- 9.8 SD. HiFP were wider in 26 control patients (133.5 msec +/- 15.7, p less than 0.005) but HiFP-UnFP (11.2 msec +/- 8.5) and signals less than 10 microV terminating HiFP inscription (21.7 msec +/- 23.4) were similar to normal values. Seventeen patients with paroxysmal or recently cardioverted AFF did not have significantly longer intervals than controls (HiFP averaged 138.8 msec +/- 23.0, HiFP-UnFP 13.2 msec +/- 9.3, and signals less than 10 microV 32.4 msec +/- 19.5). Therefore, signal-averaged P waves do not identify patients with AFF.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1989
Dan L. Pierce; Arthur R. Easley; John R. Windle; Toby R. Engel
Signal-averaged electrocardiograms (X, Y and Z leads) were acquired from 24 patients with coronary artery disease and recurrent ventricular tachycardia, 24 control patients with coronary artery disease and 23 normal subjects to assess the discriminant value of fast Fourier transformation of the entire late potential period of the QRS complex. Analysis of the vector magnitude in the temporal domain (25 to 250 Hz bandpass filters) measured high frequency QRS duration, the duration of terminal signals less than 40 microV and the root mean square voltage of the last 40 ms. Late potentials were defined as terminal signals greater than 25 Hz that were less than 40 microV. Analysis in the frequency domain used a 120 ms window that encompassed (had onset with) all of the late potential, but the mean value was first subtracted to eliminate a direct current component. High frequency spectral areas (60 to 120 Hz) and the percent high frequency (100 x [60 to 120 Hz/0 to 120 Hz]) were calculated. Results in both temporal and frequency domains were similar in control patients with coronary artery disease and normal subjects. Patients with ventricular tachycardia had a longer high frequency QRS complex (p less than 0.0001) and longer high frequency terminal signals less than 40 microV (p less than 0.0004), but not significantly lower voltage in the last 40 ms. The most useful temporal domain measurement was high frequency QRS duration (if greater than or equal to 120 ms, odds ratio = 8.2). Patients with ventricular tachycardia had increased high frequency spectral areas (p less than 0.0002) in the late potential, and the percent high frequency was especially increased (p = 0.0000; if percent high frequency greater than 3.1%, odds ratio = 18.4). The odds ratio and the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve were both greater for percent high frequency than for high frequency QRS duration (p less than 0.03). All patients with ventricular tachycardia had a high frequency QRS complex greater than or equal to 107 ms or percent high frequency greater than or equal to 3.1% (sensitivity 100%). For a high frequency QRS complex greater than or equal to 107 ms and percent high frequency greater than or equal to 3.1%, specificity was 96%. Therefore, high frequencies in late potentials, not their duration or reduced voltage, most usefully identify patients with coronary artery disease who are prone to ventricular tachycardia.
Circulation | 1990
Jonathan A. Stelling; David A. Danford; John D. Kugler; John R. Windle; John P. Cheatham; Carl H. Gumbiner; Larry A. Latson; Philip J. Hofschire
We compared signal-averaged electrocardiography with invasive electrophysiological study in patients after surgical repair of congenital heart disease to determine if potentially useful correlations exist between the two methods for assessment of risk for ventricular tachycardia. Thirty-one patients (age, 1-49 years; mean, 10.6 years) with congenital heart disease repaired with right ventriculotomy or postrepair right bundle branch block (77% postoperative tetralogy of Fallot) who had electrophysiological study were studied with signal-averaged electrocardiography. Patients were classified by electrophysiological study results as having no inducible ventricular tachycardia, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, or sustained ventricular tachycardia. Signal-averaged electrocardiograms were examined for the duration of low-amplitude (less than or equal to 40 microV) QRS signal, duration of total QRS, and root-mean-square voltage of the terminal 40 msec of the QRS. Low-amplitude terminal root-mean-square voltage of 100 microV or less had 91% sensitivity and 70% specificity for ventricular tachycardia inducible by electrophysiological study. Similar sensitivity but less specificity were seen using the criterion of 20 msec or more total low-amplitude QRS signal (initial plus terminal) or using total QRS duration of 128 msec or more. There was a weaker association between terminal low-amplitude QRS signal of 15 msec or more and inducible ventricular tachycardia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Transplantation | 2012
Taylor F. Dowsley; David Bayne; Alan N. Langnas; Ioana Dumitru; John R. Windle; Thomas R. Porter; Eugenia Raichlin
Background Liver transplantation (LTx) is a life-saving treatment of end-stage liver disease. Cardiac complications including heart failure (HF) are among the leading causes of death after LTx. The Aim The aim is to identify clinical and echocardiographic predictors of developing HF after LTx. Methods Patients who underwent LTx at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) between January 2001 and January 2009 and had echocardiographic study before and within 6 months after transplantation were identified. Patients with coronary artery disease (>70% lesion) were excluded. HF after LTx was defined by clinical signs, symptoms, radiographic evidence of pulmonary congestion, and echocardiographic evidence of left ventricular dysfunction (left ventricle ejection fraction <50%). Results Among 107 patients (presented as mean age [SD], 55 [10] years; male, 70%) who met the inclusion criteria, 26 (24%) patients developed HF after LTx. The pre-LTx left ventricle ejection fraction did not differ between the HF (69 [7]) and the control groups (69 [7] vs. 67 [6], P=0.30). However, pre-LTx elevation of early mitral inflow velocity/mitral annular velocity (P=0.02), increased left atrial volume index (P=0.05), and lower mean arterial pressure (P=0.03) were predictors of HF after LTx in multivariate analysis. Early mitral inflow velocity/mitral annular velocity greater than 10 and left atrial volume index 40 mL/m2 or more were associated with a 3.4-fold (confidence interval, 1.2–9.4; P=0.017) and 2.9-fold (confidence interval, 1.1–7.5; P=0.03) increase in risk of development of HF after LTx, respectively. Conclusions This study suggests that elevated markers of diastolic dysfunction during pre-LTx echocardiographic evaluation are associated with an excess risk of HF and may predict post-LTx survival.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1999
Huagui Li; Andrea Natale; Gery Tomassoni; Salwa Beheiry; Patricia Cooper; Fabio M. Leonelli; Arthur R. Easley; William Barrington; John R. Windle
We repeated direct-current cardioversion of atrial fibrillation after ibutilide injection in patients who failed conventional cardioversion. Eleven of 12 patients (92%) had successful cardioversion and avoided the need for internal cardioversion.
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 1997
Robert D. Throne; Lorraine G. Olson; Terry J. Hrabik; John R. Windle
The authors have previously proposed two novel solutions to the inverse problem of electrocardiography, the generalized eigensystem technique (GES) and the modified generalized eigensystem technique (tGES), and have compared these techniques with other numerical techniques using both homogeneous and inhomogeneous eccentric spheres model problems. In those studies the authors found their generalized eigensystem approaches generally gave superior performance over both truncated singular value decomposition (SVD) and zero-order Tikhonov regularization (TIK). Here, the authors extend the comparison to the case of a realistic heart-torso geometry. With this model, the GES and tGES approaches again provide smaller relative errors between the true potentials and the numerically derived potentials than the other methods studied. In addition, the isopotential maps recovered using GES and tGES appear to be more accurate than the maps recovered using either SVD and TIK.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2000
Huagui Li; Marc Weitzel; Arthur R. Easley; William Barrington; John R. Windle
Vasovagal syncope is the most common cause of syncope, but its risk for driving remains uncertain. We analyzed the clinical characteristics of patients who had syncope during driving and subsequently underwent the head-up tilt test (HUTT). Of the 245 consecutive patients undergoing HUTT, 23 (9%) had > or =1 episode of syncope during driving. HUTT was positive in 19 (group A) and negative in 4 (group B) patients. No patient had structural heart disease. In group A, the driving incident occurred on the first syncope in 3 patients, and the other 16 patients had 1 to 4 episodes of prior syncope not associated with driving. In group B, the driving incident occurred on the first syncope in 1 patient, and the other 3 patients had prior syncope (3 episodes in each) not associated with driving. Seven group A and 1 group B patients had 2 syncope-related driving incidents, and the remaining patients had only 1 syncope-related driving incident. The syncope-related driving incidents caused personal injury in 7 group A and 2 group B patients. One incident in 1 group A patient caused the death of another driver. After HUTT, all but 1 patient in group A received medical treatment and only 1 patient in group B received empirical beta-blocker therapy. During the follow-up of 51+/-26 months, 1 patient died and another was lost to follow-up. Of the remaining patients, 4 patients had recurrence of syncope and 2 patients had presyncope in group A. One of these patients had another syncope-related driving incident. No group B patient had syncope recurrence. A second etiology of syncope was never found in any patient. We conclude that vasovagal syncope during driving is not uncommon in patients referred for syncope evaluation. Early medical attention to patients with vasovagal syncope may help reduce syncope-related driving incidents.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1984
Joseph P. Ornato; William L Carveth; John R. Windle
We investigated the use of transvenous (TV) and transmyocardial (TM) pacemakers in the emergency department (ED) in 54 adult patients (42 men and 12 women) with bradyasystolic cardiac arrest. Down time prior to cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was 4.8 +/- 4.3 minutes. Time in the ED prior to pacer insertion was 26.9 +/- 17.7 minutes. Electrical capture rate was 63%. Pulse developed in 5%. Only 1.2% were admitted, and none was discharged alive. There was no significant difference in capture rate for TV versus TM pacers or in capture rate whether the pacer was inserted early or late after ED arrival. We conclude that ED pacer insertion for such patients does not alter survival rates.
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America | 1998
Huagui Li; Arthur R. Easley; William Barrington; John R. Windle
AF is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia. Recognition and appropriate management of AF is important to optimize care of concurrent medical problems and prevent long-term consequences. DC cardioversion under sedation should be performed in patients with pulmonary edema, angina, or hypotension. Ventricular rate control is the first choice in stable patients with rapid ventricular rate. Anticoagulation should be considered in all patients with AF duration < 48 hours, except for those under 65 years old and having no other risk factors of stroke. Recent data imply that early attempts at cardioversion may increase success rates and decrease AF recurrence rates. Thus, transesophageal echocardiogram-guided early cardioversion may become more widely used.