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Dive into the research topics where Kewal C. Goswami is active.

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Featured researches published by Kewal C. Goswami.


American Heart Journal | 1993

Echocardiographic diagnosis of aneurysm of the sinus of Valsalva

Vishva Dev; Kewal C. Goswami; Savotri Shrivastava; Vinay K. Bahl; Anita Saxena

Echocardiographic and Doppler data of 62 patients with ASOV are presented. Catheterization and angiography were performed in 38 cases and surgery in 25 of the 38. The origin of these aneurysms was the RCS in 56 cases, NCS in 5, and LCS in 1 case. Seven had unruptured aneurysms, 6 rising from RCS dissected into the ventricular septum, producing heart block in 4, AR in 5, mitral regurgitation in 1; 1 aneurysm rising from the LCS was asymptomatic. In other cases (n = 55) the aneurysm had ruptured into one of the cardiac chambers. Thirty-two of the 50 RCS aneurysms ruptured into the RVOT, 13 into the RV cavity, 2 into the RA, and 3 into the LV. Of the 5 NCS aneurysms, (3 ruptured into the RA, 1 into the RV, and 1 into both the RA and RV. Associated VSD was identified in 16 (25.8%) of 62 cases. All of these patients had RCS aneurysms that ruptured into the RVOT. Echocardiography missed VSD in three cases that at surgery were found to have VSD. AR was found in 34 of 62 cases. Echocardiography picked up discrete subaortic stenosis in two cases but missed subvalvar PS in 2 of the 3 cases. A detailed echocardiographic study (two-dimensional, Doppler, and color flow imaging) is accurate in the diagnosis of ASOV, in the identification of its site of origin and rupture, and in the evaluation of the associated defects; in the vast majority of cases, it can totally supplant the need for angiography.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Clinical and echocardiographic predictors of left atrial clot and spontaneous echo contrast in patients with severe rheumatic mitral stenosis: a prospective study in 200 patients by transesophageal echocardiography

Kewal C. Goswami; Rakesh Yadav; M.Bhaskara Rao; Vinay K. Bahl; K.K. Talwar; Manchanda Sc

The objective of this study was to prospectively investigate various clinical and echocardiographic variables to predict the left atrial and left atrial appendage clot and spontaneous echo contrast in patients with severe rheumatic mitral stenosis. We studied 200 consecutive patients (112 males and 88 females; mean age 29.6+/-9.6 years). Left atrial clot and spontaneous echo contrast were present in 26 and 53.5% of cases, respectively. There were no significant differences in the mitral valve area, mean transmitral diastolic gradient and left ventricular ejection fraction between patients with and without clot. Patients with clot were older (34.4+/-11.4 vs. 28.2+/-8.5 years, P<0.001), had longer duration of symptoms (41. 4+/-36.0 vs. 28.8+/-22.9 months, P<0.001), more frequent atrial fibrillation and spontaneous echo contrast (69.2 vs. 16.9%, P<0. 00001 and 76.9 vs. 45.3%, P<0.00001, respectively) and larger left atrial area and diameter (41.0+/-12.7 vs. 29.9+/-7.4 cm(2), P<0.00001 and 53.9+/-8.3 vs. 47.6+/-7.4 mm, P<0.0001, respectively) as compared to patients without clot. Similarly patients with spontaneous echo contrast were older (31+/-10.4 vs. 27.8+/-8.3 years, P<0.01), had more frequent atrial fibrillation (48.6 vs. 9.7%, P<0.0001), left atrial clot (37.4 vs. 12.9%, P<0.0001), larger left atrial area and diameter (37.6+/-11.2 vs. 28.1+/-6.7 cm(2), P<0.00001 and 52.2+/-8.3 vs. 45.9+/-6.5 mm, P<0.00001, respectively) and smaller mitral valve area (0.77+/-0.14 vs. 0.84+/-0.13 cm(2), P<0.01) as compared to patients without spontaneous echo contrast. There were no significant differences in the mean transmitral diastolic gradient and left ventricular ejection fraction. On multiple regression and discriminant function analysis, atrial fibrillation and left atrial area were independent predictors of left atrial clot formation. In a subgroup of patients with sinus rhythm, larger left atrial area and presence of spontaneous echo contrast were significantly associated with the presence of clot in left atrium and appendage. We conclude that in patients with severe mitral stenosis, the presence of atrial fibrillation and in the subgroup of the patients with sinus rhythm the presence of large left atrium (> or =40 cm(2)) and spontaneous echo contrast were associated with higher risk of clot formation in the left atrium and might be benefited by prophylactic anticoagulation.


American Heart Journal | 1993

Echocardiographic diagnosis of total anomalous pulmonary venous connection

Kewal C. Goswami; Savitri Shrivastava; Anita Saxena; Vishva Dev

Over a 7-year period, 110 of 35,000 echocardiographic cases were diagnosed to have total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC). Ages ranged from 7 days to 38 years (male 62, female, 48). In 60 cases the diagnosis was confirmed by angiography (n = 47) and/or surgery (n = 50). In 13 cases angiography was not performed; surgery was performed on the basis of echocardiographic diagnosis. Diagnosis of TAPVC was correctly made in all of the 60 confirmed cases. Drainage sites were correctly identified by echocardiography in 58 (96.7%) of these 60 cases. Of the five cases of mixed TAPVC, the second drainage site was missed by echocardiography in two cases. Of the 110 cases the drainage sites were as follows: supracardiac 70, cardiac 30, infracardiac 5, and mixed variety 5. Seventeen cases had Doppler echocardiographic evidence of obstruction along the course of the anomalous vein. The continuous wave Doppler signal for tricuspid regurgitation was present in 14 of 47 catheterized patients, and catheterization-measured peak pulmonary artery systolic pressure correlated well with that derived by Doppler study (r = 0.96, p = 0.001). Additionally, 17 patients had other cardiac anomalies that were correctly diagnosed by echocardiography. Combined two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography is accurate in the diagnosis of TAPVC, identification of the site of drainage, presence of obstruction, and assessment of pulmonary arterial hypertension and other associated anomalies.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Clinical profile of biopsy proven idiopathic myocarditis

S. Ramamurthy; K.K. Talwar; Kewal C. Goswami; S. Shrivastava; Prem Chopra; S. Broor; Arun Malhotra

We studied 20 patients in detail (age: 27 months to 45 years, mean 22 years; 15 males, 5 females) of idiopathic myocarditis histologically confirmed by endomyocardial biopsy. None of these patients had evidence of active or previous rheumatic fever. The commonest mode of presentation was congestive heart failure (16 patients) followed by arrhythmias (seven patients--five of whom had associated congestive heart failure) and chest pain resembling myocardial infarction (two patients). Ten patients had a history of preceding upper respiratory infection. Only one of these patients had a significant rising serum titre for Coxsackie B3 virus. Throat and rectal swabs for virus culture were negative in all patients. The electrocardiogram was abnormal in all patients, with a prolonged corrected QT-interval being the commonest abnormality (14 patients). Serial electrocardiographic patterns of evolving myocardial infarction occurred in three patients. Echocardiographic left ventricular end diastolic dimension (4.15 +/- 1.01 cm/m2) and end systolic dimension (3.37 +/- 1.03 cm/m2) were increased in 15 of the 18 patients studied. Pericardial involvement occurred in only one patient. Radionuclide ventriculography showed a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (< 50%) in 17 patients, global hypokinesia in 12 patients and regional wall motion abnormalities in five patients. Left ventricular and right ventricular end diastolic pressures were elevated in 15 and 11 patients, respectively.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1998

Balloon aortic valvuloplasty in young adults by antegrade, transseptal approach using Inoue balloon

Vinay K. Bahl; Subhash Chandra; Kewal C. Goswami; Manchanda Sc

Transvenous, transseptal, antegrade balloon aortic valvuloplasty (BAV) was successfully performed in 16 consecutive young adults with noncalcific aortic stenosis using Inoue balloon catheter. There were 13 males and three females, with a mean age of 20.4 +/- 5.8 years (range 14-30 years). All the patients had normal left ventricular systolic function. All procedures were performed electively by the antegrade technique, except the initial index case in whom, the stenosed aortic valve could not be crossed retrogradely. Dilatation was performed using stepwise technique keeping the balloon:annulus ratio < or = 100% in all the cases. Transaortic peak systolic gradient decreased from 113.4 +/- 42.6 (range 70-210) mm Hg to 11.2 +/- 9.2 (range 4-32) mm Hg; P = 0.0005. Following BAV, three patients developed grade 2+ aortic regurgitation, who were managed medically. None of the patients developed tamponade, vascular complications, excessive bleeding, or thromboembolism. Significant left to right atrial shunt (Qp/Qs > or = 1.5:1) was observed in one case. The average procedure time was 20 +/- 8 min (range 18-35 min). On follow-up (n = 11 patients) at 4 +/- 1.5 months (range 2-7 months) all the patients were asymptomatic. Doppler transaortic peak systolic gradient was found to be 15 +/- 10.3 mm Hg (range 4-36 mm Hg). Antegrade BAV technique using Inoue balloon for noncalcific aortic stenosis in young adults is safe, effective and may be technically advantageous.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2014

Transient, Subclinical Atrial Fibrillation and Risk of Systemic Embolism in Patients With Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis in Sinus Rhythm

Ganesan Karthikeyan; Ramamoorthy Ananthakrishnan; Niveditha Devasenapathy; Rajiv Narang; Rakesh Yadav; Sandeep Seth; Sandeep Singh; Kewal C. Goswami; Vinay K. Bahl

Stroke and systemic embolism occur frequently in patients with rheumatic mitral stenosis (MS) in sinus rhythm (SR), but the risk and predictors of embolic events in this population are not well studied. The aim of this study was to determine if transient, subclinical atrial fibrillation (AF) increases the risk of systemic embolism in patients with MS in SR. A single-center, prospective observational study of patients with rheumatic MS in SR was performed. The rate of the composite primary outcome of stroke, transient ischemic attack, or non-central nervous system embolism was determined, as well as the predictive value of Holter-detected episodes of transient (<30 seconds), subclinical AF for this outcome. Hazard ratios were derived for subclinical AF, after adjustment for clinical and echocardiographic predictors of systemic embolism, using Cox regression. The sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of subclinical AF were determined for the primary outcome. Among 179 patients (mean follow-up 10.2 months), the rate of the primary outcome was 5.3/100 patient-years (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.6 to 10.5). In univariate analysis, subclinical AF (hazard ratio 4.54, 95% CI 1.08 to 19.0, p = 0.038) and dense spontaneous echocardiographic contrast (hazard ratio 4.32, 95% CI 1.03 to 18.09, p = 0.045) were predictors of the primary outcome. In multivariate analysis, subclinical AF remained the only significant predictor (hazard ratio 5.02, 95% CI 1.15 to 22.0, p = 0.032). Subclinical AF had an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.68 and high negative predictive value (97.7%) for the primary outcome. In conclusion, Holter-detected, transient (<30 seconds), subclinical AF is a predictor of stroke and systemic embolism in patients with rheumatic MS in SR. Considering the high risk for embolism, randomized trials of oral anticoagulation are needed in this population.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1997

Versatility of Inoue balloon catheter

Vinay K. Bahl; Subhash Chandra; Anil Goel; Kewal C. Goswami; Harbans S. Wasir

Inoue rubber nylon single balloon catheter is being used worldwide for performing balloon mitral valvuloplasty (BMV). The popularity of Inoue balloon is attributed to its self-positioning configuration, size-adjustability, rapid inflation-deflation sequence and the ease of performance. We report its use in performing various non-mitral interventions. Its utility in treating patients with mitral stenosis and combined mitral and tricuspid stenosis is well established. Seventeen patients with valvular pulmonic stenosis (age 32+/-16 years; 11 males and 6 females) achieved significant reduction of peak systolic gradient (PSG) from 125+/-28 to 32+/-16 mmHg (P<0.005). Four patients with inferior vena-cava obstruction (age 20-48 years; 3 males and 1 female) derived symptomatic benefit following successful dilatation. Inoue balloon was used to create percutaneous pericardial window in four cases (age 43-68 years; 2 males and 2 females) of recurrent pericardial collection secondary to carcinoma lung/breast, thus alleviating the symptoms of tamponade. One patient each with coarctation of aorta (32 years, male), discrete subaortic membrane (16 years, female), and critical valvular aortic stenosis (13 years, male) derived immediate hemodynamic improvement with Inoue balloon dilatation. No major complications were encountered. We conclude that Inoue balloon can be used to successfully manage various stenotic lesions.


The Cardiology | 1997

Effect of the Balloon-Anulus Ratio on the Intermediate and Follow-Up Results of Pulmonary Balloon Valvuloplasty

Rajiv Narang; Gladwin S. Das; V. Dev; Kewal C. Goswami; Anita Saxena; Savitri Shrivastava

Pulmonary balloon valvuloplasty (PBV) is an effective method to treat congenital valvular pulmonic stenosis, but the ideal balloon-anulus ratio (BAR) for this procedure remains unclear. We studied 71 procedures where BARs of 1.0-1.5 were used, since it has been shown that a ratio of < 1.0 is less effective and that of > 1.5 may produce more complications. A curvilinear relation was found between BAR and the fractional fall in haemodynamic parameters reflecting stenosis severity, both immediately after dilatation and at follow-up. Best results were observed with a BAR of 1.25, with progressive worsening on either side of this ratio. The relationship remained significant in multiple regression analysis involving age, sex and baseline haemodynamic variables. The data show that a BAR of 1.25 is probably the ideal ratio for PBV.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Juvenile tricuspid stenosis and rheumatic tricuspid valve disease: an echocardiographic study

Kewal C. Goswami; M.Bhaskara Rao; Vishava Dev; S. Shrivastava

Tricuspid valve involvement is not uncommon in patients with rheumatic heart disease and is frequently missed on routine clinical examination. We prospectively studied the echocardiographic profile of tricuspid valve disease in 788 consecutive patients with rheumatic heart disease. Out of these patients 9% (70) had tricuspid valve disease and 55.7% (39) of these were of < or = 20 years of age. Of these 60% were females and 40% were males. Their ages ranged from 9 to 64 years (mean 24.2+/-13.6 years). Of these patients, 50% had tricuspid stenosis with or without tricuspid regurgitation whereas 50% had isolated tricuspid regurgitation. Isolated tricuspid stenosis was present in 7.4% of these cases. All patients had associated mitral stenosis. Severe mitral stenosis was present more commonly in patients with juvenile tricuspid stenosis compared to older patients (94.1% vs. 55.6%, P<0.005). Mitral regurgitation was present more commonly in juvenile age group patients compared to older patients (53.8% vs. 25.8%, P<0.01). A combination of mitral, aortic and tricuspid stenosis was present in five cases and four of these were in the juvenile age group. Left ventricular enlargement and dysfunction were present in 28.6 and 14.3% patients, respectively, and the majority of these patients were in the juvenile age group (P<0.05). We conclude that rheumatic tricuspid valve disease occurs early in the course of the disease and progresses faster in India and is always associated with mitral stenosis. Juvenile tricuspid stenosis is more commonly associated with severe mitral stenosis, mitral regurgitation, left ventricular enlargement and dysfunction as compared with older patients.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Percutaneous balloon mitral valvuloplasty using the Inoue balloon: analysis of echocardiographic and other variables related to immediate outcome

Kewal C. Goswami; Vinay K. Bahl; K.K. Talwar; Savitri Shrivastava; Manchanda Sc

To determine whether the mitral valve morphology influences the results of percutaneous balloon mitral valvuloplasty for mitral stenosis, two-dimensional echocardiography was performed before valvuloplasty in 126 patients (mean age 25.5+/-9.4 years) and in 30 normal controls. The 2D echocardiographic features of mitral valve leaflets: thickness, length and motion; diastolic mitral valvular excursion; chordal length; mitral annular diameter; subvalvular distance ratio; distance between mid mitral annulus to left ventricular apex, base and tip of papillary muscle and effective balloon dilating area, effective balloon dilating area/body surface area and effective balloon dilating diameter/mitral annular diameter were then correlated to the immediate post-valvuloplasty mitral valve area. For the total patients population, post-valvuloplasty valve area increased from 0.67+/-0.17 to 2.1+/-0.86 cm2 (P<0.0001), mean transmitral diastolic gradient decreased from 24.5+/-9.0 to 6.0+/-3.0 mm Hg (P<0.0001), mean left atrial pressure decreased from 29.7+/-6.2 to 12.7+/-4.8 mm Hg (P<0.0001), mean pulmonary artery pressure decreased from 44.8+/-14.2 to 25.4+/-9.5 mm Hg (P<0.0001) and cardiac index increased from 2.7+/-0.38 to 3.1+/-0.55 l/min/m2 (P<0.0001). The patients were divided into three groups on the basis of post-valvuloplasty mitral valve area. Group I had valve area <1.5 cm2, group II had valve area from 1.5 to 1.9 cm2 and group III had valve area > or =2.0 cm2. On comparison, no statistically significant difference was found in any of the echocardiographic variables in the three groups. On univariate, multivariate, multiple regression and discriminate function analysis, none of the variables were found to have significant influence on immediate result of valvuloplasty. There was no significant difference in the incidence of mitral regurgitation in any of the three groups. We conclude that the extent of mitral valvular and subvalvular deformity do not have a significant effect on the immediate outcome of mitral valvuloplasty using the Inoue balloon and it can be successfully performed in patients with severe subvalvular fibrosis. Unique balloon geometry and stepwise balloon sizing may explain these acceptable immediate results in severely deformed valves.

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Vinay K. Bahl

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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K.K. Talwar

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Rakesh Yadav

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Manchanda Sc

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Savitri Shrivastava

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Rajiv Narang

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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S. Shrivastava

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Anita Saxena

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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V. Dev

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Subhash Chandra

Greater Baltimore Medical Center

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