Mandar Shah
Holy Family Hospital
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Featured researches published by Mandar Shah.
Circulation | 2010
Tara Bourke; Marmar Vaseghi; Yoav Michowitz; Vineet Sankhla; Mandar Shah; Nalla Swapna; Noel G. Boyle; Aman Mahajan; Calambur Narasimhan; Yash Lokhandwala; Kalyanam Shivkumar
Background— Reducing sympathetic output to the heart from the neuraxis can protect against ventricular arrhythmias. The purpose of this study was to assess the value of thoracic epidural anesthesia (TEA) and left cardiac sympathetic denervation (LCSD) in the management of ventricular arrhythmias in patients with structural heart disease. Methods and Results— Clinical data of 14 patients (25 to 75 years old, mean±SD of 54.2±16.6 years; 13 men) who underwent TEA, LCSD, or both to control ventricular tachycardia (VT) refractory to medical therapy and catheter ablation were reviewed. Twelve patients were in VT storm, and 2 experienced recurrent VT despite maximal medical therapy and catheter ablation procedures. The total number of therapies per patient before either procedure ranged from 5 to 202 (median of 24; 25th and 75th percentile, 5 and 56). Eight patients underwent TEA, and 9 underwent LCSD (3 patients had both procedures). No major procedural complications occurred. After initiation of TEA, 6 patients had a large (≥80%) decrease in VT burden. After LCSD, 3 patients had no further VT, 2 had recurrent VT that either resolved within 24 hours or responded to catheter ablation, and 4 continued to have recurrent VT. Nine of 14 patients survived to hospital discharge (2 TEA alone, 3 TEA/LCSD combined, and 4 LCSD alone), 1 of the TEA alone patients underwent an urgent cardiac transplantation. Conclusions— Initiation of TEA and LCSD in patients with refractory VT was associated with a subsequent decrease in arrhythmia burden in 6 (75%) of 8 patients (68% confidence interval 51% to 91%) and 5 (56%) of 9 patients (68% confidence interval 34% to 75%), respectively. These data suggest that TEA and LCSD may be effective additions to the management of refractory ventricular arrhythmias in structural heart disease when other treatment modalities have failed or may serve as a bridge to more definitive therapy.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 2012
Behzad B. Pavri; Yash Lokhandwala; Gaurav Kulkarni; Mandar Shah; Bharat K. Kantharia; Daniel A.N. Mascarenhas
BACKGROUND Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) often have clinically useful battery life remaining when explanted because of upgrades, infection, or patient death. OBJECTIVE To show that explanted ICDs can be resterilized and reused. DESIGN Retrospective cohort study. SETTING Multicenter ICD acquisition and single-center ICD reimplantation. PATIENTS Indigent persons in India who had class I indications for cardiac resynchronization therapy with an ICD and were unable to afford such a device. MEASUREMENTS Device longevity after reimplantation, device-related complications, number of appropriate therapies, patient clinical characteristics, and deaths. RESULTS Eighty-one consecutive consenting patients (mean age, 52.6 years; 66 male patients) received 106 explanted devices. Twenty-two patients received a second device and 3 patients received a third device after the prior one reached replacement voltage. Mean time to ICD replacement was 1287.4 days. Follow-up data were available for 75 of 81 (92.6%) patients. Mean follow-up duration for all devices was 824.9 days. No infectious complications occurred; 1 lead dislodgement and 1 lead fracture required repeated surgery. Appropriate therapy (shocks or antitachycardia pacing) was delivered by 64 of 106 (60.4%) devices in 44 of 81 (54.3%) patients. Nine of 81 (11.1%) patients died; mean time from implantation to death was 771.3 days. LIMITATIONS This is a retrospective report of a single-center experience with a modest number of patients and devices. Follow-up data were missing for 6 patients. No records were kept of the number of devices obtained through postmortem versus antemortem explantation or whether explantation was due to infection or upgrade. Complete data were not available on exact battery voltage at the time of reimplantation, left ventricular ejection fraction, or number of inappropriate shocks. A control group was not possible. CONCLUSION Explanted ICDs with 3 or more years of estimated remaining battery life can be reused after they are cleaned and resterilized. These devices functioned normally and delivered life-saving therapies, without an increased risk for complications. These preliminary data deserve further validation and, if confirmed, could have important societal and economic implications. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE None.
Indian pacing and electrophysiology journal | 2014
Abdhija Hanumandla; Daljeet Kaur; Mandar Shah; Narasimhan Calambur
Focal left atrial tachycardia (FLAT) although a common cause of supraventricular tachycardia(SVT) among children, the ones arising from left atrial appendage (LAA) present a unique challenge for successful ablation because of anatomical location. We present two children with FLAT arising from the epicardial LAA, successfully mapped and ablated through percutaneuous epicardial approach.
Indian pacing and electrophysiology journal | 2014
Daljeet Kaur Saggu; Mandar Shah; Arun Gopi; Abdhija Hanumandla; Calambur Narasimhan
Background Electrical storm (ES) due to drug refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT) occurring within first few weeks of acute myocardial infarction (MI) has poor prognosis. Catheter ablation has been proposed for treating VT occurring late after MI, but there is limited data on catheter ablation in VT within first few weeks of MI. Methods and Results Five patients (4 males, mean age 54.2±12.11 years) between June 2008 to July 2012, referred for VT presenting as ES refractory to antiarrhythmic drugs in the early post infarction period (six weeks following MI) despite revascularization. Three patients had anterior wall MI and two inferior wall MI with left ventricular ejection fraction ranging from 26 to 35%.All underwent catheter ablation within 48 hours of being in VT except one who presented late. Clinical VT was induced in all five patients. Total number of VTs induced were 11 (2.2±1.09 per patient). Two patients needed epicardial ablation via pericardial puncture. Though acute success was 100%, one patient had recurrence of clinical VT the next day of procedure.One patient succumbed to sepsis with multiple organ failure. The remaining four patients are doing well without further clinical recurrence of VT over a period of 3.7 years of follow-up. Conclusion Catheter ablation can be a useful adjunctive therapy for patients with recurrent VT in the early post infarction period. This procedure appears to be safe with acceptable success rate.
Heartrhythm Case Reports | 2015
Daljeet Saggu; Mandar Shah; Abhijeet Shelke; Calambur Narasimhan
Catheter ablation has curative potential in patients with idiopathic ventricular tachycardia (VT). Different endocavitary structures, such as papillary muscles, moderator band, and false tendon, have been described as the substrate for idiopathic VT. Although single-morphology VT arising from a false tendon is a well-known entity, multiple monomorphic VTs requiring ablation of a false tendon have
Journal of Electrocardiology | 2009
Yash Lokhandwala; Gopi Krishna Panicker; Mandar Shah; Hein J.J. Wellens
A tachycardia with left bundle-branch block morphology and right axis deviation points to the diagnosis of ventricular tachycardia. Conversely, any supraventricular tachycardia with left bundle-branch block is typically associated with a normal or leftward QRS axis. We present the case of a 34-year-old man showing atrioventricular nodal reentrant tachycardia with left bundle-branch block/right axis deviation as an exception to this rule.
Archive | 2012
Behzad B. Pavri; Yash Lokhandwala; Gaurav Kulkarni; Mandar Shah; Bharat K. Kantharia
Indian heart journal | 2015
Henri Roukoz; Mandar Shah; Lawrence Jesuraj Masilamani; Ajit Thachil; Prem K. Jayakumar; David G. Benditt; Calambur Narasimhan
Indian heart journal | 2008
Brian Pinto; Anand Rao; Mandar Shah; G. Sengottuvelu; Yves Louvard
Archive | 2014
Daljeet Saggu; Mandar Shah; Arun Gopi; Abdhija Hanumandla; Calambur Narasimhan; C Narasimhan; Banjara Hills