Mary S. Riedinger
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Mary S. Riedinger.
American Heart Journal | 1985
A. Gray Ellrodt; Mary S. Riedinger; Asher Kimchi; Daniel S. Berman; J. Maddahi; H.J.C. Swan; Glen H. Murata
Left ventricular dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of septic shock, but little is known about its natural history, cause, and prognostic significance. Left ventricular performance was assessed by serial radionuclide and hemodynamic studies in 35 patients with culture-proven septic shock. The mean age (+/- S.D.) of the group was 64 +/- 18 years; 16 of the subjects were women, and 15 had antecedent heart disease. On the first study, the left ventricular stroke work index was depressed in 33 (94%) patients, and nineteen (54%) had a left ventricular ejection fraction less than 0.48. Twenty-two (63%) of the patients had segmental and four had generalized wall motion abnormalities. Conventional hemodynamic parameters were of no value in predicting the patients who had a depressed left ventricular ejection fraction or segmental abnormalities. Patients with underlying heart disease had a much higher frequency (87%) of segmental dysfunction than those without underlying heart disease (45%; p = 0.016), but no differences were noted in the left ventricular ejection fraction or left ventricular stroke work index of these two groups. Segmental abnormalities and low ejection fractions were seen more often in patients with a large left ventricular end-diastolic volume index. Only five subjects had a systemic vascular resistance index greater than 2580 dynes X sec X cm-5 per m2, and the correlation between systemic vascular resistance index and left ventricular ejection fraction was poor. No difference was found in the mean coronary perfusion pressure of those with segmental abnormalities and those with normal wall motion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984
Asher Kimchi; A. Gray Ellrodt; Daniel S. Berman; Mary S. Riedinger; H.J.C. Swan; Glen H. Murata
Twenty-five patients with septic shock underwent simultaneous radionuclide ventriculography and right heart catheterization to clarify the role of the right ventricle in this syndrome. A depressed right ventricular ejection fraction (less than 38%) was present in 13 patients and was found in patients with elevated cardiac output (4 of 6 patients) and with normal or low cardiac output (9 of 19 patients). Right ventricular dysfunction was seen with or without acute respiratory failure. In eight patients, a depressed right ventricular ejection fraction was seen in combination with an abnormal left ventricular ejection fraction (less than 48%), but in five patients, right ventricular ejection fraction impairment occurred with normal left ventricular ejection fraction. There was no significant correlation between abnormal right ventricular afterload and depressed right ventricular ejection fraction. No clinical or hemodynamic finding could be used to identify patients with diminished right ventricular ejection fraction. On follow-up study in 17 surviving patients, right ventricular ejection fraction improved in 6 and was unchanged in 11. Improvement in right ventricular ejection fraction occurred more frequently in patients without pulmonary hypertension or respiratory distress. The results suggest that right ventricular dysfunction in septic shock may be more common than previously suspected. It may be caused by abnormalities in right ventricular afterload in some patients and depressed myocardial contractility in others. The findings are of therapeutic importance since interventions that diminish right ventricular afterload and increase right ventricular contractility would be appropriate in patients with septic shock and right ventricular dysfunction.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1989
Scott R. Weingarten; Bruce Ermann; Mary S. Riedinger; Prediman K. Shah; A. Gray Ellrodt
PURPOSE During an observational study, we investigated the potential benefits and risks of the use of admission and early transfer triage rules in 498 patients hospitalized with chest pain. PATIENTS AND METHODS Appropriateness of triage decisions was measured using explicit and implicit judgments. RESULTS Application of an admission triage rule (partially based on the Brush electrocardiographic criteria) would have increased coronary care unit (CCU) admissions by 3%, whereas application of a triage rule 24 hours after admission would have reduced bed utilization by 860 intermediate care and 82 CCU bed-days per year when compared with actual patient triage. Although 9.5% of patients who underwent triage according to the early transfer triage rule would have experienced a minor complication after transfer, the medical care of none would have been adversely affected. CONCLUSION Our results show that application of a triage rule 24 hours after admission may have the potential to shorten length of stay in the CCU and intermediate care unit without significantly compromising patient care. However, use of the admission triage rule would have increased CCU bed utilization. The failure of the admission triage rule to improve bed utilization illustrates the potential hazards of ignoring patient complications, interventions, and co-morbidity when predicting the efficacy of a triage rule.
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology | 1986
Frank G. Shellock; Mary S. Riedinger; Michael C. Fishbein
SummaryCachexia is a common manifestation of advanced cancer and frequently contributes to physical disability and mortality. An increased metabolic rate has been suggested to be one of the causes of cancer-induced cachexia, although the mechanisms producing this hypermetabolism remain unclear. The presence and activation of brown adipose tissue, a highly thermogenic tissue, may result in a hypermetabolic state and be partially responsible for weight loss in cancer patients. To investigate this hypothesis, we examined necropsy samples of peri-adrenal tissues using light microscopy to identify the prevalence of brown adipose tissue in 25 cachectic patients who died from cancer and 15 age-matched subjects who died from other illnesses. Brown adipose tissue was observed in 20 of the cancer patients (80%) compared to 2 of the age-matched subjects (13%). Therefore, our preliminary results indicate that a high prevalence of brown adipose tissue is associated with cancer-induced cachexia and may reflect an abnormal mechanism responsible for profound energy expenditure and weight loss.
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2000
Mary S. Riedinger; Kathleen Dracup; Mary-Lynn Brecht
BACKGROUND Two and one half million women have heart failure (HF). Yet little is known about quality of life (QOL) in this population and the factors influencing it. Given the importance of QOL as an outcome of care, we conducted a study to evaluate predictors of QOL in women with HF. METHODS Using baseline QOL data collected in the Studies of Left Ventricular Dysfunction (SOLVD) trials, we studied predictors of QOL in 691 women with HF. Univariate, bivariate, and multiple regression analyses were used. Potential predictors included age, education, tobacco use, social isolation, life stresses, comorbidity index, New York Heart Association (NYHA) class, HF symptoms, etiology, and medications. We measured global QOL and QOL dimensions of physical function, emotional distress, and social and general health. RESULTS Women were older (61+/-10.5 years), predominantly Caucasian (75%), and their mean ejection fraction was 0.27 (+/-6.51). Variables with the strongest relationship to QOL included dyspnea, NYHA class, and life stresses. As dyspnea, life stresses, and NYHA class increased, QOL decreased. Additionally, smoking behavior and vasodilator use was associated with decreased QOL. Heart failure etiology of ischemic origin was associated with decreased social life satisfaction, and use of digitalis was predictive of increased social life satisfaction. Finally, increasing age was related to an increase in general life satisfaction. CONCLUSION Symptom amelioration, which may improve functional ability, has the greatest potential for increasing QOL in women with HF. Programs to increase physical activity in women with HF should be developed and tested. Finally, clinicians may need to optimize HF medications in women.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1984
A. Gray Ellrodt; Glen H. Murata; Mary S. Riedinger; Morgan E. Stewart; Carol Mochizuki; Richard Gray
Neutropenia is a rare complication of procainamide therapy. However, over a period of 20 months, 8 patients developed severe neutropenia while taking a sustained-release preparation of the drug. Seven patients presented with fever and constitutional symptoms and one patient was asymptomatic. Bone marrow examinations showed myeloid aplasia or maturation arrest in 5 patients and myeloid hyperplasia in 1. Neutropenia resolved within 30 days of drug withdrawal, and all patients survived. A case-control study showed a significant association between sustained-release procainamide therapy and severe neutropenia in 5 of 114 patients (4.4%) recovering from open-heart surgery (Mantel-Haenszel chi square = 13.84; p less than 0.001). Thus, life-threatening neutropenia may be common with sustained-release procainamide preparations.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990
Scott Weingarten; Bruce Ermann; Roger Bolus; Mary S. Riedinger; Haya R. Rubin; Alec Green; Katy Karns; A. Gray Ellrodt
OBJECTIVE To determine whether providing private practitioners with triage criteria for their low-risk chest pain patients would safely enhance bed utilization efficiency in coronary and intermediate care units. DESIGN Prospective, controlled, interventional trial using an alternate month study design. SETTING A large teaching community hospital. PATIENTS Cohort of 404 low-risk patients with chest pain for whom a diagnosis of myocardial infarction has been excluded and who have not sustained complications, required interventions, or developed unstable comorbidity. INTERVENTIONS During intervention months, private practitioners caring for low-risk patients in the coronary and intermediate care units were contacted 24 hours after admission. Physicians were informed that the transfer of low-risk patients to nonmonitored beds could probably be done safely, based on the results of a pilot study. The practitioner had the option of agreeing to or deferring patient transfer. During control months, physicians were not contacted in this way. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Use of the triage criteria by private practitioners reduced lengths of stay in the intermediate and coronary care units by 36% and 53%, respectively. Bed availability increased by 744 intermediate and 372 coronary care unit bed-days per year. Charges decreased by
Neuroepidemiology | 2004
Wouter I. Schievink; Mary S. Riedinger; Tajinder K. Jhutty; Paul Simon
2.6 million per year and profits improved by
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2005
Wouter I. Schievink; Mary S. Riedinger; M. Marcel Maya
390,000 per year. There were not significant differences in complications between control and intervention patients and in no case (95% CI, 0% to 1.6%) did the triage criteria adversely affect quality of care. CONCLUSIONS The early transfer triage criteria may be a safe and efficacious decision aid for improving bed utilization in intermediate and coronary care units. In addition, this study shows the feasibility of and potential benefits from applying practice guidelines at a community hospital.
The Joint Commission journal on quality improvement | 2001
Judith H. Lichtman; Sarah A. Roumanis; Martha J. Radford; Mary S. Riedinger; Scott Weingarten; Harlan M. Krumholz
We examined the racial distribution of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) mortality in a unique multiracial community. Mortality rates for SAH among the residents of Los Angeles County were calculated from death certificate data (1985–1998). Residential postal zones were classified into three strata as a measure of socioeconomic status. The number of SAH deaths was 2,897. The age-adjusted SAH mortality rate was 1.9 in whites, 2.7 in Hispanics, 3.0 in Asians and 3.7 in blacks. In those younger than 70 years of age, the SAH mortality rate among blacks was 2.2 times that of whites and 1.8 times that of Hispanics and Asians. The SAH mortality rate declines after age 70 in blacks. The SAH mortality rate was higher in women than in men in all races and it was highest in elderly Asian women (23.5 per 100,000). An inverse relationship was observed between income and SAH mortality rates in all racial groups except whites.