Miguel A. García-Fernández
Complutense University of Madrid
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Miguel A. García-Fernández.
American Heart Journal | 1992
Miguel A. García-Fernández; Esteban Torrecilla; Daniel San Román; Azevedo J; Héctor Bueno; Mar Moreno; Juan L. Delcán
The characteristics and clinical implications of left atrial appendage (LAA) flow have not been clearly analyzed. Thirty-nine consecutive patients underwent a transesophageal echocardiographic (TEE) color Doppler study to correlate the LAA pulsed Doppler flow pattern with echocardiographic variables and the cardiac rhythm of each patient. Three different LAA flow patterns were identified. Type I flow, characterized by a biphasic pattern (waves of filling and emptying), was found in 17 patients, all in sinus rhythm; it was not associated with LAA spontaneous contrast or thrombus. Mean peak velocities of the filling and emptying waves were, respectively: 28 +/- 12 cm/sec and 31 +/- 9 cm/sec. Type II sawtooth active flow (eight patients) (mean peak velocity: 49 +/- 12 cm/sec) was only detected in atrial fibrillation (AF) and dilated LAA (LAA area: 421 +/- 40 mm2) but without thrombus or significant LAA spontaneous echocardiographic contrast. Type III flow pattern was noted in 14 patients with AF and a very dilated LAA (LAA area: 619 +/- 96 mm2). This flow pattern was characterized by the absence of identifiable flow waves and was associated with the presence of LAA spontaneous contrast; the majority (six of seven) had evidence of thrombus. We concluded that the LAA is a dynamic structure in which TEE study identified three flow patterns with different implications. AF is associated with two LAA flow types (II and III) with a larger LAA size as well as a higher incidence of LAA clots in type III flow.
Circulation | 2005
Raquel Yotti; Javier Bermejo; J. Carlos Antoranz; M. Mar Desco; Cristina Cortina; José Luis Rojo-Álvarez; Carmen Allue; Laura E. Martin; Mar Moreno; José A. Serrano; Roberto Muñoz; Miguel A. García-Fernández
Background— Diastolic suction is a major determinant of early left ventricular filling in animal experiments. However, suction remains incompletely characterized in the clinical setting. Methods and Results— First, we validated a method for measuring the spatio-temporal distributions of diastolic intraventricular pressure gradients and differences (DIVPDs) by digital processing color Doppler M-mode recordings. In 4 pigs, the error of peak DIVPD was 0.0±0.2 mm Hg (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.95) compared with micromanometry. Forty patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and 20 healthy volunteers were studied at baseline and during dobutamine infusion. A positive DIVPD (toward the apex) originated during isovolumic relaxation, reaching its peak shortly after mitral valve opening. Peak DIVPD was less than half in patients with DCM than in control subjects (1.2±0.6 versus 2.5±0.8 mm Hg, P<0.001). Dobutamine increased DIVPD in control subjects by 44% (P<0.001) but only by 23% in patients with DCM (P=NS). DIVPDs were the consequence of 2 opposite forces: a driving force caused by local acceleration, and a reversed (opposed to filling) convective force that lowered the total DIVPD by more than one third. In turn, local acceleration correlated with E-wave velocity and ejection fraction, whereas convective deceleration correlated with E-wave velocity and ventriculo:annular disproportion. Convective deceleration was highest among patients showing a restrictive filling pattern. Conclusions— Patients with DCM show an abnormally low diastolic suction and a blunted capacity to recruit suction with stress. By raising the ventriculo:annular disproportion, chamber remodeling proportionally increases convective deceleration and adversely affects left ventricular filling. These previously unreported mechanisms of diastolic dysfunction can be studied by using Doppler echocardiography.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2008
Marcelino Cortés; Eulogio García; Miguel A. García-Fernández; Jose Juan Gomez; Esther Pérez-David; Francisco Fernández-Avilés
This study was conducted to assess the usefulness of transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) as a guide in the percutaneous transcatheter occlusion of paravalvular defects and in subsequent follow-up. In 27 consecutive patients with mitral paravalvular leaks with significant regurgitation considered to be poor surgical candidates who were treated with percutaneous closure of the defects, TEE was performed before and during the procedure. If the device was successfully positioned, a reevaluation was made 1 month later. Events occurring during the procedure and 1-month follow-up were recorded. The device was correctly positioned in 17 of the patients (63%). TEE enabled the detection of complications (intraprosthetic insufficiencies due to passing the guide through the prosthesis, blockade of the prosthesis, etc.). It also confirmed the correct canalization of the leak with the catheter and the position of the device. In 8 patients (47% of patients with successful implantation), the degree of regurgitation was substantially reduced after 1 month. In conclusion, TEE is a fundamental technique when considering the percutaneous treatment of paravalvular leaks in patients with high surgical risk. It provides essential information on the characteristics of the dehiscence during implantation and follow-up.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1983
Jose Lopez-Sendon; Miguel A. García-Fernández; Isabel Coma-Canella; Mar Moreno Yangüela; Fermin Bañuelos
Right ventricular (RV) segmental contraction was studied in 63 patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI), using 2-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography. Group A included 32 patients with ischemic RV dysfunction: 19 had a disproportionate increase in right atrial pressure at the time of the examination (Group AI) and in 13 patients, right atrial pressure was normal when the echocardiogram was obtained (Group AII). Group B included 31 patients without ischemic RV dysfunction. Alkinesia or dyskinesia of the RV wall was found in 30 patients: 19 from Group AI, 8 from Group AII, and 3 from Group B. Asynergy could be identified in all segments of the RV wall including the outflow tract, RV apex, and anterior wall, but was more frequently found in the posterior wall (29 patients), best seen in the transversal subcostal short-axis view. A significant difference was found either in the frequency of wall motion abnormalities or in the number of segments with asynergy among the 3 groups (p less than 0.001). However, asynergy of the RV wall may be present in some patients with normal right heart hemodynamic function, suggesting that asynergy may be more sensitive than hemodynamic function in the diagnosis of acute RV infarction. Paradoxical septal motion was found in 8 patients, all in Group AI, and all had a right atrial pressure equal to or greater than pulmonary capillary pressure.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996
Javier Bermejo; Miguel A. García-Fernández; Esteban G. Torrecilla; Héctor Bueno; M. Moreno; Daniel San Román; Juan L. Delcán
OBJECTIVES This study sought to assess the diagnostic implications of the flow dependence of Doppler echocardiographic indexes of aortic valve stenosis. BACKGROUND Although valve area has been shown to change with alterations in flow rate, the diagnostic consequences of this phenomenon remain unknown. Valve resistance has been suggested as a more stable index for evaluating aortic stenosis. METHODS A low dose dobutamine protocol was performed in 35 patients with aortic stenosis. Hemodynamic indexes were obtained by Doppler echocardiography at baseline and at each dobutamine dose. RESULTS As a result of the shortening of the systolic ejection period, flow increased from (mean +/- SD) 164 +/- 48 to 229 +/- 102 ml/s (p < 0.0001). At peak flow, valve area increased by 28% (from 0.5 +/- 0.2 to 0.6 +/- 0.3 cm2, p < 0.0001), whereas valve resistance decreased by 4% (from 498 +/- 252 to 459 +/- 222 dynes.s.cm-5, p = 0.04). This observed change in resistance was smaller than that for valve area (p < 0.01). The flow dependence of valve area varied among individual patients (p < 0.0001). Multivariate analysis identified calcific degenerative etiology (beta 0.29, p = 0.002), left ventricular velocity of fiber shortening (beta 0.22, p = 0.01), baseline flow (beta -0.28, p = 0.04) and amount of flow increased induced by dobutamine (beta 0.90, p < 0.0001) as factors related to valve area flow dependence. CONCLUSIONS Although all Doppler echocardiographic indexes of aortic stenosis are affected by flow, valve resistance is more stable than valve area under dobutamine-induced hemodynamic changes. Baseline valve area may be unreliable in patients with calcific degenerative aortic stenosis and low output states.
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1998
Nicasio Pérez-Castellano; Miguel A. García-Fernández; Eulogio García; Juan L. Delcán
We have rarely observed the appearance of a dissection of the aortic sinus of Valsalva during catheterizations of the related coronary artery. The aim of this study is to describe the cause, mechanism, and evolution of this complication, which have implications for the management of the patient. According to our experience (one case out of 12,546 diagnostic and three cases out of 4,970 angioplasty procedures performed during the last 6 years), the dissection of the sinus of Valsalva always results from the retrograde extension of a dissection of the right coronary artery. It usually remains localized, but it may quickly involve the entire aorta. Contrast injections and balloon inflations promote its propagation, so these procedures should be avoided if possible. Instead of angiography, transesophageal echocardiogram is a safe and accurate method for studying its extension and as a follow-up method. The sinus of Valsalva dissections that remain localized during catheterization tend to spontaneously resolve in the first month.
Circulation | 2005
Raquel Yotti; Javier Bermejo; M. Mar Desco; J. Carlos Antoranz; José Luis Rojo-Álvarez; Cristina Cortina; Carmen Allue; Hugo Rodríguez-Abella; Mar Moreno; Miguel A. García-Fernández
Background—Ejection intraventricular pressure gradients are caused by the systolic force developed by the left ventricle (LV). By postprocessing color Doppler M-mode (CDMM) images, we can measure noninvasively the ejection intraventricular pressure difference (EIVPD) between the LV apex and the outflow tract. This study was designed to assess the value of Doppler-derived EIVPDs as noninvasive indices of systolic chamber function. Methods and Results—CDMM images and pressure-volume (conductance) signals were simultaneously acquired in 9 minipigs undergoing pharmacological interventions and acute ischemia. Inertial, convective, and total EIVPD curves were calculated from CDMM recordings. Peak EIVPD closely correlated with indices of systolic function based on the pressure-volume relationship: peak elastance (within-animal R=0.98; between-animals R=0.99), preload recruitable stroke work (within-animal R=0.81; between-animals R=0.86), and peak of the first derivative of pressure corrected for end-diastolic volume (within-animal R=0.88; between-animals R=0.91). The correlation of peak inertial EIVPD with these indices was also high (all R>0.75). Load dependence of EIVPDs was studied in another 5 animals in which consecutive beats obtained during load manipulation were analyzed. During caval occlusion (40% EDV reduction), dP/dtmax, ejection fraction, and stroke volume significantly changed, whereas peak EIVPD remained constant. Aortic occlusion (40% peak LV pressure increase) significantly modified dP/dtmax, ejection fraction, and stroke volume; a nearly significant trend toward decreasing peak EIVPD was observed (P=0.06), whereas inertial EIVPD was unchanged (P=0.6). EIVPD beat-to-beat and interobserver variabilities were 2±12% and 5±11%, respectively. Conclusions—Doppler-derived EIVPDs provide quantitative, reproducible, and relatively load-independent indices of global systolic chamber function that correlate closely with currently available reference methods.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003
Javier Bermejo; Rodolfo Odreman; Josefina Feijoo; M. Moreno; Paz Gómez-Moreno; Miguel A. García-Fernández
OBJECTIVES This study was designed to assess which hemodynamic index best accounts for clinical severity of aortic stenosis (AS) and to analyze the value of low-dose dobutamine testing. BACKGROUND Pressure gradient and valve area are suboptimal because they depend on flow rate, correlate poorly with symptoms, and provide limited prognostic information. Recently, new indices and low-dose inotropic stimulation have been introduced, but their clinical value remains uncertain. METHODS A total of 307 consecutive patients with AS were included in an ambispective study design (71 +/- 12 years old; peak jet velocity: 3.7 +/- 1.1 m/s). Clinical and Doppler-echocardiographic data were obtained, as well as results of low-dose dobutamine infusion (47 patients). Using receiver-operator-characteristic curve analysis, we evaluated jet velocity, pressure gradient, valve area, resistance, stroke-work loss (SWL), and dobutamine-induced increase in area for predicting 1) symptomatic status at entry, 2) early (</=3 months) cardiovascular death or aortic valve replacement, and 3) long-term outcome. Logistic regression and Cox models were designed multivariate and adjusted by bootstrapping. RESULTS Only 28% of patients were alive without valve replacement at the end of the follow-up period (22 +/- 4 months). The decision for valve replacement was made by the referring physician, blinded to the SWL, valve resistance, and dobutamine results. Non-flow-corrected indices performed better than valve area and valve resistance. Among them, SWL best predicted the defined end points. Odds/hazard ratios associated with a SWL Delta = 17% were 5.14 for presenting AS symptoms, 4.68 for early events, and 2.31 for late outcome. A cutoff value of SWL >25% best discriminated clinical end points. Other independent predictors of prognosis were symptomatic status and left ventricular ejection fraction. Dobutamine testing added no value to baseline models. CONCLUSIONS Non-flow-corrected indices show the highest clinical efficacy in aortic stenosis. Among these, SWL best predicts symptomatic status and outcome and therefore should be incorporated to aid patient management in unclear situations.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2000
Esteban González-Torrecilla; Miguel A. García-Fernández; Esther Pérez-David; Javier Bermejo; Mar Moreno; Juan L. Delcán
The purpose of this study was to investigate the independent factors associated with the presence of left atrial (LA) spontaneous echo contrast (SEC) and thromboembolic events in patients with mitral stenosis (MS) in chronic atrial fibrillation (AF). Factors independently associated with LASEC, thrombi, and embolic events have been mainly investigated in patients with nonvalvular AF or inhomogeneous populations with rheumatic heart disease. Transesophageal and transthoracic echo studies were performed in 129 patients with MS in chronic AF. Previous embolic events were documented in 45 patients, 20 of them within 6 months, and 65 patients were receiving long-term anticoagulation. The intensity of LASEC and mitral regurgitation, the presence of thrombi and active LA appendage flow (peak velocities > or = 20 cm/s), and LA volume as well as other conventional echo-Doppler determinations were investigated in every patient. The prevalences of significant LASEC (degrees 3+ and 4+), thrombus, active LA appendage flow, and significant mitral regurgitation (>2+) were: 52% (67 patients), 29.5% (38 patients), 32% (41 patients), and 36% (47 patients), respectively. Multivariate analysis showed that decreasing mitral regurgitation severity, absence of active LA appendage flow, and mitral valve area were the independent correlates of LASEC (odds ratio [OR] 3.7, 5.4, and 0.17, respectively; all p <0.02). Active LA appendage flow and anticoagulant therapy were associated negatively, whereas the severity of LASEC was associated positively with the finding of LA thrombus (OR 9.6, 3.9, and 1.6, respectively; all p <0.05). The intensity of LASEC and previous anticoagulant therapy (OR 1.74 and 4.5, respectively; p <0.005) were the independent covariates of thrombi and/or recent embolic events. In conclusion, the severity of mitral regurgitation and lack of active LA appendage flow were, respectively, the strongest independent correlates of significant LASEC and thrombus in patients with MS in chronic AF. LASEC remains the cardiac factor most strongly associated with thrombus and/or recent embolic events in these patients.
American Heart Journal | 1998
Miguel A. García-Fernández; José M. López-Pérez; Nicasio Pérez-Castellano; Lorenzo F. Quero; Alejandro Virgós-Lamela; Alejandra Otero-Ferreiro; Ana M. Lasara; Marino Vega; Mar Moreno; José A. Pastor-Benavent; Javier Bermejo; José García-Pardo; Miguel Gil de la Peña; Juan Navia; Juan L. Delcán
OBJECTIVES This study was designed to evaluate the usefulness of transesophogeal echocardiography (TEE) for detecting cardiac damage after blunt chest trauma (BCT). BACKGROUND Multiple methods have been used to detect cardiac damage after a BCT, but none has been demonstrated to be sensitive, specific, and feasible enough. METHODS This multicenter prospective trial was designed to evaluate the usefulness of TEE in the assessment of patients with BCT and to compare the TEE findings with those provided by the electrocardiogram (ECG) and cardiac isoenzymes assay. One hundred seventeen consecutive patients with a significant BCT were enrolled. A TEE was performed in each patient. Serial ECGs and plasma profiles of creatine kinase (CK) and CK-monoclonal antibody (MB) were obtained. RESULTS Sixty-six (56%) patients had pathologic findings in the TEE attributed to the BCT (group A). In the remaining 51 (44%) patients the TEE was normal (group B). An abnormal ECG was more frequent in group A (59% vs 24%; p < 0.001), and the serum CK-MB peak level was also higher in group A (174 +/- 30 U/L vs 93 +/- 21 U/L; p = 0.05). Relative to pathologic TEE findings, the sensitivity and specificity of an abnormal ECG were 59% and 73% and of high CK-MB with CK-MB/CK > 5% were 64% and 52%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that TEE can be routinely and safely performed for diagnosing cardiac injuries after a BCT and plays an important role in the evaluation and treatment of these patients. EGG and CK-MB assay are not good methods for detecting cardiac damage in this setting.