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Dive into the research topics where Randolph P. Martin is active.

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Featured researches published by Randolph P. Martin.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

Improvement in the Diagnosis of Abscesses Associated with Endocarditis by Transesophageal Echocardiography

Werner G. Daniel; Andreas Mügge; Randolph P. Martin; Oliver Lindert; Dirk Hausmann; Barbara Nonnast-Daniel; Joachim Laas; Paul R. Lichtlen

BACKGROUND Echocardiography is recognized as the method of choice for the noninvasive detection of valvular vegetations in patients with infective endocarditis, with transesophageal echocardiography being more accurate than transthoracic echocardiography. The diagnosis of associated abscesses by transthoracic echocardiography is difficult or even impossible in many cases, however, and it is not known whether transesophageal echocardiography is any better. METHODS To determine the value of transesophageal echocardiography in the detection of abscesses associated with endocarditis, we studied prospectively by two-dimensional transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography 118 consecutive patients with infective endocarditis of 137 native or prosthetic valves that was documented during surgery or at autopsy. RESULTS During surgery or at autopsy, 44 patients (37.3 percent) had a total of 46 definite regions of abscess. Abscesses were more frequent in aortic-valve endocarditis than in infections of other valves, and the infecting organism was more often staphylococcus (52.3 percent of cases) in patients with abscesses than in those without abscesses (16.2 percent). The hospital mortality rate was 22.7 percent in patients with abscesses, as compared with 13.5 percent in patients without abscesses. Whereas transthoracic echocardiography identified only 13 of the 46 areas of abscess, the transesophageal approach allowed the detection of 40 regions (P less than 0.001). Sensitivity and specificity for the detection of abscesses associated with endocarditis were 28.3 and 98.6 percent, respectively, for transthoracic echocardiography and 87.0 and 94.6 percent for transesophageal echocardiography; positive and negative predictive values were 92.9 and 68.9 percent, respectively, for the transthoracic approach and 90.9 and 92.1 percent for the transesophageal approach. Variation between observers was 3.4 percent for transthoracic and 4.2 percent for transesophageal echocardiography. CONCLUSIONS The data indicate that transesophageal echocardiography leads to a significant improvement in the diagnosis of abscesses associated with endocarditis. The technique facilitates the identification of patients with endocarditis who have an increased risk of death and permits earlier treatment.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Comparison of transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography for detection of abnormalities of prosthetic and bioprosthetic valves in the mitral and aortic positions

Werner G. Daniel; Andreas Mügge; Jochen Grote; Dirk Hausmann; Peter Nikutta; Joachim Laas; Paul R. Lichtlen; Randolph P. Martin

Two-dimensional echocardiography is the diagnostic procedure of choice for evaluation of prosthetic valve abnormalities. However, transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) may be limited owing to acoustic shadowing and poor acoustic windows. Some of these limitations may be overcome by transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). One hundred twenty-six patients with 148 prosthetic valves (113 bioprostheses and 35 mechanical devices) were studied by M-mode and 2-dimensional TTE and TEE. Prosthetic valve morphology was confirmed by surgery or autopsy in all cases; 124 prostheses were classified as diseased (33 endocarditis, 8 thrombi, and 83 degeneration defined as leaflet thickening > 3 mm with restricted motion) and 24 as normal. Prosthetic valve endocarditis and thrombi were correctly identified by TTE in 12 of 33 (36%) and 1 of 8 (13%) prostheses, respectively, but could be diagnosed by TEE in 27 of 33 (82%; p < 0.001) and 8 of 8 (100%; p < 0.01), respectively. Compared with TTE, TEE had a higher sensitivity for morphologic prosthetic valve abnormalities in patients with either bioprostheses (88 [87%] vs 66 [65%] of 101 prostheses; p < 0.01) or mechanical devices (19 [83%] vs 5 [22%] of 23 prostheses; p < 0.01) and in patients with a prosthesis in either the aortic (49 [77%] vs 32 [50%] of 64; p < 0.01) or mitral (58 [97%] vs 39 [65%] of 60; p < 0.001) position. Overall, sensitivity and specificity were 57 and 63%, respectively, for TTE, and 86 and 88%, respectively, for TEE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996

Natural history of severe atheromatous disease of the thoracic aorta: A transesophageal echocardiographic study

David Montgomery; John J. Ververis; Gerard McGorisk; Stephen Frohwein; Randolph P. Martin; W. Robert Taylor

OBJECTIVES This study sought to prospectively observe the morphologic and clinical natural history of severe atherosclerotic disease of the thoracic aorta as defined by transesophageal echocardiography. BACKGROUND Atherosclerosis of the thoracic aorta has been shown to be highly associated with risk for embolic events in transesophageal studies, but the natural history of the disease under clinical conditions has not been reported. METHODS During a 20-month period, 191 of 264 patients undergoing transesophageal echocardiography had adequate visualization of the aorta to allow atherosclerotic severity to be graded as follows: grade I = normal (44 patients); grade II = intimal thickening (52 patients); grade III = atheroma < 5 mm (62 patients); grade IV = atheroma > or = 5 mm (19 patients); grade V = mobile lesion (14 patients). All available patients with grades IV (8 patients) and V (10 patients) disease as well as a subgroup of 12 patients with grade III disease had follow-up transesophageal echocardiographic studies (mean [+/- SD] 11.7 +/- 0.9 months, range 6 to 22). RESULTS Of 30 patients undergoing follow-up transesophageal echocardiographic studies, 20 (66%) had no change in atherosclerotic severity grade. Of the remaining 10 patients, atherosclerotic severity progressed one grade in 7 and decreased in 3 with resolved mobile lesions. Of 18 patients with grade IV or V disease of the aorta who underwent a follow-up study, 11 (61%) demonstrated formation of new mobile lesions. Of 10 patients with grade V disease on initial study who underwent follow-up study, 7 (70%) demonstrated resolution of a specific previously documented mobile lesion. However, seven patients (70%) with grade V disease also demonstrated development of a new mobile lesion. Of 33 patients with grade IV or V disease, 8 (24%) died during the study period, and 1 (3%) had a clinical embolic event. CONCLUSIONS The presence of severe atherosclerotic disease of the thoracic aorta as defined by transesophageal echocardiography is associated with a high mortality rate. Although the morphologic natural history of the disease process itself is marked by stability over a 1-year period, individual lesion morphology is dynamic, with formation and resolution of mobile components occurring frequently over the same period. The dynamic nature of individual lesion morphology potentially enhances the possibility of developing a successful therapeutic strategy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992

Improved reproducibility of left atrial and left ventricular measurements by guided three-dimensional echocardiography☆

Donald L. King; Michael R. Harrison; Aasha S. Gopal; Randolph P. Martin; Anthony N. DeMaria

OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to determine whether guided three-dimensional echocardiography could improve the reproducibility of left atrial and left ventricular anteroposterior measurements over that of standard unguided two-dimensional echocardiography. BACKGROUND Although these measurements are standard indexes for evaluating chamber size, their use is limited by significant interobserver variability largely due to variable image plane positioning. To improve measurement accuracy and reproducibility, we have developed a three-dimensional echocardiograph that displays the line of intersection of the real-time image with a previously saved orthogonal reference image. This display shows the relation of the real-time image to anatomic landmarks in its third, nonvisualized dimension and may be used to guide image positioning. METHODS Three pairs of operators independently performed unguided two-dimensional and guided three-dimensional examinations on three groups of 10 patients each. The left atrium was measured in a plane through the inferior surface of the aortic cusps and the left ventricle in a plane perpendicular to its long axis 1 cm below the mitral leaflet tips. Interobserver variability of these measurements on unguided parasternal long-axis images and on guided short-axis images was assessed. RESULTS The standard unguided two-dimensional examination was associated with an interobserver variability of 14.6% and 9.1% for atrial and ventricular measurements, respectively. Guided three-dimensional echocardiography significantly reduced interobserver variability to 5.0% and 3.1%, respectively, for the same measurements (p < 0.005 by McNemars test). CONCLUSIONS Significant interobserver variability occurs with standard unguided two-dimensional echocardiographic measurement of left atrial and left ventricular dimensions. Guided three-dimensional echocardiography achieves a nearly threefold improvement of reproducibility of these measurements and provides the basis for improved serial evaluation and comparison of atrial and ventricular size by different operators.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Clinical significance and origin of artifacts in transesophageal echocardiography of the thoracic aorta.

Alan F. Appelbe; Peter G. Walker; J.K. Yeoh; Anthony Bonitatibus; Ajit P. Yoganathan; Randolph P. Martin

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to identify the mechanism and features of artifacts encountered during transesophageal echocardiography of the aorta. BACKGROUND Artifacts are an important potential limitation of transesophageal echocardiography of the aorta. METHODS The mechanism of the artifacts was examined by in vitro modeling. The frequency and clinical correlates of artifacts were examined by retrospective review of transesophageal echocardiograms in 36 patients with aortic pathologic lesions. RESULTS Two classes of artifact were seen: linear artifacts in the ascending aorta, which may mimic intimal flaps, and mirror image artifacts in the transverse and descending thoracic aorta. Linear artifacts in the ascending aorta, seen in 44% of patients, were shown in vitro to be multiple path artifacts caused by reflection of ultrasound within the left atrium. Linear artifacts in the ascending aorta were associated with dilatation of the ascending aorta and were more frequent when the aortic diameter exceeded the left atrial diameter (p < 0.001). The mirror image artifacts of the transverse and descending thoracic aorta give the appearance of a double-barrel aorta and were shown in vitro to be caused by the aorta-lung interface, which acts as a total reflector of ultrasound. Mirror image artifacts were seen in > 80% of patients. Artifacts were equally frequent with the sagittal and transverse imaging planes when biplane transesophageal echocardiography was used. CONCLUSIONS Artifacts occur frequently during transesophageal echocardiography of the aorta. An understanding of why they occur and the features that distinguish them from true abnormalities should enhance the diagnostic accuracy of transesophageal echocardiography for aortic disease.


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2009

Echocardiography and Risk Prediction in Advanced Heart Failure: Incremental Value Over Clinical Markers

Syed A. Agha; Andreas P. Kalogeropoulos; Jeffrey Shih; Vasiliki V. Georgiopoulou; Grigorios Giamouzis; Perry Anarado; Deepa Mangalat; Imad Hussain; Wendy Book; Sonjoy Laskar; Andrew L. Smith; Randolph P. Martin; Javed Butler

BACKGROUND Incremental value of echocardiography over clinical parameters for outcome prediction in advanced heart failure (HF) is not well established. METHODS AND RESULTS We evaluated 223 patients with advanced HF receiving optimal therapy (91.9% angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blocker, 92.8% beta-blockers, 71.8% biventricular pacemaker, and/or defibrillator use). The Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM) was used as the reference clinical risk prediction scheme. The incremental value of echocardiographic parameters for event prediction (death or urgent heart transplantation) was measured by the improvement in fit and discrimination achieved by addition of standard echocardiographic parameters to the SHFM. After a median follow-up of 2.4 years, there were 38 (17.0%) events (35 deaths; 3 urgent transplants). The SHFM had likelihood ratio (LR) chi(2) 32.0 and C statistic 0.756 for event prediction. Left ventricular end-systolic volume, stroke volume, and severe tricuspid regurgitation were independent echocardiographic predictors of events. The addition of these parameters to SHFM improved LR chi(2) to 72.0 and C statistic to 0.866 (P < .001 and P=.019, respectively). Reclassifying the SHFM-predicted risk with use of the echocardiography-added model resulted in improved prognostic separation. CONCLUSIONS Addition of standard echocardiographic variables to the SHFM results in significant improvement in risk prediction for patients with advanced HF.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Should the freehand allograft be abandoned as a reliable alternative for aortic valve replacement

Ellis L. Jones; Vipul B. Shah; Jack S. Shanewise; Tomas D. Martin; Randolph P. Martin; Jorge A. Coto; Ruth Broniec; Yannan Shen

Cryopreserved aortic allografts were used for aortic valve replacement in 80 patients between 1986 and 1994 (infracoronary in 46 and complete root replacement in 34). Hospital mortality was 6.3% (5/80) with all deaths occurring in the infracoronary group. Three of five deaths were in patients with endocarditis and valve ring abscess. Left ventricular-aortic mean pressure gradients across the allograft valves were significantly lower for root replacement patients (mean, 9.0 +/- 6.9 mm Hg versus 18.1 +/- 8.7 mm Hg for infracoronary patients) (p = 0.0001). No patient having root allograft replacement had early echocardiographic aortic insufficiency greater than grade 1 versus 28% of those having infracoronary implantations. Late aortic insufficiency of grade 2 or greater was seen in 46% of patients having infracoronary implantation versus 17% of patients having root implantation. Nine patients had explantation of an aortic allograft (eight infracoronary and one root). Reasons for explantation were as follows: endocarditis (three infracoronary, one root), technical (three infracoronary), undiagnosed idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (1 patient), and prolapsing infracoronary leaflet (1 patient). Actuarial freedom from grade 3 and 4 aortic insufficiency or explantation was 77% at 7 years for infracoronary implantations. We conclude that the infracoronary aortic allograft has an unacceptable frequency of late insufficiency and its use in this position should be abandoned. The substantial incidence of late endocarditis in the infracoronary (free-hand) aortic allograft was surprising.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 2001

The role of transesophageal echocardiography in the diagnosis and management of patients with aortic perivalvular abscesses

Marschall S. Runge; George A. Stouffer; Richard G. Sheahan; Stamatios Lerakis; W. Robert Taylor; Mary Ellen Lynch; Craig M. Litman; Stephen D. Clements; Trevor D. Thompson; Randolph P. Martin

Aortic valve abscesses (AVAs) are a devastating complication of aortic valve endocarditis. Over 8 years, 25 patients were diagnosed with AVA by transesophageal echo (TEE). Management and outcomes were then analyzed. Eleven (44%) AVAs involved prosthetic valves, and 6 (24%) occurred in congenitally malformed valves. Twenty patients (80%) underwent surgical intervention; the rest were treated medically. Eleven (44%) of the patients died [6 (30%) surgery patients and all the medical patients]. Eight of 11 (73%) patients who died were culture positive for Staphylococcus aureus. All patients with congenitally malformed aortic valves underwent surgical intervention and survived. We conclude that: (1) despite advances in therapy and diagnosis, patients with AVAs have a high mortality rate; (2) prognosis with AVA is especially poor when S aureus is the infectious organism; (3) patients with AVAs in congenitally malformed valves have a great outcome with surgery; (4) patients treated medically have a very poor prognosis; earlier identification by TEE may be critical to improving survival.


Critical Care Clinics | 1996

Assessment of endocarditis and associated complications with transesophageal echocardiography.

Jack S. Shanewise; Randolph P. Martin

TEE offers many benefits in the evaluation of patients with IE. It provides increased sensitivity as compared to TTE in the detection of this disease, and is better able to identify and delineate many of the associated complications and hemodynamic aberrancies. TEE also has helped expand our knowledge of the pathophysiology and natural history of IE. Continued advances in the technology of TEE instrumentation undoubtedly will lead to further improvements in our ability to assess and to treat patients stricken with this serious infection. Nevertheless, IE continues to exact a significant toll on its victims, and our efforts to diagnose, to treat, and to prevent it must not weaken.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1991

Atrial septal aneurysm mimicking a right atrial mass on transesophageal echocardiography

Joon Kuan Yeoh; Alan F. Appelbe; Randolph P. Martin

Abstract Atrial septal aneurysm (ASA)is an uncommon anomaly usually first recognized on echocardiographic examination. Visualization on conventional transthoracic echocardiographic imaging may at times be difficult because the atrial septum lies in the ultrasonic far field. Furthermore, although the morphology is typical in most cases, diagnostic confusion may arise when an unusual appearance exists. 1 A recent report 2 suggests that transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is superior in imaging and characterizing the morphology of ASA. We describe a patient undergoing TEE examination for suspected acute aortic dissection with an incidental finding of an ASA whose appearance simulated a right atrial mass.

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