Raymond F. Stainback
Baylor College of Medicine
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Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography | 2010
Allen J. Taylor; Manuel D. Cerqueira; John McB. Hodgson; Daniel B. Mark; James K. Min; Patrick O'Gara; Geoffrey D. Rubin; Christopher M. Kramer; Daniel S. Berman; Alan S. Brown; Farooq A. Chaudhry; Ricardo C. Cury; Milind Y. Desai; Andrew J. Einstein; Antoinette S. Gomes; Robert A. Harrington; Udo Hoffmann; Rahul K. Khare; John R. Lesser; Christopher McGann; Alan Rosenberg; Robert S. Schwartz; Marc Shelton; Gerald W. Smetana; Sidney C. Smith; Michael J. Wolk; Joseph M. Allen; Steven R. Bailey; Pamela S. Douglas; Robert C. Hendel
The American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF), along with key specialty and subspecialty societies, conducted an appropriate use review of common clinical scenarios where cardiac computed tomography (CCT) is frequently considered. The present document is an update to the original CCT/cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) appropriateness criteria published in 2006, written to reflect changes in test utilization, to incorporate new clinical data, and to clarify CCT use where omissions or lack of clarity existed in the original criteria (1). The indications for this review were drawn from common applications or anticipated uses, as well as from current clinical practice guidelines. Ninety-three clinical scenarios were developed by a writing group and scored by a separate technical panel on a scale of 1 to 9 to designate appropriate use, inappropriate use, or uncertain use. In general, use of CCT angiography for diagnosis and risk assessment in patients with low or intermediate risk or pretest probability for coronary artery disease (CAD) was viewed favorably, whereas testing in high-risk patients, routine repeat testing, and general screening in certain clinical scenarios were viewed less favorably. Use of noncontrast computed tomography (CT) for calcium scoring was rated as appropriate within intermediate- and selected low-risk patients. Appropriate applications of CCT are also within the category of cardiac structural and functional evaluation. It is anticipated that these results will have an impact on physician decision making, performance, and reimbursement policy, and that they will help guide future research.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011
Pamela S. Douglas; Mario J. Garcia; David E. Haines; Wyman W. Lai; Warren J. Manning; Michael H. Picard; Donna Polk; Michael Ragosta; R. Parker Ward; Rory B. Weiner; Steven R. Bailey; Peter Alagona; Jeffrey L. Anderson; Jeanne M. DeCara; Rowena J Dolor; Reza Fazel; John A. Gillespie; Paul A. Heidenreich; Luci K. Leykum; Joseph E. Marine; Gregory Mishkel; Patricia A. Pellikka; Gilbert Raff; Krishnaswami Vijayaraghavan; Neil J. Weissman; Katherine C. Wu; Michael J. Wolk; Robert C. Hendel; Christopher M. Kramer; James K. Min
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1128 Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1128
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014
Michael J. Wolk; Steven R. Bailey; John U. Doherty; Pamela S. Douglas; Robert C. Hendel; Christopher M. Kramer; James K. Min; Manesh R. Patel; Lisa Rosenbaum; Leslee J. Shaw; Raymond F. Stainback; Joseph M. Allen
The American College of Cardiology Foundation along with key specialty and subspecialty societies, conducted an appropriate use review of common clinical presentations for stable ischemic heart disease (SIHD) to consider use of stress testing and anatomic diagnostic procedures. This document reflects an updating of the prior Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) published for radionuclide imaging (RNI), stress echocardiography (Echo), calcium scoring, coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), stress cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), and invasive coronary angiography for SIHD. This is in keeping with the commitment to revise and refine the AUC on a frequent basis. A major innovation in this document is the rating of tests side by side for the same indication. The side-by-side rating removes any concerns about differences in indication or interpretation stemming from prior use of separate documents for each test. However, the ratings were explicitly not competitive rankings due to the limited availability of comparative evidence, patient variability, and range of capabilities available in any given local setting. The indications for this review are limited to the detection and risk assessment of SIHD and were drawn from common applications or anticipated uses, as well as from current clinical practice guidelines. Eighty clinical scenarios were developed by a writing committee and scored by a separate rating panel on a scale of 1 to 9, to designate Appropriate, May Be Appropriate, or Rarely Appropriate use following a modified Delphi process following the recently updated AUC development methodology. The use of some modalities of testing in the initial evaluation of patients with symptoms representing ischemic equivalents, newly diagnosed heart failure, arrhythmias, and syncope was generally found to be Appropriate or May Be Appropriate, except in cases where low pre-test probability or low risk limited the benefit of most testing except exercise electrocardiogram (ECG). Testing for the evaluation of new or worsening symptoms following a prior test or procedure was found to be Appropriate. In addition, testing was found to be Appropriate or May Be Appropriate for patients within 90 days of an abnormal or uncertain prior result. Pre-operative testing was rated Appropriate or May Be Appropriate only for patients who had poor functional capacity and were undergoing vascular or intermediate risk surgery with 1 or more clinical risk factors or an organ transplant. The exercise ECG was suggested as an Appropriate test for cardiac rehabilitation clearance or for exercise prescription purposes. Testing in asymptomatic patients was generally found to be Rarely Appropriate, except for calcium scoring and exercise testing in intermediate and high-risk individuals and either stress or anatomic imaging in higher-risk individuals, which were all rated as May Be Appropriate. All modalities of follow-up testing after a prior test or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) within 2 years and within 5 years after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) in the absence of new symptoms were rated Rarely Appropriate. Pre-operative testing for patients with good functional capacity, prior normal testing within 1 year, or prior to low-risk surgery also were found to be Rarely Appropriate. Imaging for an exercise prescription or prior to the initiation of cardiac rehabilitation was Rarely Appropriate except for cardiac rehabilitation clearance for heart failure patients.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013
Andrea M. Russo; Raymond F. Stainback; Steven R. Bailey; Andrew E. Epstein; Paul A. Heidenreich; Mariell Jessup; Suraj Kapa; Mark S. Kremers; Bruce D. Lindsay; Lynne W. Stevenson; Michael B. Alexander; Ulrika Birgersdotter-Green; Alan S. Brown; Richard A. Grimm; Paul J. Hauptman; Sharon A. Hunt; Rachel Lampert; JoAnn Lindenfeld; David J. Malenka; Kartik Mani; Joseph E. Marine; Edward T. Martin; Richard L. Page; Michael W. Rich; Paul D. Varosy; Mary Norine Walsh; Michael J. Wolk; John U. Doherty; Pamela S. Douglas; Robert C. Hendel
Steven R. Bailey, MD, FACC, FSCAI, FAHA, Moderator Andrea M. Russo, MD, FACC, FHRS, Writing Group Liaison [⁎][1] Suraj Kapa, MD, Writing Group Liaison Michael B. Alexander, MD, FACC[§][2] Steven R. Bailey, MD, FACC, FSCAI, FAHA[∥][3] Ulrika Birgersdotter-Green, MD, FHRS[∥][3] Alan S.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2011
Michael H. Picard; David Adams; S. Michelle Bierig; John M. Dent; Pamela S. Douglas; Linda D. Gillam; Andrew M. Keller; David J. Malenka; Frederick A. Masoudi; Marti McCulloch; Patricia A. Pellikka; Priscilla J. Peters; Raymond F. Stainback; G. Monet Strachan; William A. Zoghbi
Michael H. Picard, MD, FASE, David Adams, RDCS, FASE, S. Michelle Bierig, RDCS, MPH, FASE, JohnM.Dent,MD,FASE, Pamela S.Douglas,MD,FASE,LindaD.Gillam,MD,FASE,AndrewM.Keller,MD,FASE, David J. Malenka, MD, FASE, Frederick A. Masoudi, MD, MSPH, Marti McCulloch, RDCS, FASE, Patricia A. Pellikka, MD, FASE, Priscilla J. Peters, RDCS, FASE, Raymond F. Stainback, MD, FASE, G.Monet Strachan, RDCS, FASE, andWilliam A. Zoghbi,MD, FASE, Boston, Massachusetts; Durham,North Carolina; St. Louis, Missouri; Charlottesville, Virginia; New York, New York; Danbury, Connecticut; Lebanon, New Hampshire; Denver, Colorado; Houston, Texas; Rochester, Minnesota; Pennsauken, New Jersey; San Diego, California
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2000
Berry M. van Gelder; Frank A. Bracke; Ali Oto; Aylin Yildirir; P. Clay Haas; John J. Seger; Raymond F. Stainback; Kees-Joost Botman; Albert Meijer
Three patients from different centers with pacemaker or ICD leads endocardially implanted in the left ventricle are described. All leads, two ventricular pacing leads and one ICD lead, were inserted through a patent foramen ovale or an atrial septum defect. The diagnosis was made 9 months. 14 months, and 16 years, respectively, after implantation. All patients had right bundle branch block configuration during ventricular pacing. Chest X ray was suggestive of a left‐sided positioned lead except in the ICD patient. Diagnosis was confirmed with echocardiography in all patients. One patient with a ventricular pacing lead presented with a transient ischcmic attack at 1‐month postimplantation. During surgical repair of the atrial septum defect 14 months later, the lead was extracted and thrombus was attached to the lead despite therapy with aspirin. The other patients were asymptomatic without anticoagulation (9 months and 16 years after implant). No thrombus was present on the ICD lead at the time of the cardiac transplantation in one patient. We reviewed 27 patients with permanent leads described in the literature. Ten patients experienced thromboembolic complications, including three of ten patients on antiplatelet therapy. The lead was removed in six patients, anticoagulation with warfarin was effective for secondary prevention in the four remaining patients. In the asymptomatic patients, the lead was removed in five patients. In the remaining patients, 1 patient was on warfarin, 2 were on antiplatelet therapy, and in 3 patients the medication was unknown. After malposition was diagnosed, three additional patients were treated with warfarin. In conclusion, if timely removal of a malpositioned lead in the left ventricle is not preformed, lifelong anticoagulation with warfarin can be recommended as the first choice therapy and lead extraction reserved in case of failure or during concomitant surgery.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2008
Pamela S. Douglas; Bijoy K. Khandheria; Raymond F. Stainback; Neil J. Weissman; Eric D. Peterson; Robert C. Hendel; Michael Blaivas; Roger D. Des Prez; Linda D. Gillam; Terry Golash; Loren F. Hiratzka; William G. Kussmaul; Arthur J. Labovitz; JoAnn Lindenfeld; Frederick A. Masoudi; Paul H. Mayo; David Porembka; John A. Spertus; L. Samuel Wann; Susan E. Wiegers; Ralph G. Brindis; Manesh R. Patel; Michael J. Wolk; Joseph M. Allen
The American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF) and the American Society of Echocardiography (ASE) together with key specialty and subspecialty societies, conducted an appropriateness review for stress echocardiography. The review assessed the risks and benefits of stress echocardiography for several indications or clinical scenarios and scored them on a scale of 1 to 9 (based upon methodology developed by the ACCF to assess imaging appropriateness). The upper range (7 to 9) implies that the test is generally acceptable and is a reasonable approach, and the lower range (1 to 3) implies that the test is generally not acceptable and is not a reasonable approach. The midrange (4 to 6) indicates a clinical scenario for which the indication for a stress echocardiogram is uncertain. The indications for this review were drawn from common applications or anticipated uses, as well as from current clinical practice guidelines. Use of stress echocardiography for risk assessment in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) was viewed favorably, while routine repeat testing and general screening in certain clinical scenarios were viewed less favorably. It is anticipated that these results will have a significant impact on physician decision making and performance, reimbursement policy, and will help guide future research.
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2010
Jerry D. Estep; Raymond F. Stainback; Stephen H. Little; Guillermo Torre; William A. Zoghbi
Recent advances in the field of left ventricular device support have led to an increased use of left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) in patients with end stage heart disease. The primary imaging modality to monitor patients with LVADs has been echocardiography. The purpose of this review is to highlight the clinical role of echo and other noninvasive imaging modalities in the assessment of cardiac structure and function in patients with pulsatile and continuous flow LVADs. In addition, we discuss the role of imaging with emphasis on echo to detect LVAD dysfunction and device related complications.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013
Robert C. Hendel; Manesh R. Patel; Joseph M. Allen; James K. Min; Leslee J. Shaw; Michael J. Wolk; Pamela S. Douglas; Christopher M. Kramer; Raymond F. Stainback; Steven R. Bailey; John U. Doherty; Ralph G. Brindis
The past several decades have seen rapid and extensive changes in the practice of cardiology, especially in the innovation and utilization practices of imaging, interventional, and electrophysiology procedures. Enhanced radionuclide imaging techniques, evolution of echocardiography, development of
Heart Rhythm | 2013
Andrea M. Russo; Raymond F. Stainback; Steven R. Bailey; Andrew E. Epstein; Paul A. Heidenreich; Mariell Jessup; Suraj Kapa; Mark S. Kremers; Bruce D. Lindsay; Lynne Warner Stevenson
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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