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Dive into the research topics where Ricky M. Schneider is active.

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Featured researches published by Ricky M. Schneider.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Prognostic significance of severe narrowing of the proximal portion of the left anterior descending coronary artery

Lloyd W. Klein; William S. Weintraub; Jai B. Agarwal; Ricky M. Schneider; Paul A. Seelaus; Robert I. Katz; Richard H. Helfant

To determine the prognostic importance of significant narrowings involving the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), 866 medically treated patients with significant coronary artery disease (CAD) were followed after cardiac catheterization for a mean of 17 months (range 1 to 46). Coronary narrowings in all patients were evaluated based on site relative to large branches and on angiographic severity. Prognosis was best predicted by the presence of at least 70% diameter reductions in the LAD before the first 2 large branches (chi 2 = 16, p = 0.0001). At 3 years, there was a 94% cumulative survival rate in patients with less than 70% stenoses at this location, but an 82% survival rate in patients with 70% or more stenoses (p less than 0.0001). In addition, although the presence of proximal LAD narrowings was the best predictor of prognosis in patients with a low global ejection fraction, this was not so in patients with normal ejection fractions, as this subgroup had an excellent overall prognosis. Thus, the presence and severity of significant stenoses in the proximal LAD are stronger predictors of prognosis than stenoses elsewhere in the major coronary arteries. The presence of an angiographically significant narrowing in this anatomic location is highly correlated with an increased 1- to 3-year mortality rate.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Rate of left ventricular functional recovery by radionuclide angiography after exercise in coronary artery disease

Ricky M. Schneider; William S. Weintraub; Lloyd W. Klein; Paul A. Seelaus; Jai B. Agarwal; Richard H. Helfant

To characterize determinants of the rate of recovery of left ventricular (LV) function after exercise-induced ischemia, sequential postexercise radionuclide angiography was performed prospectively in 38 consecutive patients with documented coronary artery disease (CAD). In each patient new or increased regional asynergy developed or absolute ejection fraction decreased at least 4% during exercise. Twenty patients showed immediate recovery of LV function after exercise (group 1) and 18 showed delayed recovery (group 2). Ejection fraction in the first postexercise period was significantly greater in group 1 (65 +/- 12%) than in group 2 (55 +/- 11%) (p less than 0.01). The mean number of coronary arteries with at least 70% diameter narrowing was greater in group 2 (2.7 +/- 0.5) than in group 1 (2.0 +/- 0.9) (p = 0.026); CAD score was also greater in group 2 than in group 1 (p = 0.005). The increase in LV end-diastolic volume from rest to end exercise was greater in group 2 than in group 1 (p = 0.005); neither the change in LV volume nor the change in heart rate or blood pressure after exercise separated the groups. The only independent predictor of the rate of functional recovery was the degree of exercise-induced regional myocardial asynergy (p less than 0.001). Thus, exercise radionuclide angiography in patients with CAD provides a model for evaluating postischemic myocardial function. Delayed functional recovery is associated with extensive exercise-induced regional asynergy as a result of severe CAD and is not primarily influenced by hemodynamic changes.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1986

Effects of previous myocardial infarction on measurements of reactive hyperemia and the coronary vascular reserve

Lloyd W. Klein; Jai B. Agarwal; Ricky M. Schneider; George A. Hermann; William S. Weintraub; Richard H. Helfant

The measurement of coronary vascular reserve by the reactive hyperemic response to ischemia has been advocated as a practical method of assessing the physiologic significance of coronary stenoses. Because the concept of measuring coronary blood flow during maximal vasodilation assumes a normal arteriolar network and viable myocardium, the presence of previous myocardial infarction may cause a significant decrease in the coronary reserve unrelated to the severity of a coronary stenosis itself. To determine the potential importance of this effect, rest and hyperemic coronary blood flow were measured in 14 dogs in the regions subtended by the left anterior descending and left circumflex coronary arteries. One hour occlusion of the left anterior descending artery followed by reperfusion was performed in 10 dogs; the 4 remaining dogs in which no occlusion was performed served as control animals (group 3). One week later, rest and hyperemic blood flow measurements were repeated in all 14 dogs. Of the 10 dogs undergoing left anterior descending artery occlusion, 5 had a large infarct (group 1) and 5 had a small infarct (group 2). In group 1 in the 1 week study, both the coronary reserve in the left anterior descending artery zone and the ratio of the coronary reserve in this zone and the left circumflex artery zone decreased compared with values before occlusion (from 425 +/- 134 to 150 +/- 34% and from 1.56 +/- 0.40 to 0.68 +/- 0.31, respectively; both p = 0.007).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1985

Relation between left ventricular global and regional function and extent of myocardial ischemia in the canine heart.

Makoto Akaishi; Ricky M. Schneider; Richard J. Mercier; Franco Naccarella; Jair B. Agarwal; Richard H. Helfant; William S. Weintraub

To develop a quantitative relation between the overall severity of acute ischemia and left ventricular global and regional function, two minor axis internal diameters and myocardial wall thickness were determined using ultrasonic crystals in 10 open chest dogs with carotid-left anterior descending artery cannulation. The overall extent of ischemia produced by graded stenosis of the cannulation system was estimated by total myocardial blood flow deficit, calculated using radioactive microspheres and a balloon-reservoir perfusion technique permitting precise separation of ischemic from nonischemic tissue. Although cardiac output and left ventricular stroke work were maintained through chamber enlargement until total myocardial blood flow deficit was about 10%, ejection indexes of left ventricular function decreased progressively with increasing ischemia and correlated inversely with total myocardial blood flow deficit (r = -0.55 to -0.73). Ejection indexes of left ventricular global function correlated directly with regional function in the ischemic zone (r = 0.67 to 0.83), although global function decreased at a far slower rate than regional contraction during progressive coronary stenosis with an ischemic region comprising about 25% of total left ventricular weight. During myocardial ischemia, regional dysfunction resulted in progressive global contractile dysfunction; left ventricular hemodynamic status was maintained until ischemia was severe.


American Heart Journal | 1987

Assessment of coronary artery stenoses by digital subtraction angiography: A pathoanatomic validation

Lloyd W. Klein; Jai B. Agarwal; Mitchell C. Rosenberg; Gregory Stets; William S. Weintraub; Ricky M. Schneider; George A. Hermann; Richard H. Helfant

Automated computer assessment of coronary stenoses from digital subtraction angiographic images comparing geometric and videodensitometric algorithms was performed. Digital subtraction angiograms were acquired on a 512 X 512 X 8 bit pixel matrix at 8 frames/second. Fifteen segments from nine human cadaver coronary arteries, with lesions ranging from 0% to 97%, were analyzed. Hand injections of radiopaque dye were made during the pulsatile infusion of saline solution at physiologic pressures and flows. Individual frames best demonstrating a lesion were digitally magnified and the stenosis was measured; the operator identified only the segment of interest. The artery was then injected with a rapidly hardening gel during the same rate of infusion as that used during image acquisition. Histologic sections were cut at 2 mm intervals after fixation and elastic stains applied. Photographs of the section comparable to the site determined from the angiogram were taken, and hand planimetry by a blinded investigator was performed. There was an excellent correlation between histopathology and videodensitometry (r = 0.93; p less than 0.0001). The two geometric algorithms studied also had very good correlations (r = 0.90 and 0.84) with pathology. Two experienced angiographers, despite excellent agreement with each other, had lower correlations with pathology than any of the three computer algorithms studied (r = 0.79 and 0.83, respectively), although this difference did not attain statistical significance. This in vitro model simulating in vivo conditions validates the use of automated videodensitometric and geometric computer algorithms to interpret coronary angiography and assess severity of stenosis.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Medical and surgical survival in Coronary artery disease in the 1980s

Gary J. Vigilante; William S. Weintraub; Lloyd W. Klein; Ricky M. Schneider; Paul A. Seelaus; Grant V.S. Parr; Jai B. Agarwal; Richard H. Helfant

The survival of 1,657 patients with angiographically proved coronary artery disease (CAD) was studied for 4 years (mean 2.0 +/- 1.2) during the 1980s to examine the prognostic importance of multiple clinical variables. One hundred of the 1,049 medically treated patients (9.5%) and 31 of the 608 surgically treated patients (5.1%) died. Multivariate analyses revealed that the strongest prognostic variables for survival in the medical group were indexes of left ventricular function (p less than 0.0001), severity of coronary stenoses (p less than 0.0001) and age (p = 0.005). However, only age (p less than 0.0001) was a significant prognostic variable in the surgically treated group. This study emphasizes the lack of prognostic significance of left ventricular function indexes and severity of coronary stenoses in surgically treated patients with CAD. These results continue the trend toward improved surgical survival shown in recent years.


American Heart Journal | 1986

The significance of underlying coronary stenosis for recovery of myocardial function after transient ischemia in the dog

Makoto Akaishi; William S. Weintraub; Richard J. Mercier; Jai B. Agarwal; Ricky M. Schneider; Richard H. Helfant

The rate of recovery of myocardial function after transient coronary occlusion (CO) has been considered to depend on the duration and frequency of CO. However, underlying coronary stenosis has not been previously demonstrated to be a determinant of the rate of myocardial functional recovery. Thus, 12 open-chest dogs were studied to examine the influence of critical coronary stenosis (CCS) on functional recovery after transient CO. Regional functional recovery following 2-minute CO was examined under two different conditions in eight dogs: patent coronary artery stenosis and fixed CSS that exhausted coronary reserve but did not cause a deficit in resting coronary flow or regional function. Following reperfusion with the coronary artery patent, regional function in the ischemic zone was fully recovered (100 +/- 18.0% of pre-CO value) at 30 seconds and was significantly increased (postischemic hypercontraction) compared to pre-CO value at 1 and at 2 minutes after reperfusion. Following CO and reperfusion in the setting of CCS, regional functional recovery was delayed and regional function remained depressed until 2 minutes after reperfusion. No cumulative effect on functional recovery following repeated 2-minute CO was demonstrated in a control group of four dogs. We conclude that coronary artery patency is a determinant of the rate of myocardial function recovery after a transient ischemic episode, and postischemic hypercontractility was suppressed by the underlying CCS.


American Heart Journal | 1986

Prospective evaluation of the severity of coronary artery disease with exercise radionuclide angiography and electrocardiography

William S. Weintraub; Ricky M. Schneider; Paul A. Seelaus; David H. Wiener; Jai B. Agarwal; Richard H. Helfant

To evaluate the utility of exercise radionuclide angiography (RNA) and electrocardiography in assessing the severity of coronary artery disease (CAD), 185 patients undergoing coronary angiography were studied prospectively. To avoid work-up bias and to provide an appropriate control group, all patients were simultaneously scheduled for exercise RNA and electrocardiography and for coronary arteriography. All test results were interpreted blinded to other data. Of multiple exercise variables analyzed by stepwise linear discriminant analysis, the independent predictors of disease severity were exercise ejection fraction, ST segment change, and maximum heart rate. These three variables were used to create a set of four equations that determine probabilities of zero, one-, two-, or three-vessel disease (VD). The noninvasive estimate of number of VD in each patient was compared to the angiographic result. Patients without significant CAD were classified correctly 71% of the time, while those with three-VD were predicted correctly in 80%. Fully 90% of patients with predicted three-VD had two- or 3-VD. Conversely, 84% of patients predicted to have zero VD had zero or one-VD. Thus the combined use of exercise RNA and ECG data permits assessment of the presence and severity of CAD.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1987

Improved survival with coronary bypass surgery in patients with three-vessel coronary disease and abnormal left ventricular function: Matched case-control study in patients with potentially operable disease

Gary J. Vigilante; William S. Weintraub; Lloyd W. Klein; Ricky M. Schneider; Paul A. Seelaus; Grant V.S. Parr; Gerald M. Lemole; Jai B. Agarwal; Richard H. Helfant

Recent studies have suggested that patients with three-vessel coronary disease and abnormal left ventricular function have better survival rates with bypass surgery than with medical therapy alone. Case-control studies may give accurate survival estimates, but to be valid, selection biases must be taken into account. A matched case-control method was used to compare survival patterns in patients treated medically or surgically during the 1980s. Fifty medical patients with potentially operable coronary disease and 46 surgical patients were matched for significant three-vessel disease and abnormal ventricular function. These two groups had no significant differences with regard to 24 variables, including age (64 +/- 8 versus 63 +/- 10 years), chest pain class, congestive heart failure signs, ejection fraction (36 +/- 8 versus 37 +/- 9 percent), segmental wall score, or a coronary score evaluating lesion site and severity. There were slight differences between the two groups with regard to congestive heart failure symptoms (p = 0.04). Patients undergoing bypass surgery had improved four-year survival rates compared with the medical group (89 versus 55 percent; p = 0.01). Thus, this study used an effective case-control method to suggest that, in the 1980s, coronary surgery improves prognosis substantially in surgically approachable patients with severe coronary disease and ventricular dysfunction.


American Heart Journal | 2006

A cooperative network of trained sites for the conduct of a complex clinical trial: A new concept in multicenter clinical research

Robert M. Davidson; J. Frederick McNeer; Leanne Logan; Michael B. Higginbotham; Jerome Anderson; Joseph L. Blackshear; Alan Chu; Bruce Hettleman; Frank McGrew; Roderick Meesse; Christopher M. O'Connor; Ricky M. Schneider; Galen S. Wagner

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Jai B. Agarwal

University of Pennsylvania

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Lloyd W. Klein

University of Pennsylvania

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Paul A. Seelaus

University of Pennsylvania

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Makoto Akaishi

University of Pennsylvania

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Gary J. Vigilante

University of Pennsylvania

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George A. Hermann

University of Pennsylvania

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Grant V.S. Parr

University of Pennsylvania

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