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Dive into the research topics where Steven F. Horowitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven F. Horowitz.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

A new noninvasive index to predict sustained ventricular tachycardia and sudden death in the first year after myocardial infarction: Based on signal-averaged electrocardiogram, radionuclide ejection fraction and holter monitoring

J. Anthony Gomes; Stephen L. Winters; Debra Stewart; Steven F. Horowitz; Mark R. Milner; Philip Barreca

A prospective study of the prognostic significance of the signal-averaged electrocardiogram (ECG), left ventricular function and 24 hour Holter ECG monitoring was performed in 102 patients (age 63 +/- 11 years) after myocardial infarction. The signal-averaged ECG (40 Hz high pass bidirectional filtering) was obtained 10 +/- 6 days after the acute myocardial infarction and all three tests were performed within 72 hours of each other. Ejection fraction was determined by radionuclide ventriculography. An abnormal signal-averaged ECG was seen in 44% of patients; abnormal ejection fraction (less than 40%) in 52% and high grade ectopic activity (greater than or equal to 10 ventricular premature depolarizations/h or couplets, or nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, or a combination of these) in 62%. During a 12 +/- 6 month follow-up period, 15 patients (14.7%) had an arrhythmic event defined as sustained ventricular tachycardia or sudden cardiac death, or both. The event rates were higher in patients with an abnormal versus a normal signal-averaged ECG (29 versus 3.5%, p = 0.003), an abnormal versus a normal ejection fraction (24 versus 6%, p = 0.001) and the presence versus the absence of high grade ectopic activity (23 versus 9%, p = 0.09). Patients with an abnormal signal-averaged ECG and an abnormal ejection fraction had a significantly higher (p = 0.0007) event rate than did patients in whom both the tests were normal (36 versus 0%; odds ratio 30.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

Atrial kinetics and left ventricular diastolic filling in the healthy elderly

Rohit Arora; Josef Machac; Martin E. Goldman; Robert N. Butler; Richard Gorlin; Steven F. Horowitz

A delay of left ventricular isovolumic relaxation and decrease in myocardial compliance may result in a decline of measured early filling rates in elderly subjects. Previous studies of diastolic function, however, have not excluded coronary artery disease or addressed the contribution of atrial contraction to diastole. The present study evaluated radionuclide-derived diastolic variables in 13 healthy elderly volunteers aged 75 +/- 6 years without symptoms or risk factors for coronary disease who had normal findings on the stress electrocardiogram, stress gated blood pool imaging and two-dimensional echocardiogram. Results were compared with those of a group of 10 healthy young volunteers aged 26 +/- 5 years. High count, 32 frame, double-buffered gated blood pool acquisitions were obtained at rest in the left anterior oblique view with an RR interval variation less than 5%. Left ventricular time-activity curves were analyzed and flow-volume loops for each group were constructed. In the healthy elderly: peak early diastolic filling rate is decreased, time of peak early filling and time to first third of diastolic filling are delayed, and peak late left ventricular filling rate and percent of atrial filling volume are augmented, suggesting an adaptive response of the atria to diminished left ventricular compliance.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1983

Can noninvasive exercise test criteria identify patients with left main or 3-vessel coronary disease after a first myocardial infarction?*

Randolph E. Patterson; Steven F. Horowitz; Calvin Eng; Jose Meller; Stanley J. Goldsmith; Augusto D. Pichard; Doris A. Halgash; Michael V. Herman; Richard Gorlin

This study attempts to determine whether exercise treadmill testing with clinical, electrocardiographic, and thallium-201 myocardial perfusion imaging data can identify which patients have left main or 3-vessel (anatomically high-risk) coronary artery disease (CAD) after their first transmural myocardial infarct (MI). Twelve exercise test criteria for high-risk disease were compared in 40 patients referred for cardiac catheterization; 34 had a history of chest pain and 17 had angiographically defined high-risk CAD. A thallium image defect outside the vascular distribution of the MI was the most reliable criterion to distinguish patients with high-risk CAD (p = 0.00052 for Fishers exact test of discrimination). Thallium imaging was somewhat more sensitive (92 versus 65%, p = 0.108) when patients with negative thallium imaging criteria who failed to achieve 85% of the age-predicted maximal heart rate were excluded. Failure to achieve 85% of predicted heart rate was by itself a useful criterion for detecting high-risk CAD (p = 0.017), especially in patients not taking propranolol (p = 0.004). Development of positive S-T segment depression at less than 70% predicted heart rate also discriminated left main or 3-vessel disease from less extensive CAD (p = 0.016). Other criteria failed to discriminate significantly between high-risk and less extensive CAD in patients after their first MI (p greater than 0.05). S-T segment depression (p = 0.199) or chest pain (p = 0.577) during exercise testing were particularly unreliable. Further, none of the criteria for high-risk CAD were influenced by irreversible left ventricular dysfunction. It is concluded that patients with thallium imaging defects outside the region of the infarct, decreasing blood pressure during exercise, failure to achieve 85% of predicted heart rate, or S-T depression at less than 70% of predicted heart rate have a high probability of having left main or 3-vessel disease. Patients without these criteria have a very low probability of having high-risk CAD and probably do not need coronary angiography for the purpose of excluding these high-risk coronary lesions after a first MI.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984

Relation between exercise-induced changes in ejection fraction and systolic loading conditions at rest in aortic regurgitation

Martin E. Goldman; Milton Packer; Steven F. Horowitz; Jose Meller; Randolph E. Patterson; Marrick L. Kukin; Louis E. Teichholz; Richard Gorlin

To examine the role of systolic wall stress at rest in determining left ventricular performance during exercise in aortic regurgitation (AR), systolic wall stress (measured by M-mode echocardiography) was related to changes in left ventricular function during maximal exercise (evaluated by radionuclide ventriculography) in 30 patients with chronic aortic regurgitation. Of these 30 patients, 7 had a normal exercise response, defined as an absolute increase in ejection fraction of 5% or greater (Group I) and 23 had abnormal exercise response, defined as no change (less than 5% change) or a decline (less than or equal to 5%) in ejection fraction (Group II). Patients in Group I had a significantly lower radius/wall thickness ratio (2.5 +/- 0.2 versus 3.1 +/- 0.1, p less than 0.01) and lower peak systolic wall stress (123 +/- 11 versus 211 +/- 12 X 10(3) dynes/cm2, p less than 0.01) than patients in Group II. An increase in ejection fraction during exercise was seen in 6 of the 9 patients with normal systolic wall stress at rest (less than 150 X 10(3) dynes/cm2), but in only 1 of 21 patients with elevated systolic wall stress (p less than 0.001). Peak systolic wall stress at rest varied linearly, and inversely with changes in left ventricular ejection fraction during exercise (r = 0.60, p less than 0.001). Groups I and II did not differ in ejection fraction at rest, clinical symptoms or maximal work load achieved.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1981

Quantification of valve regurgitation by radionuclide angiography before and after valve replacement surgery

Joann Urquhart; Randolph E. Patterson; Milton Packer; Stanley J. Goldsmith; Steven F. Horowitz; Robert S. Litwak; Richard Gorlin

Radionuclide gated cardiac blood pool imaging was used to quantify the severity of valve regurgitation in 20 patients, by calculating the ratio of left ventricular to right ventricular stroke counts (end-diastolic minus end-systolic counts in right and left ventricular regions of interest). This ratio (the stroke index ratio) was substantially higher in patients with aortic and mitral regurgitation (3.91 +/- 1.45) than in a control group of 10 patients without regurgitation (1.32 +/- 0.15), p less than 0.001. The stroke index ratio correlated closely (r = 0.947) with measurements of regurgitant fraction derived from simultaneous determinations of total and forward stroke volumes during cardiac catheterization. After aortic and mitral valve replacement in 18 patients, the stroke index ratio decreased from 4.03 +/- 1.46 to 1.38 +/- 0.23 (p less than 0.001), a value not significantly different from that observed in patients without regurgitation. All three patients with residual postoperative regurgitation had a stroke index ratio greater than 2 standard deviations above the mean values for the control group (greater than 1.62), whereas the remaining 15 patients, who had no evidence of regurgitation, had values within the normal range. Therefore, radionuclide gated blood pool scanning provides a noninvasive method of quantifying valve regurgitation and assessing the results of medical or surgical interventions.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1984

Practical diagnosis of coronary artery disease: A Bayes' theorem nomogram to correlate clinical data with noninvasive exercise tests☆

Randolph E. Patterson; Calvin Eng; Steven F. Horowitz

Recent technologic advances have presented the physician with many diagnostic tests for coronary artery disease (CAD).’ Bayes’ theorem can be used to correlate clinical and noninvasive test data to evaluate patients for CAD.2-4 This rather complex Bayesian analysis remains underused in clinical practice because of the continuing need for a practical format. Thus, our purpose was to develop a Bayesian nomogram to diagnose CAD by integrating clinical data with the results of 1 or more noninvasive tests. This report illustrates its clinical usefulness in deciding indications for any test to diagnose CAD in different patients.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1987

Relation of late potentials to ejection fraction and wall motion abnormalities in acute myocardial infarction

J. Anthony Gomes; Steven F. Horowitz; Mark Millner; Josef Machac; Stephen L. Winters; Phillip Barreca

A prospective study was performed to determine the relation between quantitative signal-averaged parameters and ejection fraction (EF) and wall motion abnormalities determined by radionuclide ventriculography in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). In 50 patients with AMI, signal-averaging of the surface QRS complex (200 beats; filter frequencies of 40 to 250 Hz and 80 to 250 Hz) was performed and radionuclide ventriculograms were recorded 8 +/- 5 days after AMI. Twenty-five of these patients (50%) had anterior wall AMI, 20 (40%) had inferior wall AMI and 5 (10%) had non-Q-wave AMI. The duration of the low-amplitude signals of less than 40 microV, the signal-averaged QRS complex and the root-mean-square voltage of the terminal 40 ms were determined. In addition to EF determinations, wall motion abnormalities were assessed for the presence or absence of dyskinetic, akinetic and hypokinetic segments. A wall motion score was constructed by separating the left and right ventricles into 21 segments in the anterior, left anterior oblique and lateral views. On the basis of the presence or absence of late potentials, the patients were separated into 2 groups: group I comprised 15 patients (30%) with late potentials and group II 35 patients (70%) without late potentials. The low-amplitude signals (49 +/- 12 vs 24 +/- 8 ms) and the signal-averaged QRS complex (122 +/- 20 vs 96 +/- 15 ms) were significantly longer and the root-mean-square voltage (13.8 +/- 4.9 vs 54.3 +/- 27.4 microV) significantly lower in group I than in group II.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1981

Noninvasive detection of left ventricular dysfunction with a portable electrocardiographic gated scintillation probe device

Arnold M. Strashun; Steven F. Horowitz; Stanley J. Goldsmith; Louis E. Teichholz; Adam Dicker; Kenneth Miceli; Richard Gorlin

A comparison of left ventricular function data derived from a low cost, portable electrocardiographic gated scintillation probe (nuclear stethoscope) with conventional scintiangiographic data was performed in 68 patients. Ejection fraction correlation (r = 0.86, p less than 0.005) was better in patients with uniform wall motion than in those with regional asynergy (r = 0.68 p less than 0.01). Probe variables reflecting systolic emptying rates, diastolic filling rates and timing intervals, and relative volumes analyzed in combination provided 100 percent sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value in detecting abnormal left ventricular performance. The results suggest that radionuclide angiography with an electrocardiographic gated scintillation probe is a sensitive, rapid and relatively inexpensive portable method of screening for cardiac dysfunction with a yield similar to that from the more costly gamma camera derived scintiangiogram.


Journal of Electrocardiology | 1992

The effect of stress and fatigue on cardiac rhythm in medical interns

Jonathan S. Stamler; Martin E. Goldman; Joseph Gomes; Deborah Matza; Steven F. Horowitz

Twenty-four-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring was used to determine the incidence of arrhythmia while on-call and its relationship to stress and fatigue in 20 healthy medical interns. Mitral valve prolapse was present in 8 of 19 interns (42%). Heart rates ranged from a maximum of 103-167 beats/min (135 +/- 16) to a minimum of 38-61 beats/min (47 +/- 5). Interns had at least one episode of sinus tachycardia/h during 57% +/- 21% (range, 8-88%) of their hours on-call. Atrial premature beats (APB) were present in 19 of 20 (95%) and ventricular premature beats (VPB) in 12 of 20 (60%) subjects. APB/h ranged from 0 to 1.2 (0.4 +/- 0.3) and VPB/h from 0 to 23 (2 +/- 6). Three interns had multiform VPB and two had ventricular couplets. More APB/h occurred in interns under greater stress (0.5 +/- 0.4/h vs 0.3 +/- 0.1/h, p < 0.05) and combined stress and fatigue (0.6 +/- 0.4/h vs 0.2 +/- 0.2/h, p < 0.01). More VPB/h (5 +/- 9/h vs 0.5 +/- 0.6/h, p < 0.05) and higher (Lown) grade ventricular ectopy (2.3 +/- 1.6 vs 0.8 +/- 1.1; p < 0.05) occurred in interns under greater combined stress and fatigue. Mitral valve prolapse, sleep deprivation and caffeine intake were not associated with increased arrhythmia. The authors conclude that (1) rapid sinus tachycardia is frequent in interns while on-call and (2) interns experiencing greater stress and fatigue have more APB/h, VPB/h, and higher grade ventricular ectopy. These data support the notion that stress and fatigue may contribute to arrhythmia in healthy normal subjects.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Response of the right ventricle to exercise in isolated mitral stenosis

Marc Cohen; Steven F. Horowitz; Josef Machac; Bruce P. Mindich; Valentin Fuster

Eight patients in sinus rhythm, with varying degrees of isolated mitral stenosis (mitral valve area 0.6 to 1.3 cm2 and total pulmonary vascular resistance 5.0 to 17.5 U-m2), underwent supine rest and symptom-limited exercise radionuclide ventriculography to determine right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular ejection fraction (EF). Cardiac catheterization with hemodynamic measurements at rest and at peak exercise was performed within 24 hours of radionuclide ventriculography. Four of the 8 patients underwent corrective mitral surgery resulting in normal mean pulmonary artery pressures and total pulmonary vascular resistance at rest. These 4 patients had repeat radionuclide ventriculography at rest and during exercise 1 to 2 months after surgery. Preoperatively, all 8 patients had an abnormal exercise RVEF response (mean change +/- standard deviation [SD], -5.0 +/- 4.5%), coincident with an increase in mean pulmonary artery pressure during exercise (mean change, 15 +/- 5.0 mm Hg). The change in RVEF from rest to exercise, corrected for duration of exercise, correlated with peak exercise mean pulmonary artery pressure (r = -0.71, p = 0.05), as well as total pulmonary vascular resistance at rest (r = -0.82, p = 0.02). Postoperatively, all 4 patients who underwent surgical correction showed a normal RVEF response during exercise (mean change +/- SD, +6.8 +/- 4.0%). Thus, in patients with acquired mitral stenosis and no coronary artery disease (1) loading conditions and not contractility are prime determinants of RV exercise response, and (2) an exercise-induced decrease in RVEF may be a sensitive marker for increased total pulmonary vascular resistance and pulmonary hypertension.

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Josef Machac

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Martin E. Goldman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Andrew Van Tosh

Beth Israel Medical Center

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Calvin Eng

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Jose Meller

City University of New York

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