Tomás F. Cianciulli
Argerich Hospital
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Tomás F. Cianciulli.
World Journal of Cardiology | 2010
Tomás F. Cianciulli; María Cristina Saccheri; Jorge A. Lax; Alejandra Bermann; Daniel Ernesto Ferreiro
Echocardiography is the most common diagnostic method for assessing atrial function but the technique has some limitations. Traditionally, assessment of left atrial function has been performed by measuring volumes with 2D echocardiography. Additionally, it can be assessed with transmitral Doppler and pulmonary vein Doppler. Recently, an alternative method has been incorporated, namely, measurement of myocardial deformation with color tissue Doppler-derived strain. However, this method has several limitations, such as suboptimal reproducibility, angle-dependence, signal artifacts and the fact that it only measures regional strain and does not obtain information about the curved portion of the atrial roof. To overcome these limitations in the quantification of atrial function, the use of speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) strain has been proposed. This technique is not derived from Doppler but rather from 2D echocardiography; it is angle-independent and allows one to measure global as well as regional atrial strain. In this editorial, we describe the physical and pathophysiological concepts of STE and underline the clinical usefulness of this new technique.
European Journal of Echocardiography | 2009
Tomás F. Cianciulli; María Cristina Saccheri; Jorge A. Lax; Robert Guidoin; Ze Zhang; Juan E. Guerra; Horacio A. Prezioso; Luis A. Vidal
Intermittent aortic regurgitation (AR) is an unusual complication after a mechanical prosthetic replacement. We describe a rare case of intermittent dysfunction of a bileaflet mechanical aortic prosthetic valve in a 41-year-old man with a 21 mm Tri-technologies prosthetic valve implanted 4 years before. Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) before discharge was normal and prosthesis-patient mismatch was ruled out. He was admitted to our hospital because of mild dyspnoea at effort. TTE revealed acute and severe intermittent AR. The patient underwent surgery, during which abnormal proliferation of subvalvular pannus overgrowth on the inflow aspect of the prosthesis was found impeding the normal closure of one of the discs of the prosthesis. The pannus formation was resected, the Tri-technologies prosthetic valve was prophylactic explanted and a 23 mm St Jude Medical bileaflet mechanical prosthesis valve was implanted. We describe the role of TTE and the limitation of the cinefluoroscopy in the diagnosis of Tri-technologies prosthetic dysfunction.
Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2013
María Cristina Saccheri; Tomás F. Cianciulli; Jorge A. Lax; Juan Gagliardi; Guillermo Cáceres; Alejandra E. Quarin; Isaac Kisinovsky; Paula Rozenfeld; Ricardo Reisin
Fabry disease (FD) is characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Conventional echocardiography is not sensitive enough to perform the preclinical diagnosis To assess whether longitudinal myocardial strain of the left ventricle (LV), using speckle tracking, is useful to detect early myocardial involvement in FD. Forty‐four patients with FD who were diagnosed with genetic testing were prospectively included and were compared to a sex‐matched control group. They were divided into three groups: 22 with LVH (Group I), 22 without LVH (Group II), and 22 healthy volunteers (Group III). LV longitudinal strain was measured from the apical views. An ANOVA test was used for multiple comparisons for variables with a normal distribution, and a Kruskal–Wallis test was used for variables with non‐Gaussian distribution. Longitudinal LV strain was different in the three groups: it was ≥−15% in at least one segment in all Group I patients, in 50% of patients of Group II and in no patient of Group III. Seventy percent of the segments with abnormal strain in Group II were located in the basal regions (32/46). These findings show that the presence of at least one strain value ≥−15% demonstrates subclinical myocardial dysfunction in patients with preclinical FD. Longitudinal myocardial LV strain measured with speckle tracking is a useful tool to detect early myocardial involvement in young patients with FD. This information allows the detection and treatment of myocardial dysfunction at an early stage, which is of high clinical importance.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2014
Alberto Cozzarin; Tomás F. Cianciulli; Robert Guidoin; Ze Zhang; Jorge A. Lax; María Cristina Saccheri; Alejandro García Escudero; Jorge E. Estrada
Percutaneous transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) has become an alternative to surgical therapy for patients with severe aortic stenosis and high operative risk, but it is associated with specific complications. We report the case of a 72-year-old man who underwent the procedure without complications; however, 45 days after the procedure, he was admitted to the hospital with symptoms of heart failure secondary to severe mitral regurgitation. Necropsy findings showed prosthesis malposition and perforation of the anterior mitral leaflet caused by the contact of the stent of the CoreValve prosthesis (Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN). We discuss TAVR complications, specifically regarding low positioning of the prosthetic valve.
Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2009
María Cristina Saccheri; Tomás F. Cianciulli; Jorge A. Lax; Juan E. Guerra; Héctor J. Redruello; Fabio L. Weich Glogier; Juan A. Gagliardi; Adriana N. Dorelle; Horacio A. Prezioso; Luis A. Vidal
Background: Tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) parameters of peak myocardial velocities (S′, E′, and A′) has been employed to assess the regional left ventricular myocardial function. The global function index (GFI) derived from TDI has been recently employed to distinguish the different etiologies of left ventricular hypertrophy. Objective: To analyze whether the GFI or individual TDI parameters of peak myocardial velocities (S′, E′, and A′) allows detecting different degrees of regional myocardial dysfunction in the most frequent forms of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Methods: GFI = (E/E′)/S′ (where E is the peak transmitral flow velocity, E′ is the early diastolic myocardial velocity, and S′ is the peak systolic myocardial velocity) and TDI peak myocardial velocities was measured in the septal and lateral mitral annulus in 101 patients with HCM (mean age 47.5 ± 14 years, 58 women) and in age‐matched group of 30 healthy controls (mean age 46 ± 6 years, 16 women). Results: Forty‐five patients had nonobstructive asymmetric septal HCM, 20 patients had a subaortic gradient ≥ 30 mm Hg, 21 p. had apical HCM, and 15 p. had other forms of HCM (midventricular, symmetric, and biventricular). All patients with HCM exhibited a decrease in early diastolic (E′) and systolic (S′) myocardial velocities, both in the lateral and septal‐mitral annulus border, but more pronounced in septal‐mitral annulus. Septal GFI was higher in HCM patients than in healthy subjects (1.8 (1.1–2.5) and (0.57 (0.31–0.92), respectively, P < 0.001), but no differences were seen when different forms of HCM were compared. Conclusions: In a selected population of patients with HCM and a preserved left ventricular(LV) systolic function, GFI and individual TDI parameters of peak velocity (S′, E′, and A′) and E/E′ ratio were similar in different forms of HCM, indicating that in all patients with HCM there is regional systolic and diastolic myocardial dysfunction, regardless of the location of hypertrophy. (ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Volume 26, July 2009)
Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2016
Tomás F. Cianciulli; Juan Bautista Soumoulou; Jorge A. Lax; María Cristina Saccheri; Alberto Cozzarin; Martín Alejandro Beck; Daniel Ernesto Ferreiro; Horacio A. Prezioso
Papillary fibroelastoma (PFE) is a benign cardiac tumor that is currently detected more often due to the technological improvements in echocardiography.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2014
Tomás F. Cianciulli; Héctor J. Redruello; Miguel Rubio; Ricardo L. Poveda Camargo; Miguel Angel Granja; Carlos Barrero; Víctor Mauro
Images in Cardiology Surgical Rescue of Embolized Amplatzer Septal Occluder Tomas Francisco Cianciulli, MD, FACC, H ector Jorge Redruello, MD, Miguel Angel Rubio, MD, Ricardo Luis Poveda Camargo, MD, Miguel Angel Granja, MD, Carlos Manuel Barrero, MD, FACC, and Victor Miguel Mauro, MD Department of Cardiology, Clinica Bazterrica, Buenos Aires, Argentina Researcher of the Ministry of Health, Government of the City of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Clinica Bazterrica, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2006
Tomás F. Cianciulli; María Cristina Saccheri; Isabel V. Konopka; Dora F. Serans; Rafael S. Acunzo; Alejandro Mario García Escudero; Osvaldo Horacio Masoli; Horacio A. Prezioso
BackgroundMost patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) have asymmetric septal hypertrophy and among them, 25% present dynamic subaortic obstruction. Apical HCM is unusual and mid-ventricular HCM is the most infrequent presentation, but both variants may be associated to an apical aneurysm. An even more rare presentation is the coexistece mid-ventricular and apical HCM. This case is a combination of obstructive HCM with mid-ventricular HCM and an apical aneurysm, which to date, has not been reported in the literature.Case presentationThe patient is a 49 year-old lady who presents a combination of septal asymmetric hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and midventricular HCM, a subaortic gradient of 65 mm Hg and a midventricular gradient of 20 mm Hg, plus an apical aneurysm. Her clinical presentation was an acute myocardial infarction in June 2005. One month after hospital discharge, the electrocardiogram (ECG) showed a right bundle branch block (RBBB) with no Q waves or ST segment elevation. Coronary angiography revealed normal coronary arteries, left ventricular hypertrophy and an apical aneurysm.ConclusionThis case is a rare example of an asymptomatic patient with subaortic and mid-ventricular hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, who presents a myocardial infarction and normal coronary arteries, and during the course of her disease develops an apical aneurysm.
European Journal of Echocardiography | 2008
Ricardo J. Méndez; Tomás F. Cianciulli; Coloma Parisi; Horacio A. Prezioso; Luis A. Vidal
Thrombosis in a native aortic valve is a rare complication which may lead to systemic embolization. A few cases of aortic thrombosis in previously abnormal valves have been described. In this report, we describe a 42-year-old male who suffered two acute ischaemic attacks, one in the upper right limb and another in the cerebral territory supplied by the left sylvian artery, from a thrombus that developed in a bicuspid and stenotic aortic valve. The diagnosis was made with transthoracic and transoesophageal echocardiography, and the patient subsequently underwent surgery. In cases of bicuspid aortic valves, we should think of thrombosis as a possible complication with its resulting risk of embolism, and assess such patients with transthoracic and transoesophageal echocardiography, thus enabling their early detection and treatment.
European Journal of Echocardiography | 2010
Tomás F. Cianciulli; Edgar R. Rubinetti; María Cristina Saccheri; Sergio D. Llanos Dethinne; Horacio A. Prezioso
A 57 year-old male patient was admitted to our echocardiography laboratory to rule out thrombus in left atrium before electrical cardioversion of atrial fibrillation. Transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) demonstrated in the bicaval view, the right atrial appendage measured 10 x 5 cm, area: 42 cm(2), volume: 229 mL (Figure, left). A quick injection of 15 cc of echo-contrast fluid (shaken saline/1 cc air), delivered via an antecubital vein, showed filling the right atrial appendage aneurysm (Figure, right). Idiopathic giant congenital aneurysm of the right atrium appendage is a very rare malformation. TEE with contrast echocardiography is very useful in the non-invasive diagnosis of giant right atrial appendage aneurysm.