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Dive into the research topics where William C. Sheldon is active.

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Featured researches published by William C. Sheldon.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Influence of the Internal-Mammary-Artery Graft on 10-Year Survival and Other Cardiac Events

Floyd D. Loop; Bruce W. Lytle; Delos M. Cosgrove; Robert W. Stewart; Marlene Goormastic; George W. Williams; Leonard A.R. Golding; Carl C. Gill; Paul C. Taylor; William C. Sheldon; William L. Proudfit

We compared patients who received an internal-mammary-artery graft to the anterior descending coronary artery alone or combined with one or more saphenous-vein grafts (n = 2306) with patients who had only saphenous-vein bypass grafts (n = 3625). The 10-year actuarial survival rate among the group receiving the internal-mammary-artery graft, as compared with the group who received the vein grafts (exclusive of hospital deaths), was 93.4 percent versus 88.0 percent (P = 0.05) for those with one-vessel disease; 90.0 percent versus 79.5 percent (P less than 0.0001) for those with two-vessel disease; and 82.6 percent versus 71.0 percent (P less than 0.0001) for those with three-vessel disease. After an adjustment for demographic and clinical differences by Cox multivariate analysis, we found that patients who had only vein grafts had a 1.61 times greater risk of death throughout the 10 years, as compared with those who received an internal-mammary-artery graft. In addition, patients who received only vein grafts had 1.41 times the risk of late myocardial infarction (P less than 0.0001), 1.25 times the risk of hospitalization for cardiac events (P less than 0.0001), 2.00 times the risk of cardiac reoperation (P less than 0.0001), and 1.27 times the risk of all late cardiac events (P less than 0.0001), as compared with patients who received internal-mammary-artery grafts. Internal-mammary-artery grafting for lesions of the anterior descending coronary artery is preferable whenever indicated and technically feasible.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983

Coronary artery surgery in women compared with men: Analyses of risks and long-term results

Floyd D. Loop; Leonard R. Golding; Julie P. Macmillan; Delos M. Cosgrove; Bruce W. Lytle; William C. Sheldon

A surgical experience with 2,445 consecutive women who underwent isolated bypass grafting was analyzed for comparison with 18,079 consecutive men. Severe or unstable angina occurred preoperatively in 60% of women and 45% of men (p less than 0.001). Despite less three vessel disease (44 versus 56%, p less than 0.001) and better left ventricular contraction (normal in 60% of women and 53% of men [p less than 0.001]), women had a higher operative mortality rate (2.9 versus 1.3%). When matched for age, severity of angina and extent of coronary atherosclerosis, women still had twice the operative mortality of men. In matched patients, body surface area was the strongest predictor of operative risk, even when the model was adjusted for gender. When the model was adjusted for body surface area, gender was not an important predictor of operative death. The smaller size of women, rather than their sex, appears to explain the difference in operative mortality. After a mean interval of 2 years, women had a lower overall graft patency rate (76.4%) than men (82.1%) (p less than 0.001). At 5 and 10 years postoperatively, a higher percent of men were angina-free. Yet, survival for women (90.6%) and for men (93.0%) at 5 years, and at 10 years (78.6 and 78.2%, respectively) was not dissimilar.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

Ergonovine maleate provocative test for coronary arterial spasm

Frederick A. Heupler; William L. Proudfit; Mehdi Razavi; Earl K. Shirey; Richard Greenstreet; William C. Sheldon

Ergonovine maleate was evaluated as a provocative agent for inducing coronary spasm during coronary arteriography. The study group consisted of 98 patients with either mild fixed obstructions of coronary luminal diameter (less than 50 percent) or normal coronary arteriograms. The test was considered positive if the drug precipitated severe coronary spasm. A positive ergonovine test occurred in 10 of 11 patients with Prinzmetals variant angina (P < 0.02). Two of these patients had a transmural myocardial infarction in the distribution of the spastic artery. Ergonovine tests were negative in (1) the 15 control patients with no clinically suspected coronary artery disease (P < 0.001), (2) 63 of 66 patients with angina-like chest pain (P < 0.001), and (3) all 6 patients with myocardial infarction and no history of Prinzmetals variant angina (P < 0.05). No major complications occurred as a result of this test. Thus, ergonovine maleate test is a safe, sensitive and specific method for reproducing coronary spasm in patients with Prinzmetals variant angina and no major coronary obstructions. The results suggest that coronary spasm can be implicated as a cause of myocardial infarction in patients with normal coronary arteriograms who also have Prinzmetals variant angina. Coronary spasm was not demonstrated in patients who had normal coronary arteriograms and a history of myocardial infarction as an isolated clinical event. Also, coronary spasm could not be demonstrated in the majority of patients who had angina-like chest pain and no major coronary obstruction.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1987

Clinical and angiographic features of coronary artery disease after chest irradiation

Paul T. McEniery; Khosrow Dorosti; William A. Schiavone; Thomas J. Pedrick; William C. Sheldon

Coronary artery disease (CAD) developed in 15 patients at a mean of 16 years (range 3 to 29) after chest irradiation. The mean dose of radiation was 42 +/- 7 grays; irradiation was performed for Hodgkins disease in 9 patients, lymphoma in 2, breast carcinoma in 3 and cystic hygroma in 1 patient. Mean age was 48 years (range 26 to 63) at diagnosis of CAD; 4 patients were younger than 35 years. Nine were women. Ten presented with angina, 3 with acute myocardial infarction, 1 patient with syncope and 1 with dyspnea. Twelve had no more than 2 risk factors of atherosclerosis. At coronary angiography, 8 had at least 50% diameter narrowing of the left main coronary artery and 4 had severe ostial stenosis of the right coronary artery. Eight patients also had valvular heart disease, 4 pericardial disease and 4 complete heart block. Mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 67 +/- 11% (range 53 to 80%). Nine had undergone coronary artery bypass grafting, but surgery was difficult or impossible in 3 because of severe mediastinal and pericardial fibrosis. Radiation-associated CAD is characterized by a high incidence of left main and right ostial coronary disease and often occurs in women with relatively few conventional risk factors for CAD.


American Heart Journal | 1983

Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery (Bland-White-Garland syndrome) in adult patients: Long-term follow-up after surgery

Douglas Moodie; Derek A. Fyfe; Carl C. Gill; Sebastian A. Cook; Bruce W. Lytle; Paul C. Taylor; Rita Fitzgerald; William C. Sheldon

Congenital anomalous origin of the left coronary artery arising from the pulmonary artery, or the Bland-White-Garland syndrome (BWGS), is an uncommon but frequently lethal lesion of both children and adults.’ Although approximately 80 % to 90% of patients develop congestive heart failure and die in infancy, some patients may present as adolescents or adults.*z3 Although often asymptomatic, many adults with BWGS demonstrate evidence of previous myocardial infarction and frequently exhibit ischemic patterns when evaluated with stress electrocardiography or stress thallium-201 myocardial imaging.4-6 Several reports of recurrent arrhythmias7 or sudden death2s8 in such patients have been published. Most clinicians recognize the need for surgical intervention. Surgical approaches have included reimplantation of the anomalous left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery to the aorta,g ligation of the anomalous left coronary artery from inside the pulmonary artery,‘O or ligation of the left coronary artery combined with saphenous vein grafting to the anterior descending coronary artery.” No data are currently available which demonstrate the superiority of one surgical approach over another in adult patients. This report describes the presentation, evaluation, and long-term follow-up in 10 adult patients with BWGS following various methods of surgical repair.


Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases | 1975

Surgical treatment of coronary artery disease: Pure graft operations, with a study of 741 patients followed 3–7 Yr

William C. Sheldon; Gustavo Rincon; Augusto D. Pichard; Mehdi Razavi; Chalit Cheanvechai; Floyd D. Loop

This report reviews the experience with bypass graft surgery in the pure form, without associated cardiac procedures, in 6828 patients operated upon from 1967 through 1974. The hospital mortality rate in this group was 1.4%. The incidence of definite perioperative myocardial infarction was 6.9% prior to 1971, and 4.1% in the past 3 yr. Graft patency in postoperative studies performed an average of over 12 mo after surgery was 83.6%, and 89% of patients had one or more functioning grafts. In a subgroup of 741 consecutive patients operated upon with pure graft techniques from 1967 through 1970, survival seemed to be improved when compared to another group of similar, but nonoperated patients. The average annual mortality rate was 3.3% per yr in the surgical group (including surgical mortality) compared to 8.8% per year in the medical group. Differences in survival were most striking in patients with isolated anterior descending, double and triple vessel involvement. In the 741-patient subgroup the incidence of new occlusions of grafted arteries was related to the severity of the lesion(s) for which the operation was performed, and unrelated to graft patency. Arteriographically demonstrated new occlusions of ungrafted arteries were infrequent, and few patients developed significant new lesions during the period of observation. Symptomatic improvement is related to completeness of revascularization as determined by postoperative arteriography.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1977

Internal mammary artery graft for ischemic heart disease. Effect of revascularization on clinical status and survival.

Floyd D. Loop; Manuel J. Irarrazaval; Johan J. Bredée; Wayne Siegel; Paul C. Taylor; William C. Sheldon

Four hundred consecutive patients, 80 percent of whom had multiple vessel obstruction, received a single internal mammary artery graft (121 patients) alone or combined with vein grafts (279 patients) in 1971 and 1972. Four patients died during or within 30 days of the operation. Sixteen patients had intraoperative infarction; three died. Arteriography was performed postoperatively (mean 12 months) in 254 patients, and 248 of 261 internal mammary artery grafts (95 percent) and 195 of 237 vein grafts (82 percent) were patent. Follow-up was complete (mean interval 38 months); all 80 patients with single vessel disease are alive, and the 3 year survival rate for patients with double and triple vessel disease was 98.7 and 94.4 percent, respectively. Comparison of longevity of 741 patients who had received vein grafts in 1967 to 1970 with that of 400 patients with internal mammary artery grafts (1971 to 1972) indicates greater survival for the recent series (P less than 0.004). Factors responsible for improved survival include (1) reduced operative mortality, (2) fewer intraoperative infarctions, (3) more complete revascularization, and (4) higher patency rate of the internal mammary artery graft.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1975

Coronary arteriographic findings in 1,000 women under age 50

C.Charles Welch; William L. Proudfit; William C. Sheldon

In a consecutive series of 1,000 women under age 50 examined by coronary cinearteriography principally for evaluation of chest pain, 236 had at least 50 percent narrowing of one or more coronary arteries. The youngest, and the only patient who died, was 26 years old. The anterior descending coronary artery was the vessel most frequently involved; the right coronary artery was most often totally occluded. The amount of arterial involvement seemed to be related to the duration of symptoms. Only 10 percent of women with serum cholesterol levels under 200 mg/100 ml had significant coronary artery disease, whereas 44 percent of those with levels over 275 mg/100 ml had significant disease. Electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial infarction was uncommon in women with single vessel disease, but left ventriculograms disclosed that additional patients had areas of decreased contractility. Eleven of 46 women with electrocardiographically diagnosed myocardial infarction had no significant coronary artery disease. The cause of the electrocardiographic finding remained obscure in some. Although there was an excellent correlation of clinical diagnoses with arteriographic findings in women thought not to have angina pectoris, only half of those thought to have angina pectoris had significant coronary artery disease. This finding may be a major reason for recommending coronary arteriography for the evaluation of angina-like pain in women under age 50.


Circulation | 1973

Vein Graft Surgery for Coronary Artery Disease: Survival and Angiographic Results in 1,000 Patients

William C. Sheldon; Gustavo Rincon; Donald B. Effler; William L. Proudfit; F. Mason Sones

One thousand patients were operated upon with vein graft techniques for severe coronary artery obstructions between May 1967 and July 1970, with a hospital mortality rate of 4% and a 5.6% incidence of angiographically confirmed in-hospital myocardial infarctions. Postoperative angiograms, performed in 619 of the survivors, revealed patency of one or more vein grafts in 84.2% of patients, and 82.5% of all grafts were patent in studies performed 1 to 49 months after surgery.The hospital survivors were followed for 22 to 60 months; only three patients were lost to follow-up. The survival curve for this group of patients was compared with that of another group of 469 patients who also had severe coronary artery disease and were potential surgical candidates, but were studied in an earlier period and did not have surgical treatment. The annual rate of attrition for each of the four years of follow-up in the surgical group averaged 4.8% per year (2.5% per year excluding hospital mortality), and 9.3% per year in the nonsurgical group. Remission of symptoms correlated closely with the completeness of revascularization.Myocardial revascularization with vein graft techniques can be accomplished successfully and with low risk in the majority of properly selected patients, resulting in a significant improvement in symptoms, as well as in long-term survival.


Circulation | 1970

Cinecoronary Arteriography in Young Men

C.Charles Welch; William L. Proudfit; F. Mason Sones; Earl K. Shirey; William C. Sheldon; Mehdi Razavi

Of a group of 723 men less than 40 years old who underwent cinecoronary arteriography primarily for evaluation of chest pain, 357 (49%) were found to have at least 50% narrowing of one or more coronary arteries. The youngest person was 17 years old.The distribution of lesions in the young men was similar to that found earlier in a study of persons not selected by age. The anterior descending coronary artery was most frequently affected; the right coronary artery was most often totally occluded. No total occlusions of the left main coronary artery were seen.Electrocardiographic evidence of myocardial infarction, found in 109 patients, was less common with disease of the circumflex or right coronary arteries than with disease of the anterior descending coronary artery. This observation was confirmed by examination of left ventriculograms for areas of decreased contractility. Six patients had no significant arterial narrowing.The extent of arterial involvement seemed to be related to the duration of symptoms in patients who had angina pectoris or myocardial infarctions.Clinical diagnoses correlated well with the angiographic findings, particularly in those men considered to be normal and those with typical angina pectoris. Addition of atypical features or prolonged pain decreased the degree of correlation.Only 20% of those with cholesterol levels less than 200 mg/100 ml had significant lesions, whereas 81% with levels more than 275 mg/100 ml had such findings.

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