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Dive into the research topics where William G. O'Callaghan is active.

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Featured researches published by William G. O'Callaghan.


Circulation | 1988

Coronary perfusion during acute myocardial infarction with a combined therapy of coronary angioplasty and high-dose intravenous streptokinase.

Richard S. Stack; Christopher M. O'Connor; Daniel B. Mark; Tomoaki Hinohara; Harry R. Phillips; M M Lee; N M Ramirez; William G. O'Callaghan; Charles A. Simonton; Eric B. Carlson

Two hundred and sixteen patients with acute myocardial infarction were treated with immediate infusion of high-dose (1.5 million units) intravenous streptokinase followed by emergency coronary angioplasty. The infarct lesion was crossed and dilated in 99% and persistent coronary perfusion after the procedure was achieved in 90% (including 3% with significant residual stenosis). Total in-hospital mortality was 12%. Multivariable analysis showed a higher hospital mortality with cardiogenic shock (41% vs 5% without shock), older age, lower left ventricular ejection fraction, and female sex. Final patency of the infarct-related vessel was determined by follow-up in-hospital cardiac catheterization. Coronary reocclusion occurred in 11% (symptomatic in 7%, treated with emergency angioplasty or bypass surgery; silent in 4%, treated medically). Of the surviving patients with successful initial establishment of infarct vessel patency, 94% were discharged from the hospital with an open infarct artery or a bypass graft to the infarct vessel. There was significant improvement in both ejection fraction (44% to 49%; p less than .0001) and regional wall motion in the infarct zone (-3.0 SD to -2.4 SD; p less than .0001) among patients with persistent coronary perfusion and insignificant residual stenosis at the time of the follow-up cardiac catheterization. Thus, a treatment strategy for acute myocardial infarction that includes immediate administration of streptokinase followed by emergency coronary angioplasty, and coronary bypass surgery when necessary, results in a high rate of early and sustained patency of the infarct-related vessel.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1987

Frequency, diagnosis and clinical characteristics of patients with multiple accessory atrioventricular pathways

Paul G. Colavita; Douglas L. Packer; Joyce C. Pressley; Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; William G. O'Callaghan; Marcel R. Gilbert; Lawrence D. German

Multiple accessory atrioventricular (AV) pathways were documented in 52 of 388 patients (13%) who underwent detailed electrophysiologic evaluation. Multiple AV pathways were identified during intraoperative mapping or electrophysiologic study by different patterns of ventricular preexcitation during atrial fibrillation, flutter or atrial pacing with different delta-wave morphologic and ventricular activation patterns; different sites of atrial activation during right ventricular pacing or orthodromic reciprocating tachycardia; or preexcited reciprocating tachycardia using a second pathway as the retrograde limb of the tachycardia. A logistic model was used to determine which clinical, electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic variables were associated with multiple AV pathways. Right free-wall and posteroseptal accessory AV pathways were more common in patients with multiple AV pathways and were frequently associated. Multivariate logistic regression identified Ebsteins anomaly, and a history of preexcited reciprocating tachycardia as significant variables (p less than 0.0001). Pathway location was not subjected to statistical analysis because of confounding variables.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1988

Late restenosis after emergent coronary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction: comparison with elective coronary angioplasty

Charles A. Simonton; Daniel B. Mark; Tomoaki Hinohara; David S. Rendall; Harry R. Phillips; Robert H. Peter; Victor S. Behar; Yihong Kong; William G. O'Callaghan; Christopher M. O'Connor; Robert M. Califf; Richard S. Stack

The late restenosis rate after emergent percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction was assessed by performing outpatient follow-up cardiac catheterization in 79 (87%) of 91 consecutive patients who had been discharged from the hospital with a successful coronary angioplasty. The majority of patients (90%) received high dose intravenous thrombolytic therapy with streptokinase in addition to angioplasty. Similar follow-up data were obtained in 206 (90%) of 228 consecutive patients who had successful elective angioplasty during the same period. The interval from angioplasty to follow-up was 28 +/- 9 weeks for the myocardial infarction group and 30 +/- 11 weeks for the elective group. Baseline clinical variables were similar for both the myocardial infarction and elective groups except for a higher percentage of men in the infarction group (81 versus 63%, p = 0.001). The number of coronary lesions undergoing angioplasty and the incidence of intimal dissection were similar, but multivessel angioplasty was more common in the elective group (13 versus 4%, p = 0.02). The rate of in-hospital reocclusion was higher in the patients receiving angioplasty for myocardial infarction (13 versus 2%, p = 0.0001). At the time of late follow-up after hospital discharge, the patients with myocardial infarction were more often asymptomatic (79 versus 55%, p = 0.0001), and the rate of angiographic coronary restenosis was lower for the infarction group both overall (19 versus 35%, p = 0.006) and when multivessel angioplasty patients were excluded (19 versus 33%, p = 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1986

Characterization of retrograde conduction by direct endocardial recording from an accessory atrioventricular pathway

William G. O'Callaghan; Paul G. Colavita; G. Neal Kay; Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; Marcel R. Gilbert; Lawrence D. German

Accessory pathway electrograms are rarely recorded in patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. In one patient, during electrophysiologic study, simultaneous local ventricular (V) accessory pathway (AP) and atrial (A) deflections were recorded during bipolar catheter endocardial mapping over the pathway. Analysis of changes in electrographic intervals during performance of the ventricular extrastimulus technique allowed characterization of the retrograde conduction properties of the pathway. As coupling intervals were decreased, an initial increase was seen in the AP2A2 interval with subsequent ventriculoatrial block between the accessory pathway and atrium. When coupling intervals were further decreased, the V2AP2 interval lengthened with ultimate block between the ventricle and accessory pathway. These findings support the concept of impedance mismatch as the cause of conduction block in accessory pathways with the distal junction of the accessory pathway being the most vulnerable.


American Heart Journal | 1985

Cardiac function in patients on chronic amiodarone therapy

Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; William G. O'Callaghan; Paul G. Colavita; Mark Stafford Smith; Lawrence D. German

Antiarrhythmic agents may depress cardiac contractility and worsen heart failure. Few data are available describing the chronic effects of amiodarone on myocardial function. To assess the effects of amiodarone on cardiac function, we studied 41 consecutive patients with first-pass or equilibrium radionuclide angiography prior to and 3 months after drug therapy was initiated. The mean heart rate, systolic blood pressure (BP), and diastolic BP were not significantly altered by treatment. The mean ejection fraction was 36% +/- 19 (mean +/- 1 SD) at the time of drug initiation and 36% +/- 17 3 months later (p less than 0.05). Nineteen patients had an ejection fraction greater than 30% and 16 had an ejection fraction less than 30%. The mean change in ejection fraction for these two subgroups showed no statistically significant difference, although a decrease in EF greater than 10% was seen in three patients (symptomatic in two), necessitating an increase in diuretic dose. No correlation between amiodarone dose and change in ejection fraction (r = -0.12, p greater than 0.05) was noted. There was no correlation between baseline ejection fraction and change in ejection fraction over this 3-month period (r = -0.36, p greater than 0.05). In summary, amiodarone does not depress left ventricular function and as a result can be used safely in patients with mild to moderate impairment of left ventricular function. In patients with stable left ventricular function, serial tests of left ventricular function may not be necessary.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Catheter atrioventricular junction ablation for recurrent supraventricular tachycardia with nodoventricular fibers

Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; William G. O'Callaghan; Paul G. Colavita; Douglas L. Packer; Marcel R. Gilbert; Lawrence D. German

Abstract Patients with nodoventricular (Mahaim) fibers are predisposed to the development of a variety of arrhythmias, which are usually amenable to pharmacologic management. 1 Closed-chest catheter atrioventricular (AV) junction albation, which has been shown to be an effective treatment for supraventricular tachycardia, 2,3 has recently been applied in a patient with tachycardia involving a Mahaim fiber. 5 We report observations in 2 cases in which tachycardia was effectively controlled using this technique, including 3-year follow-up of nodoventricular fiber conduction in 1 patient and absence of retrograde conduction in both patients. The inability of the nodoventricular fibers to conduct retrogradely has not been previously described.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1989

Utility of Introducing Ventricular Premature Complexes During Reciprocating Tachycardia in Specifying the Location of Left Free Wall Accessory Pathways

Douglas L. Packer; Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; Paul G. Colavita; William G. O'Callaghan; Lawrence D. German; Eric N. Prystowsky

The usefulness of the response to single and double ventricular premature complexes (VPCs) introduced during reciprocating tachycardia (RT) in predicting the location of a left free wall accessory pathway was studied in 55 patients with the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. One VPC introduced from the right ventricle into narrow QRS RT when the His bundle was refractory resulted in retrograde atrial preexcitation in 25 of 55 (45%) patients, while 30 (55%) showed no preexcitation. Double VPCs produced retrograde atrial preexcitation in 9 of 26 patients not responding to a single VPC. No difference in RT cycle length, AH, HV or ventriculoatrial intervals was found between those patients who did or did not show retrograde atrial preexcitation. The response to single and double VPCs during RT was related to the location of the AP. The average distance of the AP from the crux determined by intraoperative epicardial mapping in the 41 patients who underwent surgery was 2.7 +/- 0.7 mapping units (left posterolateral region) in patients showing retrograde atrial preexcitation with a single VPC, 3.6 +/- 0.7 units (at the lateral left ventricular margin) in those responding to double VPCs and 4.3 +/- 0.8 units (beyond the LV margin) in those showing no response. Left bundle--branch block (LBBB) aberrancy during RT resulted in an average 60 +/- 14 ms prolongation of the ventriculoatrial interval in 40 patients, including 5 in whom LBBB was seen only after procainamide infusion. VPCs introduced into LBBB RT resulted in significant retrograde atrial preexcitation in 6 additional patients in whom no response during normal QRS RT was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1986

Accessory Nodoventricular (Mahaim) Fibers: A Clinical Review

Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; Norman M. Ramirez; Douglas L. Packer; William G. O'Callaghan; G. Stephen Greek; Anthony L. Sintetos; Marcel R. Gilbert; Lawrence D. German


Circulation | 1985

Frequency-dependent effects of verapamil on atrioventricular nodal conduction in man.

K A Ellenbogen; Lawrence D. German; William G. O'Callaghan; P G Colavita; A C Marchese; M R Gilbert; H C Strauss


American Heart Journal | 1986

Persistent left superior vena cava: Localization of site of ectopic atrial pacemaker and associated atrioventricular accessory pathway

William G. O'Callaghan; Paul G. Colavita; G. Neal Kay; Kenneth A. Ellenbogen; James E. Lowe; Marcel R. Gilbert; Lawrence D. German

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