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Dive into the research topics where Xavier Jeanrenaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Xavier Jeanrenaud.


The Lancet | 1992

Effects of dual-chamber pacing in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

Xavier Jeanrenaud; Jean-Jacques Goy; Lukas Kappenberger

Although attempts have been made to treat hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy with right ventricular pacing, the usual treatment for those refractory to medical therapy is open heart surgery. To assess in detail the value of non-surgical therapy the effects of acute and long-term dual-chamber pacing were investigated in 13 patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy refractory to medical treatment. In the first part of the study, atrioventricular (AV) sequential pacing was found to reduce peak subaortic pressure gradient in 12 of the 13 patients, from 82 (SD 42) to 47 (34) mm Hg (p less than 0.002), without concomitantly reducing aortic blood pressure or cardiac output. This effect was related to AV interval. In the second part of the study, a dual-chamber pacemaker was implanted in 8 patients and programmed to the optimum AV interval for the individual (50-90 ms). Patients were followed up for up to 62 months. Pacing resulted in a significant and long-lasting reduction in severity of angina pectoris (from NYHA class 3 to 1) and dyspnoea (from NYHA class 3 to 2). Echocardiography showed no significant change in septal thickness or left ventricular contractility but there was a trend to a spontaneous decrease in obstruction. In patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, synchronised and ventricular pacing at optimum AV interval for the individual reduces the intraventricular pressure gradient and improves functional tolerance. Since the effect is longlasting, such pacing should be deemed an alternative therapy to surgery in selected cases.


Neurology | 1996

Prognosis after stroke followed by surgical closure of patent foramen ovale A prospective follow-up study with brain MRI and simultaneous transesophageal and transcranial Doppler ultrasound

Gérald Devuyst; Julien Bogousslavsky; Patrick Ruchat; Xavier Jeanrenaud; Paul-André Despland; Franco Regli; Nicole Aebischer; Hakan Karpuz; Veronica Castillo; Michel Guffi; Hossein Sadeghi

Background: The risk of stroke and the long-term prognosis of recurrent strokes in young patients with patent foramen ovale (PFO) are not well known. For this reason, the treatment of these patients remains empirical. An alternative treatment to prolonged antithrombotic therapy may be surgical closure of the PFO. Methods: Thirty patients (20 men and 10 women) with stroke and PFO were prospectively selected among 138 patients with stroke and PFO for a study of surgical closure of PFO at our center. Eligible patients were <60 years old, had negative results of a systematic search for another cause of stroke (first criterion), and met two of the four following criteria: (1) recurrent clinical cerebrovascular events or multiple ischemic lesions on brain MR, (2) PFO associated with an atrial septal aneurysm, (3) >50 microbubbles counted in the left atrium on contrast transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), and (4) Valsalva maneuver or cough preceding the stroke. Patients selected in this manner for surgery were considered to be a subgroup with a higher risk of stroke recurrence. Results: All patients had a direct suture of PFO while under cardiopulmonary bypass without recorded early or delayed significant complication. All patients underwent a new brain MRI and TEE simultaneous with transcranial Doppler ultrasonography after contrast injection at 8 +/- 3 months after surgery. After a mean follow-up of 2 years without antithrombotic treatment, no recurrent cerebrovascular event (stroke or transient ischemic attack [TIA]) and no new lesion on MRI had developed. Postoperative contrast TEE and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography showed that two patients had residual interatrial right-to-left shunting, although much smaller than before surgery, associated with single versus double continuous suture. Conclusions: Our study of 30 selected stroke patients with surgical suture of PFO showed a stroke recurrence rate of 0% and no significant complication. Residual right-to-left shunting may be avoided by double continuous suture of the PFO. In the absence of controlled studies to guide individual therapeutic decisions, our findings show that PFO closure can be done safely and may be considered to avoid recurrence in selected patients with long life expectancy and presumed paradoxic embolism. NEUROLOGY 1996;47: 1162-1166


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

Acute Hemodynamic Effects of Atrioventricular Pacing at Differing Sites in the Right Ventricle Individually and Simultaneously

Thomas A. Buckingham; Reto Candinas; Jürg Schläpfer; Nicole Aebischer; Xavier Jeanrenaud; Jacqueline Landolt; Lukas Kappenberger

We hypothesized that pacing, which provided a rapid uniform contraction of the ventricles with a narrower QRS, would produce a better stroke volume and cardiac output (CO). We sought to study whether pacing simultaneously at two sites in the right ventricle (right ventricular apex and outflow tract) would provide a narrower QRS and improved CO in 11 patients undergoing elective electrophysiology studies. Patients were studied by transthoracic echocardiography measurement of CO using the Doppler flow velocity method in normal sinus rhythm, AOO pacing (rate 80), DOO pacing in the right ventricular apex (AV delay 100 ms). DOO pacing in the right ventricular outflow tract, and DOO pacing at both right ventricular sites simultaneously in random order. The COs were 5.42 ± 1.83, 5.61 ± 1.97. 5.67 ± 1.6. 5.84 ± 1.68. and 5.86 ± 1.52 L/min, respectively (no significant difference by repeated measures analysis of variance [ANOVA]). The QRS durations were 0.09 ± 0.02, 0.09 ± 0.02. 0.13 ± 0.027, 0.13 ± 0.03, and 0.11 ± 0.03 sees respectively. Repeated measures ANOVA showed that the QRS duration significantly increased with right ventricular apex or right ventricluar outflow tract pacing compared to sinus rhythm and AOO pacing (P < 0.001) but then diminished with pacing at both sites (P < 0.01). QRS duration was not correlated with CO, however the change in QRS duration correlated significantly with the change in CO when pacing was performed at the two right ventricular sites simultaneoasly. In conclusion, during DOO pacing, there was a trend for pacing in the right ventricular outflow tract or both sites to improve the CO compared to the right ventricular apex. With simultaneous pacing at both ventricular sites, the QRS narrowed. Further studies will be required to see if this approach has value in patients with poor left ventricular function or congestive heart failure.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

Dual Chamber Pacing in Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy: Beneficial Effect of Atrioventricular Junction Ablation for Optimal Left Ventricular Capture and Filling

Xavier Jeanrenaud; Jürg Schläpfer; Martin Fromer; Nicole Aebischer; Lukas Kappenberger

Clinical improvement with dual chamber pacing bas largely been reported in patients suffering from hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and mainly attributed to the reduction of the subaortic pressure gradient. To be effective, pacing must induce a permanent and complete capture of the LV. In two patients of our collective, symptoms (angina and dyspnea NYHA Class III and/or syncopes) persisted or relapsed despite pacing. This was related to the inability to obtain full LV capture due to a too‐short native PR interval. RF ablation of the AV junction was therefore performed in botb patients, resulting in permanent AV block in one and prolonged PR interval up to 310 ms in the second. Pacing was thereafter associated with an immediate and significant clinical improvement related to permanent LV capture, whatever the patients activity. After RF ablation, the AV delay was set up to induce the best LV filling, as assessed by Doppler analysis of mitral flow. Our observations suggest that RF ablation or modification of the AV junction can be a successful procedure in some patients with residual or recurrent symptoms, when the latter result from a loss of capture or from the inability to program an AV delay tbat does not compromise the active component to LV filling. Doppler echocardiography is a simple and effective mean to assess the hemodynamic effect of AV interval modulation in this setting.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Surgical prophylaxis of recurrent stroke in patients with patent foramen ovale: A pilot study

M. Guffi; J. Bogousslavsky; Xavier Jeanrenaud; G. Devuyst; H. Sadeghi

Prevention of recurrent stroke in adults with patent foramen ovale represents a therapeutic challenge. Antiplatelet or anticoagulant treatment is widely introduced, but its exact indication is not known. In this pilot study, eight men and three women with previous ischemic cerebral events underwent direct surgical closure of the patent foramen ovale. Mean age was 39.4 (from 30 to 58) years. No coexisting cause of stroke was found after extensive investigations, including blood and coagulation tests, echocardiography, 24-hour three-lead electrocardiographic monitoring, extracranial and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, and cerebral angiography. Criteria for operation also included at least two of the following: atrial septal aneurysm, multiple cerebral infarcts, a history of multiple cerebral events, and Valsalva strain before stroke. Before operation, one patient had two shunts (1 patent foramen ovale, 1 intrapulmonary shunt). No intraoperative or postoperative complications occurred, but a few hours after operation transient arrhythmias developed in two patients without atrial fibrillation, hemodynamic instability, or embolism. During a median follow-up of 12.2 months, no patient had recurrent stroke. All patients prospectively underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging and contrast echocardiography with simultaneous transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. A residual right-to-left interatrial shunt, smaller than the preoperative one, was observed in only one patient, whereas no lesion was seen on magnetic resonance imaging. Our study suggests that surgical closure of patent foramen ovale in patients with presumed paradoxic embolism is safe, with no recurrent stroke in the first year of follow-up. Further studies are needed to evaluate the long-term prognosis of patients with versus without operation and to define the role of operation as an alternative to prolonged antithrombotic treatment.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

Regional Wall Motion During Pacing for Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy

Xavier Jeanrenaud; Lukas Kappenberger

In order to assess the influence of right ventricular stimulation on LV contraction sequence in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM), we performed a regional wall‐motion analysis of the left ventricle by comparing normal His‐Purkinje activation to pacing from the right ventricular apex. In 9 patients (5 males and 4 females, mean age 61 ± 9 years) assessed after a mean pacing period of 12 weeks (range 7–24 weeks), AV sequential pacing induced a 52% reduction in maximal pressure gradient from 76 ± 36 to 40 ± 28 mmHg (P < 0.01) as determined by Doppler examination. Regional wall‐motion analysis of the left ventricle was computed from digitized two‐dimensional echocardiographic images by means of the area shrinking method. Pacing induced a significant reduction of total septal area shrinking from 25%± 17% to 12%± 17% (P < 0.005). A tendency toward paradoxical septal motion was observed in one patient only. The apex showed no significant variation. A 6% increase in area shrinking was observed at the posterior wall and lateral free wall, from 38%± 13% to 43%± 10% (P < 0.05). Pacing did not significantly alter the global ejection fraction. A direct correlation between the magnitude of subaortic pressure gradient reduction and that of septal motion changes was found in a majority of patients. In conclusion, dual chamber pacing reduces septal wall motion in patients with HOCM obstructive cardiomyopathy. Tins might be one of the mechanisms involved in the reduction of LV outflow tract obstruction.


International Journal of Cardiac Imaging | 1998

An echocardiographic and magnetic resonance imaging comparative study of right ventricular volume determination

Nicole Aebischer; Reto Meuli; Xavier Jeanrenaud; Jacques Koerfer; Lukas Kappenberger

Assessment of right ventricular volume and function is important in many clinical settings involving heart or lung disease. However, the complexity of the right ventricular anatomy has prevented accurate volume determination by two-dimensional echocardiography. In the present study, 5 models incorporating standard echocardiographic views, were used to determine right ventricular volume in 10 human subjects. Two models were contingent on the true crescentic appearance of the right ventricle, whereas the remaining 3 calculated the right ventricular volume as a pyramid, an ellipsoid or other tapering geometrical figures, respectively. Subsequently, echocardiographic right ventricular volumes were compared to magnetic resonance imaging derived volumes. Correlation analysis and agreement measurement between the echocardiographic and magnetic resonance end-diastolic volume were performed in 10 out of 10 subjects and in 9 out of 10 subjects for the end-systolic volume. The 2 crescentic models resulted in the most reliable estimation of right ventricular volume. Those findings suggest that models based on right ventricular anatomical landmarks are feasible and should be preferred in echocradiographic studies.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1995

Cardiac perforation after surgical repair of pectus excavatum.

Anna Pircova; Nicole Sekarski-Hunkeler; Xavier Jeanrenaud; Patrick Ruchat; Hossein Sadeghi; Peter Frey; Maurice Payot

Five days after surgical repair of pectus excavatum, this 7-year-old boy had a right-sided Kirschner wire protruding beneath the skin. The wire was repositioned blindly. Severe congestive heart failure developed. Surgical exploration showed a pierced right atrium, a torn septal leaflet of the tricuspid valve and noncoronary aortic cusp, and a large traumatic ventricular septal defect. The outcome and the indications and possible complications of surgery are discussed.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Usefulness of the echocardiographic velocity ratio for detection of significant aortic stenosis

Hakan Karpuz; Mahmut Özşahin; Nicole Aebischer; Jean-Jacques Goy; Lukas Kappenberger; Xavier Jeanrenaud

In this study, which included 56 patients with aortic stenosis, the predictive value of the fractional shortening velocity ratio was evaluated. This Doppler index allowed detection of significant aortic stenosis (0.53 cm2/m2), with a positive predictive value of 93% and a negative predictive value of 92% for a cutoff value of 0.8.


European Heart Journal | 2012

Aortic pseudo-aneurysm caused by complete dehiscence of the left coronary artery 7 years after a composite mechanical-valved conduit aortic root replacement (Bentall operation).

Pierre Monney; Cyril Pellaton; Salah D. Qanadli; Xavier Jeanrenaud

A 65-year-old man was admitted with rapidly progressive dyspnoea. He had been operated on for a type A aortic dissection 11 years earlier (supracommissural replacement), and 4 years later underwent a Bentall operation for dehiscence of the proximal graft anastomosis and severe aortic regurgitation. On admission, high jugular venous pressure and pulmonary oedema were …

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Pierre Vogt

University of Lausanne

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