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Featured researches published by Yihong Kong.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 1980

Type A behavior, hostility, and coronary atherosclerosis.

Redford B. Williams; Thomas L. Haney; Kerry L. Lee; Yihong Kong; James A. Blumenthal; Robert E. Whalen

&NA; Type A behavior pattern was assessed using the structured interview and hostility level was assessed using a subscale of the Minnesota Multiphase Personality Inventory in 424 patients who underwent diagnostic coronary arteriography for suspected coronary heart disease. In contrast to non‐Type A patients, a significantly greater proportion of Type A patients had at least one artery with a clinically significant occlusion of 75% or greater. In addition, only 48% of those patients with very low scores (less than or equal to 10) on the Hostility scale exhibited a significant occlusion; in contrast, patients in all groups scoring higher than 10 on the Hostility scale showed a 70% rate of significant disease. The essential difference between low and high scorers on the Hostility scale appears to consist of an unwillingness on the part of the low scorers to endorse items reflective of the attitude that others are bad, selfish, and exploitive. Multivariate analysis showed that both Type A behavior pattern and Hostility score are independently related to presence of atherosclerosis. In this analysis, however, Hostility score emerged as more related to presence of atherosclerosis than Type A behavior pattern. These findings confirm previous observations of increased coronary atherosclerosis among Type A patients. They suggest further that an attitudinal set reflective of hostility toward people in general is over and above that accounted for by Type A behavior pattern. These findings also suggest that interventions to reduce the contribution of behavioral patterns to coronary disease risk might profitably focus especially closely on reduction of anger and hostility.


Circulation | 1978

The role of the exercise test in the evaluation of patients for ischemic heart disease.

J F McNeer; James R. Margolis; Kerry L. Lee; Joseph Kisslo; Robert H. Peter; Yihong Kong; Victor S. Behar; Andrew G. Wallace; Charles B. McCants; Robert A. Rosati

A cohort of 1472 patients who underwent both exercise stress testing and coronary angiography within six weeks was examined. The data indicated that a combination of exercise parameters is both diagnostically and prognostically important. Almost all patients (> 97%) who had positive exercise tests at Stage I or Stage II had significant coronary artery disease. More than half of these (> 60%) had three vessel disease and over 25% had significant narrowing (> 50%) of the left main coronary artery. Patients who achieved Stage IV or greater exercise durations with either negative or indeterminate ST-segment response had less than a 15% prevalence of three vessel disease and less than a 1% prevalence of left main coronary artery disease. A low risk subgroup (75% of all nonoperated patients) was identified with a twelve month survival greater than 99%. A high risk subgroup (11% of all nonoperated patients) was identified with a twelve month survival of less than 85%. The exercise test is a noninvasive, reproducible method to assess the presence and extent of anatomic disease and the prognosis when significant disease has been defined. It should be used in conjunction with other noninvasive tests to determine optimal management in patients evaluated for ischemic heart disease.


Circulation | 1974

Graded Exercise Stress Tests in Angiographically Documented Coronary Artery Disease

Alan G. Bartel; Victor S. Behar; Robert H. Peter; Edward S. Orgain; Yihong Kong

Graded exercise stress tests performed on 650 consecutive patients with proven or suspected coronary disease undergoing evaluation by cardiac catheterization were correlated with clinical, hemodynamic, and angiographic findings. Among 451 patients with significant coronary stenosis, 332 (74%) had interpretable stress tests and 65% of these were positive (sensitivity). The rate of “false positives’ was 8%.The clinical syndrome of typical angina identified significant coronary disease in 89% of the patients, and 58% of that group had a positive exercise test defined by objective electrocardiographic criteria.Patients were not eliminated from this study because of recent digitalis ingestion. Although a higher frequency of uninterpretable exercise tests was found in this group (40%), the test results reflected more severe coronary disease. None of the patients with “false positive’ tests were taking digitalis. It is concluded that recent digitalis ingestion should not be considered a contraindication for exercise stress testing.Among the patients with interpretable exercise tests, the angiographic severity of coronary artery disease correlates strongly with the frequency of positive tests (40%, 66%, and 76%, with 70% or greater occlusion of one, two or three vessels respectively). Left main coronary stenosis of 70% or greater was associated with more severe ST segment changes, inability to achieve target heart rate during stress, and a lower maximum heart rate during exercise. The angiographic occurrence of collateral vessels was related to the extent of coronary disease and was associated with a higher percentage of positive exercise tests; no protective effect of collateral circulation could be demonstrated. Patients with abnormal resting hemodynamics or left ventricular asynergy had no significant difference in the frequency of positive tests after adjustment for the angiographic severity of disease.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1983

Functional improvement of jeopardized myocardium following intracoronary streptokinase infusion in acute myocardial infarction.

Richard S. Stack; H R Phillips rd; D S Grierson; Victor S. Behar; Yihong Kong; Robert H. Peter; Judith L. Swain; Joseph C. Greenfield

The effect of reperfusion on regional left ventricular performance following acute myocardial infarction in man was determined. Intracoronary streptokinase was administered in 24 patients within 6 h of the onset of symptoms. 15 patients (62%) were successfully recanalized during the initial study. Mean percent radial shortening (%RS) in both the jeopardized and compensatory regions were determined using 23 radii from the centroid of diastolic and systolic angiographic silhouettes. Sequential measurements were obtained during repeat cardiac catheterization studies at 24 h in 19 patients and before discharge from the hospital (16 +/- 11 d) in 15 patients. At the time of the predischarge study, each acutely reperfused patient showed improvement in %RS in the jeopardized region (P = 0.01) with 56% returning to the normal range. Despite the uniform improvement in the contractile function of the jeopardized region in each reperfused patient, the global ejection fraction showed no improvement or a decrease at the time of the chronic study in 44%. This was due to a decrease in the compensatory wall motion in the uninvolved segments between the acute and chronic study in each case. Neither the %RS nor the ejection fraction changed significantly at the time of the chronic study in the patients who could not be acutely recanalized. These data indicate (a) significant salvage of jeopardized myocardium associated with recovery of contractile function in patients reperfused during the first 6 h of chest pain following acute myocardial infarction; (b) no improvement in regional or global left ventricular performance in patients who could not be reperfused acutely; and (c) the ejection fraction is strongly influenced by changes in the compensatory wall motion of the uninvolved segments and does not accurately reflect changes in the contractile function of the jeopardized myocardium.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1975

Comparison of angiographic and postmortem findings in patients with coronary artery disease

Jared N. Schwartz; Yihong Kong; Donald B. Hackel; Alan G. Bartel

The accuracy of coronary cineangiography in predicting the degree of stenosis in coronary arteries was evaluated by comparing autopsy and premortem cineangiographic findings in 25 patients. Coronary cineangiograms and autopsy specimens were reviewed independently by two cardiologists and two pathologists. Identical diagrams dividing the cononary arteries into 12 segments were used by both groups to record the location and degree of stenosis observed. Cineangiographic findings were in agreement with pathologic findings (less than 25 percent difference in cross-sectional luminal area) in 178 (79 percent) of the 226 segments examined, but overestimated the degree of stenosis in 13 (6 percent) and underestimated it in 34 (15 percent). Thus, cineangiography appears to be a reliable tool in evaluating coronary artery disease. When diagnostic errors are made, they are usually underestimations of the degree of disease; common causes of error are circumferential stenosis, eccentric lesions, obstruction of view by artifical valves and poor opacification due to severe proximal stenosis.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1971

Assessment of regional myocardial performance from biplane coronary cineangiograms

Yihong Kong; James J. Morris; Henry D. McIntosh

Abstract Bifurcations of coronary arteries provide a myriad of natural landmarks on the epicardial surface. With biplane coronary cineangiograms, these bifurcations can be located in space and followed in time. By calculating the spatial distances between bifurcations on successive cine frames, multiple epicardial segment lengths and their dynamic changes during the cardiac cycle can be determined. In 5 animals with epicardial metal markers sutured near the coronary bifurcations, epicardial segment lengths measured from opacified bifurcations correlated closely with those obtained from metal markers (SEE = 2.2%). Epicardial segment lengths were not affected by intracoronary injection of contrast medium in the first 5 to 6 cardiac cycles. Biplane coronary Cineangiograms of 11 patients were analyzed. Measurements of individual segment lengths yielded reproducible curves reflecting various phases of ventricular contraction and filling. These curves allowed quantitation and simultaneous comparison of the onset, duration, extent and rate of segment shortening in multiple and selected areas of the heart. In 5 patients, the extent of shorteing was 1 to 19 percent along the septum, 17 to 27 percent on the free wall and 10 to 15 percent at the base of the left ventricle. Mechanical activation of the left ventricle began from the antereoseptal area at the apex and progressed toward the base and the posterior surface. In 5 of 6 patients with coronary artery disease, localized abnormalities of contraction were found in areas of previous myocardial infarction or at regions supplied by the stenotic arteries. The diseased segments showed either systolic lengthening or marked reduction in rate and extent of shortening. The onset of shortening was frequently delayed. In addition to defining the anatomic details of the coronary circulation, biplane coronary cineangiograms provide a wealth of physiologic information regarding the dynamic changes in geometry, dimensions and movements of the heart. As the first step to utilizing this physiologic information, this study has demonstrated the validity, feasibility and clinical usefulness of this technique in assessing regional myocardial performance in man.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1964

Experience with “cardioversion” of atrial fibrillation and flutter

James J. Morris; Yihong Kong; William C. North; Henry D. McIntosh

Abstract Synchronized direct current countershock, “cardioversion,” was used in 70 patients on 94 occasions for reversion of atrial fibrillation or flutter. The method and anesthetic technics are described. A modification of the size and location of the electrode has decreased the incidence of minor discomfort resulting from the procedure and lowered the amount of energy necessary for successful cardioversion. In 90 of 94 episodes, or in 66 of 70 patients, the arrhythmia was restored to sinus rhythm. With a follow-up period of from 1 to 9 months, 52 of 66 patients (79%) remained in sinus rhythm. Fourteen patients (21%) reverted to atrial fibrillation despite multiple cardioversions and maximally tolerated quinidine therapy. Certain factors appear to decrease the chances of maintaining sinus rhythm: duration of fibrillation, type of valvular lesion, functional classification and previous quinidine failure. The advantages anticipated with the restoration of sinus rhythm are discussed. The emergency indication and contraindications are outlined. A broad policy of selection of patients for cardioversion is suggested. The reasons for this approach are the high degree of acute success (94%), the low incidence of complications (5%) and success in maintaining sinus rhythm (79%) for a short follow-up Period.


Circulation | 1983

Outcome in one-vessel coronary artery disease.

Robert M. Califf; Y Tomabechi; Kerry L. Lee; Harry R. Phillips; David B. Pryor; Frank E. Harrell; Phillip J. Harris; Robert H. Peter; Victor S. Behar; Yihong Kong; Robert A. Rosati

We analyzed the clinical outcomes in 688 patients with isolated stenosis of one major coronary artery. The survival rate among patients with disease of the right coronary artery (RCA) was higher than that among patients with left anterior descending (LAD) or left circumflex coronary artery (LCA) disease. The survival rate among patients in all three anatomic subgroups exceeded 90% at 5 years. The presence of a lesion proximal to the first septal perforator of the LAD was associated with decreased survival compared with the presence of a more distal lesion. For the entire group of one-vessel disease patients, total ischemic events (death and nonfatal infarction) occurred at similar rates regardless of the anatomic location of the lesion. Left ventricular ejection fraction was the baseline descriptor most strongly associated with survival, and the characteristics of the angina had the strongest relationship with nonfatal myocardial infarction. No differences in survival or total cardiac event rates were found with surgical or nonsurgical therapy. The relief of angina was superior with surgical therapy, although the majority of nonsurgically treated patients had significant relief of angina. The survival rate of patients with one-vessel coronary disease is excellent, and the risk of nonfatal infarction is low. Clinical strategies for the care of these patients must consider the long-term clinical course of one-vessel coronary disease.


Circulation | 1974

The Significance of Coronary Calcification Detected by Fluoroscopy A Report of 360 Patients

Alan G. Bartel; James T. T. Chen; Robert H. Peter; Victor S. Behar; Yihong Kong; Richard G. Lester

Cardiac fluoroscopy to detect coronary calcification was performed on 360 patients before undergoing coronary arteriography for proven or suspected coronary artery disease. Among the 154 patients in whom coronary calcification was identified, 97% had significant coronary disease angiographically (≧ 70% stenosis). In this group, the distribution of one, two, and three vessel coronary disease was 9%, 25%, and 66% respectively. The prevalence of coronary calcification increased with age and severity of coronary disease, but no difference in males versus females was demonstrable. The angiographic severity of coronary disease increased with multiple vessel calcification; three vessel disease occurred in 45%, 66%, and 82% of patients with one, two, and three vessel calcification, respectively. Patients with hyperlipidemia or hypertension had no significant difference in the prevalence of coronary calcification. Among the 267 patients with significant coronary lesions, 56% had calcification detected by fluoroscopy.Five of the 93 patients with no significant coronary disease angiographically had coronary calcification fluoroscopically. Four of the five had a prior history of myocardial infarction, and two showed asynergy on left ventriculography.This study demonstrates that cardiac fluoroscopy is a valuable procedure for detecting significant coronary artery disease since this highly specific test is easily performed, inexpensive, noninvasive, and widely applicable for screening large patient populations.


Circulation | 1988

Myocardial protection during coronary angioplasty with an autoperfusion balloon catheter in humans.

Peter J. Quigley; Tomoaki Hinohara; Harry R. Phillips; Robert H. Peter; Victor S. Behar; Yihong Kong; Charles A. Simonton; Jose A. Perez; Richard S. Stack

An autoperfusion balloon catheter was developed to allow passive myocardial perfusion during inflation through a central lumen and multiple side holes in the shaft proximal and distal to the balloon. We report its safety and efficacy in 11 patients undergoing elective angioplasty to a single coronary lesion. Each lesion was dilated three times with the autoperfusion inflation bracketed between two inflations by standard angioplasty catheters. Chest pain score, 12-lead electrocardiogram, heart rate, and mean aortic pressure were recorded before each inflation and at 1-minute intervals after inflation. Inflation duration during autoperfusion angioplasty (513 +/- 303 seconds) was longer than for the pre- (107 +/- 55 seconds, p = 0.0004) and post- (139 +/- 71 seconds, p = 0.0006) standard dilatations. The maximum ST-segment elevation and depression in any lead during autoperfusion angioplasty (0.3 +/- 0.5 and 0.6 +/- 0.8 mm) was significantly less than for the pre- (2.4 +/- 1.7 mm, p = 0.002 and 2.2 +/- 1.3 mm, p = 0.0004) or post- (1.9 +/- 1.3 mm, p = 0.002 and 1.6 +/- 1.3 mm, p = 0.018) standard dilatations at the same point in time. Maximal chest pain score during autoperfusion (3.2 +/- 3.5) was lower than for the pre- (6.1 +/- 2.1, p = 0.003) but not the post- (5.2 +/- 3.1, p = 0.07) standard angioplasty. All 11 patients underwent successful, uncomplicated procedures. We conclude that this autoperfusion catheter significantly reduces ischemic symptoms and signs during coronary angioplasty, allowing prolonged periods of balloon inflation.

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