Publications (2)2.99 Total impact
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Article: [Clinical finding and follow-up of chronic constrictive pericarditis].
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ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to describe the etiology, clinical findings, diagnostic methods, treatment, outcome and long-term prognosis of 35 patients with chronic constrictive pericarditis (CCP) that were prospectively analyzed according to a pericardial disease protocol performed in our Institution. Etiology of CCP was idiopathic in 24 patients (68%), and specific in 11 (32%). The majority (34 patients, 97%) underwent pericardiectomy. Perioperative mortality was 12% (4/33) no deaths were registered among patients with idiopathic CCP. Median follow-up was 5.6 years (percentile 25-75: 2.4-7.4 years). The cumulative actuarial survival probability was 97% at 1 year (confidence interval [CI] 80% to 99%); 83% at 5 years, (95% CI 65% to 93%); 78% at 7 years, (95% CI 60% to 90%), and 69% at 10 years (95% CI 50% to 84%). In conclusion, nowadays CCP is generally an idiopathic disease with late diagnosis. The clinical course of the disease produces severe symptoms of congestive heart failure. In a 10 years follow-up 2/3 of patients are alive and improved their quality of life. Idiopathic form of pericarditis did not show mortality during early postoperative period.Medicina 01/2010; 70(4):316-20. · 0.47 Impact Factor -
Article: Surgical treatment of ascending aortic complications in Marfan syndrome: early and long-term outcomes.
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ABSTRACT: Findings in 54 patients (mean age 39 years, range 18-66 years, 25% female) were analyzed. Of these patients, 21 had dissection of the ascending aorta (15 acute and six chronic) and 33 had aneurysm of the ascending aorta. Surgery was classified as emergency surgery in three cases, as urgent in 15, and as scheduled surgery in 36. The Bentall-De Bono procedure was performed in 39 patients, aortic valve reimplantation was carried out in nine, Cabrol's operation was performed in three, and a homograft was used in three. The mean diameter of the ascending aorta was 66.6 mm. Overall, in-hospital mortality was 3.7% (33.3% for emergency surgery vs. 2.8% for scheduled surgery; P< .001). During the mean follow-up period of 4 years (range, 2 months-14 years), seven patients died, including four who died due to type-B aortic dissection. The actuarial survival rate at 2, 5 and 10 years was 94%, 83% and 75%, respectively, with 88%, 67% and 43% of patients, respectively, not requiring reoperation. Elective aortic root replacement was associated with a low risk and a good survival rate.Revista Espa de Cardiologia 09/2008; 61(8):884-7. · 2.53 Impact Factor