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Complications of Transesophageal Echocardiography: A Review of Injuries, Risk Factors, and Management
Patel, Kinjal M; Desai, Ronak G; Trivedi, Keyur; Neuburger, Peter J; Krishnan, Sandeep; Potestio, Christopher P
Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) use has become widespread in cardiac surgical operating rooms over the last 2 decades. Surgical and medical decision-making often are guided by the findings of the TEE examination, rendering TEE an invaluable tool both inside and outside the operating room. TEE has become ubiquitous in some parts because it is considered safe and relatively noninvasive. However, it is imperative for clinicians to understand that TEE can cause severe and possibly life-threatening complications, and the risks of TEE must be balanced against its benefits as a diagnostic tool. Upper gastrointestinal (UGI) injuries are the most commonly described complications of TEE; however, the relative infrequency of injuries and lack of uniform reporting make it difficult to definitively identify potential risk factors. Some large retrospective trials suggested that patient factors (age, body mass index, anatomic abnormalities), comorbid conditions (previous stroke), and procedural variables (procedure time, cardiopulmonary bypass time, etc.) are associated with TEE-related injuries. In this narrative review of complications from TEE, the authors focus on the incidence of UGI injuries, the spectrum of injuries associated with TEE, risk factors that may contribute to UGI injuries, as well as diagnosis and management options. Lastly, the discussion focuses on the prevention of injuries as TEE use continues to become more prevalent.
PMID: 35317955
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 5191022
Functional Tricuspid Regurgitation in Patients With Chronic Mitral Regurgitation: An Evidence-Based Narrative Review
Patel, Kinjal M; Kumar, Nakul S; Neuburger, Peter J; Desai, Ronak G; Krishnan, Sandeep
Chronic mitral regurgitation leads to a series of downstream pathologic changes, including pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular dilation, tricuspid leaflet tethering, and tricuspid annular dilation, which can result in functional tricuspid regurgitation (FTR). The five-year survival rate for patients with severe FTR is reported to be as low as 34%. While FTR was often left uncorrected during left-heart valvular surgery, under the assumption that correction of the left-sided lesion would reverse the right-heart changes that cause FTR, recent data largely have supported concomitant tricuspid valve repair at the time of mitral surgery. In this review, the authors discuss the potentially irreversible nature of the changes leading to FTR, the likelihood of progression of FTR after mitral surgery, and the evidence for and against concomitant tricuspid valve repair at the time of mitral valve intervention. Lastly, this narrative review also examines advances in transcatheter therapies for the tricuspid valve and the evidence behind concomitant transcatheter tricuspid repair at the time of transcatheter mitral repair.
PMID: 34175204
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4926022
The Year in Electrophysiology: Selected Highlights from 2021
Vanneman, Matthew; Kothari, Perin; Bodmer, Natalie J; Convissar, David; Desai, Gopal A; Kumar, Nicolas; Iyer, Manoj H; Neuburger, Peter J; Essandoh, Michael K; Cronin, Brett; Dalia, Adam A
PMID: 35248433
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 5190322
Contemporary Practice of Echocardiography in Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement [Editorial]
Pospishil, Liliya; Nampi, Robert G; Neuburger, Peter J
PMID: 34366216
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 5006092
Native mitral valve staphylococcus endocarditis with a very unusual complication: Ruptured posterior mitral valve leaflet aneurysm [Case Report]
Maidman, Samuel D; Kiefer, Nicholas J; Bernard, Samuel; Freedberg, Robin S; Rosenzweig, Barry P; Bamira, Daniel; Vainrib, Alan F; Ro, Richard; Neuburger, Peter J; Basu, Atreyee; Moreira, Andre L; Latson, Larry A; Loulmet, Didier F; Saric, Muhamed
Infective endocarditis (IE) is a life-threatening disease associated with in-hospital mortality of nearly one in five cases. IE can destroy valvular tissue, which may rarely progress to aneurysm formation, most commonly at the anterior leaflet in instances of mitral valve involvement. We present a remarkable case of a patient with IE and a rare complication of a ruptured aneurysm of the posterior leaflet of the mitral valve. Two- and Three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography, intra-operative videography, and histopathologic analysis revealed disruption at this unusual location-at the junction of the P2 and P3 scallops, surrounded by an annular abscess.
PMID: 34923683
ISSN: 1540-8175
CID: 5108652
The PARTNER 3 Trial at Two Years: What We Have Learned and What Time Will Tell [Editorial]
Neuburger, Peter J; Patel, Kinjal M; Patel, Prakash A
PMID: 34176679
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4926082
Vasoplegia in cardiac surgery: Know your enemy and attack early [Editorial]
Slomovits, Mark; Neuburger, Peter J; Rong, Lisa Q
PMID: 34021630
ISSN: 1540-8191
CID: 4887322
Long-term outcomes after transcatheter aortic valve replacement with minimal contrast in chronic kidney disease
Rzucidlo, Justyna; Jaspan, Vita; Paone, Darien; Jilaihawi, Hasan; Xia, Yuhe; Kapitman, Anna; Nakashima, Makoto; He, Yuxin; Ibrahim, Homam; Pushkar, Illya; Neuburger, Peter J; Saric, Muhamed; Bamira, Daniel; Paschke, Sonja; Kalish, Chloe; Staniloae, Cezar; Shah, Binita; Williams, Mathew
BACKGROUND:Patients with renal insufficiency have poor short-term outcomes after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). METHODS:Retrospective chart review identified 575 consecutive patients not on hemodialysis who underwent TAVR between September 2014 and January 2017. Outcomes were defined by VARC-2 criteria. Primary outcome of all-cause mortality was evaluated at a median follow-up of 811 days (interquartile range 125-1,151). RESULTS:Preprocedural glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was ≥60 ml/min in 51.7%, 30-60 ml/min in 42.1%, and < 30 ml/min in 6.3%. Use of transfemoral access (98.8%) and achieved device success (91.0%) did not differ among groups, but less contrast was used with lower GFR (23 ml [15-33], 24 ml [14-33], 13 ml [8-20]; p < .001). Peri-procedural stroke (0.7%, 2.1%, 11.1%; p < .001) was higher with lower GFR. Core lab analysis of preprocedural computed tomography scans of patients who developed a peri-procedural stroke identified potential anatomic substrate for stroke in three out of four patients with GFR 30-60 ml/min and all three with GFR <30 ml/min (severe atheroma was the most common subtype of anatomical substrate present). Compared to GFR ≥60 ml/min, all-cause mortality was higher with GFR 30-60 ml/min (HR 1.61 [1.00-2.59]; aHR 1.61 [0.91-2.83]) and GFR <30 ml/min (HR 2.41 [1.06-5.48]; aHR 2.34 [0.90-6.09]) but not significant after multivariable adjustment. Follow-up echocardiographic data, available in 63%, demonstrated no difference in structural heart valve deterioration over time among groups. CONCLUSIONS:Patients with baseline renal insufficiency remain a challenging population with poor long-term outcomes despite procedural optimization with a transfemoral-first and an extremely low-contrast approach.
PMID: 33180381
ISSN: 1522-726x
CID: 4665422
TAVR Valves in the Mitral Position: Forever Between a Ring and a Hard Place [Editorial]
Notarianni, Andrew P; Neuburger, Peter J; Patel, Prakash A
PMID: 33865685
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4846532
Anesthetic Management of Conduction Disturbances Following Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: A Review of the 2020 ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway [Editorial]
Neuburger, Peter J; Pospishil, Liliya; Ibrahim, Homam
PMID: 33441272
ISSN: 1532-8422
CID: 4746992