Today's Hours: 8:00am - 8:00pm

Search

Did You Mean:

Search Results

  • Book
    edited by William J. Brady, Korin B. Hudson, Robin Naples, Amita Sudhir, Steven H. Mitchell, ... Show More Jeffrey D. Ferguson, Robert C. Reiser ; advisory editors: Kostas Alibertis, James Brady, Christopher Kroboth, Stewart Lowson, Amal Mattu, Mark Sochor, Benjamin Sojka, Sara Sutherland.
    Contents:
    Section 1: The ECG in Prehospital Patient Care. Clinical Applications of the Electrocardiogram (ECG) / Robert C Schutt, William J Brady, Steven H Mitchell
    Clinical Impact of the Electrocardiogram (ECG) / Robert C Schutt, William J Brady, Steven H Mitchell
    Interpretation of the Electrocardiogram : Single-, Multi-, and 12-Lead Analysis / Robert C Reiser, Robert C Schutt, William J Brady
    Variants of the Normal, Lead Misplacement, and Electrocardiographic Artifact Encountered in Clinical Practice / Robert C Reiser, Robert C Schutt, William J Brady
    Section 2: Cardiac Rhythms and Cardiac Dysrhythmias. Cardiac Rhythms with Normal Rates / Korin B Hudson, William J Brady
    Narrow QRS Complex Tachycardia / Courtney B Saunders, Jeffrey D Ferguson
    Wide QRS Complex Tachycardia / Michael Levy, Francis X Nolan
    Bradycardia / Korin B Hudson, J Aidan Boswick, William J Brady
    Atrioventricular Conduction Block / Steven H Mitchell, Korin B Hudson, William J Brady
    Intraventricular Conduction Block: Bundle Branch Block and Other Conduction Abnormalities / Steven H Mitchell, Richard B Utarnachitt, William J Brady
    Atrial and Ventricular Ectopic Beats / Jeffrey D Ferguson, Michael Levy, J Aidan Boswick, William J Brady
    Section 3: Acute Coronary Syndrome and the 12-Lead ECG. Ischemic Heart Disease: Anatomic and Physiologic Considerations / Peter Pollak, Peter Monteleone, Kelly Williamson, David Carlberg, William J Brady
    Historical Development of the Prehospital Electrocardiogram (ECG) / Erik Iszkula, David Carlberg, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Findings in Acute Coronary Syndrome / Peter Monteleone, Peter Pollak, David Carlberg, William J Brady
    Section 4: Special Populations, High-Risk Presentation Scenarios, and Advanced Electrocardiographic Techniques. The Electrocardiogram in the Pediatric Patient / Robert Rutherford, Robin Naples, William J Brady
    The Electrocardiogram in the Poisoned Patient / Steven H Mitchell, Christopher P Holstege, William J Brady
    The Electrocardiogram in Hyperkalemia / Steven H Mitchell, William J Brady
    Life-Threatening Electrocardiographic Patterns / Steven H Mitchell, Richard B Utarnachitt, William J Brady
    The Electrocardiogram in Patients with Implanted Devices / Amita Sudhir, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Tools in Prehospital Care / Robin Naples, Alvin Wang, William J Brady
    Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome / William J Brady
    Cardiac Arrest Rhythms / Amita Sudhir, William J Brady
    Section 5: Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of Common ECG Presentations. Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of Narrow Complex Tachycardia / Megan Starling, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of Wide Complex Tachycardia / Amita Sudhir, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of Bradyarrhythmia / Megan Starling, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of ST Segment Elevation / Megan Starling, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of ST Segment Depression / Amita Sudhir, William J Brady
    Electrocardiographic Differential Diagnosis of T Wave Abnormalities: The Prominent T Wave and T Wave Inversions / Amita Sudhir, William J Brady.
    Digital Access Wiley 2013
  • Article
    Brower RW, ten Katen HJ, Meester GT.
    Am J Cardiol. 1978 Jun;41(7):1222-9.
    A new method is described for determining localized epicardial shortening in regions newly perfused after saphenous vein bypass grafting. Four to six radiopaque markers are sutured to the ventricular epicardium in pairs, 2 cm apart and 0 to 3 cm distal to the coronary anastomosis. Shortening fraction and time to onset of shortening are reported in 56 patients examined noninvasively with use of cinefluorography 1 week to 6 months after operation. The right coronary bypass region showed the greatest improvement in shortening fraction in 6 months (from 10.1 to 16.7 percent); the left anterior descending region showed the least (but still significant) improvement (from 8.6 to 11.5 percent). Paradoxical systolic expansion occurred predominantly in the region of the left anterior descending coronary bypass (95 percent of all such occurrences). Measurement error, observer variability and beat to beat variability were less important than the physiologic changes in the postoperative period. This technique is a direct method providing heretofore unavailable follow-up information on localized shortening in newly perfused myocardium after coronary bypass grafting.
    Digital Access Access Options