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andrea erlicher

andrea.erlicher@asbz.ti

Journal articles

1991
 
PMID 
A Erlicher, W Pitscheider, G Panizza, R Vedovello, E Braito (1991)  Transesophageal echocardiography in the diagnosis of cor triatriatum in the adult   G Ital Cardiol 21: 7. 757-762 Jul  
Abstract: Cor triatriatum (CT) is a rare congenital defect, surgically correctable, and sometimes difficult to diagnose by cardiac catheterization. This report describes three young patients with this particular defect, one of whom was sent to us because of signs of right ventricular failure. The diagnosis of CT was made by transesophageal echocardiography and confirmed by cardiac catheterization and surgical data. The other two cases underwent cardiac catheterization and cardiac surgery during infancy for other congenital defects. The diagnosis of CT was made only during post-operative controls by transthoracic echocardiography. In these two cases transesophageal echocardiography provided the most valuable information about the morphological features of the membrane and the mitral valve, and about the flow between the two left atrial chambers.
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PMID 
W Pitscheider, A Erlicher, R Crepaz, G Panizza, A Zammarchi, E Braito (1991)  Immediate results of percutaneous mitral valvuloplasty using Inoue catheter. Personal experience in the first 15 cases   G Ital Cardiol 21: 9. 929-937 Sep  
Abstract: Mitral valvuloplasty with an Inoue balloon catheter was performed at our institution in 15 patients affected by mitral stenosis. All were severely symptomatic (class NYHA III or IV). Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography showed a mitral score less than 10 (Wilkins criteria). Patients with thrombi in the left atrium and those with important mitral regurgitation were excluded. The mitral valve area increased from 0.98 +/- 0.2 to 1.89 +/- 0.4 cm2 and the transvalvular gradient decreased from 18.2 +/- 7.5 to 6.7 +/- 3.7 mmHg. There was a small increase of the mitral regurgitation. Two complications occurred during the procedure: the first was a haemopericardium, which was percutaneously drained, and the other a rupture of the anterior mitral leaflet with acute, severe mitral regurgitation necessitating urgent surgical correction. Applying the criteria of Herrmann, the results were optimal in 11 and suboptimal in 3 cases.
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PMID 
R Crepaz, W Pitscheider, A Zammarchi, A Erlicher, A Mautone, E Braito (1991)  Role of echo-doppler in programming of sequential pacemakers. Evaluation of optimal atrioventricular delay in patients with normal or hypertrophic left ventricle   G Ital Cardiol 21: 9. 975-982 Sep  
Abstract: 2D-echocardiography, together with simultaneous measurement of systolic blood pressure and pulsed doppler examination of the transmitral flow were used to assess the left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic function during sequential pacing at 4 different atrioventricular (AV) intervals (50, 100, 150, 200 msec), and VVI pacing under the same rate of 90 beats/min in 13 patients (pts), mean age 61.25 +/- 8.26 years with DDD pacemakers implanted for complete AV block. The pts were divided into 2 groups: group I was comprised of 7 subjects showing no clinical abnormalities and normal echocardiograms, and group II of 6 hypertensive subjects with LV hypertrophy and normal systolic function on echocardiography. There was no change in LV diastolic dimension, but a depression in LV systolic function and contractility were shown by the conversion from DDD to VVI pacing in all pts, particularly in group II VVI pacing caused mitral regurgitation with LV filling pattern changing from beat to beat. By changing the AV interval during DDD pacing, the LV filling pattern was modified in all pts. Systolic performance showed little change in group I, whereas in group II more evident modifications were seen. An optimal AV delay, defined as the delay with maximal stroke volume, was identified in all subjects as being 100 and 150 ms in group I and group II respectively. Echo-doppler can thus provide useful information in choosing the mode of pacing and in programming optimal AV delay. In contrast to normal ventricles the systolic performance in hypertrophic ventricles is highly influenced by variation in the AV delay.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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1989
 
PMID 
R Crepaz, W Pitscheider, A Erlicher, P Knoll, E Braito (1989)  Quantitative evaluation of left ventricular systolic function using bidimensional echocardiography: comparison with cineangiography   G Ital Cardiol 19: 5. 393-401 May  
Abstract: The aim of the study was to compare the evaluation of the left ventricular systolic function performed both by angiography and 2D-echocardiography on 80 subjects (31 with coronary artery disease, 18 with left ventricular volume overload, 10 with left ventricular pressure overload, 14 with mitral valve disease and 7 normal controls). The 2D-echocardiograms of the left ventricle with simultaneous measurement of the right arm systolic blood pressure was performed within 24 hours of the angiographic examination. The following parameters were obtained using the two methods: end-diastolic volume index, end-systolic volume index, ejection fraction, left ventricular mass index, mass/volume ratio, end-systolic circumferential stress, contractility expressed as end-systolic circumferential stress/end-systolic volume ratio; the end-systolic circumferential stress/ejection fraction ratio was calculated only by 2D-echocardiography. The afterload and contractility were not calculated in subjects with coronary artery disease and left ventricular outflow gradient. No statistically significant differences were shown between the two methods, except a slight under-estimation by echocardiography of the angiographic end-diastolic volume index (93.1 +/- 38.9 ml/m2 vs 115 +/- 39.9 ml/m2; p less than 0.01) and over-estimation of the mass/volume ratio (1.38 +/- 0.33 g/ml vs 1.2 +/- 0.44 g/ml; p less than 0.01) was shown between the two methods for all parameters. A depressed contractile state was also demonstrated by the end-systolic circumferential stress/ejection fraction ratio. The inter and intraobserver variability was 6.6 +/- 4.4% (range 0.16%) and 4.2 +/- 3% (range 1.11%) respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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1987
 
PMID 
W Pitscheider, R Crepaz, A Erlicher, R Vedovello, E March, W Oberlechner, E Braito (1987)  Value of the isovolumetric index in the diagnosis of ischemic cardiopathy with normal left ventricular volume and ejection fraction   G Ital Cardiol 17: 5. 397-401 May  
Abstract: Purpose of this study was to assess if the isovolumic index (IVI%) was able to detect the presence of critical coronary artery disease (CAD) in a group of 43 patients with anginal chest pain and normal left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction. The left ventricular function was before evaluated with invasive method and then the IVI% was allowed in every patient. The IVI% was able to recognize early abnormalities of isovolumetric phases of the left ventricle and differentiated normal subjects (IVI% = 40.07 +/- 2.82) from patients with CAD (IVI% = 60.87 +/- 12.49; p less than 0.01). The only parameter of left ventricular function invasively calculated able to separate normal patients from patients with significant CAD were the muscular stiffness of the left ventricle (p less than 0.01).
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1986
 
PMID 
R Crepaz, W Pitscheider, R Vedovello, A Erlicher, G Panizza, E Unterhuber, E Braito (1986)  The isovolumetric index: a new index of left ventricular function   G Ital Cardiol 16: 2. 138-143 Feb  
Abstract: The isovolumic index (IVI%), a new parameter of left ventricular function defined as (isovolumic contraction + isovolumic relaxation time)/left ventricular ejection time, is easily obtained from a routine echocardiogram. By simultaneous recordings of an electrocardiogram, a carotid arterial pulse tracing and the mitral valve echocardiogram, we calculated the IVI% as (time from R wave to MV opening-LVET)/LVET %. 90 normal subjects, mean age 38.32 +/- 11.8 years (range 20-60), underwent an echocardiographic study in order to calculate this index. The value of the IV% was 39.75% +/- 6.82 (range 21.4%-52.3%). The index was heart rate independent and showed a weak positive correlation with age (y = 32.4 + 0.19x; r = 0.33; p less than 0.01). The intraobserver and interobserver variability were 2.6% and 3.6%. The methodologic aspects of the calculation of the IVI% are discussed.
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1984
 
PMID 
W Pitscheider, R Crepaz, R Vedovello, A Erlicher, E Unterhuber, E Braito (1984)  A contribution to the electrogenetic interpretation of left ventricular hypertrophy caused by volume overload   G Ital Cardiol 14: 2. 108-112 Feb  
Abstract: The purpose of the present study is to make a contribution to the understanding of the electrogenetic interpretation of left ventricular hypertrophy caused by volume overload. Thirty-two cases of isolated aortic valve regurgitation with electrocardiographic evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy were studied by vectorcardiography in order to measure the 20 msec vector both in the spatial and horizontal plane, and by M-Mode echocardiography to obtain the interventricular septal and posterior wall thickness and the end diastolic dimension of the left ventricle. The following relations were analyzed: a) between the interventricular septal thickness and the amplitude of the 20 msec vector in the spatial and horizontal plane; b) between the end diastolic dimension of the left ventricle and the amplitude of the 20 msec vector. We also explored the possibility to distinguish by means of the 20 msec vector amplitude between patients with and without disproportionate septal thickening. We found no correlation either between interventricular septal thickness and amplitude of the 20 msec vector, or between left ventricular end diastolic dimension and amplitude of the 20 msec vector. It was not possible to distinguish by means of the amplitude of the 20 msec vector between the cases of left ventricular hypertrophy with disproportional septal thickening and those without it.
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PMID 
R Crepaz, F Tezzon, A Erlicher, R Vedovello, W Pitscheider, W Lintner, W Moresco, W Oberlechner, E Braito (1984)  Preclinical changes in left ventricular function in myotonic muscular dystrophy. Value of the isovolumetric index   G Ital Cardiol 14: 11. 847-851 Nov  
Abstract: Nine patients, 7 males, 2 females, mean age 36 years, with myotonic muscular dystrophy who had no cardiac symptoms underwent M-mode echocardiography (e.), systolic time intervals (STI) measurement by simultaneous recordings of the electrocardiogram, phonocardiogram and carotid arterial pulse, and single-pass radionuclide angiocardiography (RNA) in order to assess the left ventricular function. The ejecting phase indexes measured by echocardiography (fractional shortening, mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening) were slightly depressed in 1 case and an abnormal PEP/LVET ratio was found in 3 cases. The ejection fraction measured by radionuclide angiocardiography was abnormal in 1 case who showed a diffuse hypokinesia. The IVI%, a new isovolumic phase index obtained by echocardiography, was abnormal in all patients. It is concluded that the IVI% seems more sensitive than the ejecting phase indexes calculated by echocardiography or radionuclide angiocardiography and the PEP/LVET ratio in detecting abnormalities of left ventricular function in patients with myotonic muscular dystrophy and no clinical signs of heart disease.
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1983
1980
 
PMID 
G P Perini, A Erlicher, P Marino, G C Salazzari, B Dander, A Poppi (1980)  Echocardiographic evaluation of the results of mitral commissurotomy   G Ital Cardiol 10: 12. 1647-1652  
Abstract: The AA. relate the results of an echocardiographic study carried out on some patients with mitral stenosis associated or not with mitral regurgitation or with other valvular disease. Ten patients who had to undergo to surgical commissurotomy, were studied before and in the early post-operative period. The M-mode echocardiography appeared to be always available to diagnose the mitral stenosis, but not to quantify it. On the other side the two dimensional echocardiography is proven to be a useful method in the quantitative study of the mitral area and particularly when it is applied in the evaluation of the surgical results of comparing the pre and post-operative examinations. The data obtained were analysed with statistical method.
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