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Atrial Fibrillation ◆ Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a supraventricular tachyarrhythmia that is projected to affect 12 million patients in the United States by 2050; prevalence is increased in older people and in patients with hypertension, heart failure, coronary artery disease…
Summary ◆ Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) has become an effective treatment for various descending thoracic aortic pathologic processes, including aortic aneurysm and dissection. Although long-term outcome data for this therapy are not available, the short-term and intermediate results have…
See Video 26.1 on ExpertConsult.com . Step 1 Surgical Anatomy ◆ Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) are characterized by dilation of the aorta (to at least 1.5 times its normal diameter) at the diaphragmatic hiatus—the boundary that separates the descending thoracic…
Step 1 Surgical Anatomy ◆ Academic anatomists refer to the aortic arch as that part of the aorta that begins and ends with a line drawn in cross section across the aorta at a level corresponding to the lesser curve…
Step 1 Surgical Anatomy ◆ Type A dissection is defined by the presence of a septum creating two lumens within the ascending aorta. The DeBakey classification further divides the Stanford type A classification according to whether the septum is located…
Step 1 Surgical Anatomy ◆ The tricuspid valve is located between the right atrium (RA) and right ventricle and has a valve area of 4 to 6 cm. The tricuspid valve is composed of three leaflets—the anterior, posterior, and septal. The…
Step 1 Surgical Anatomy ◆ Percutaneous therapies have changed how the modern cardiothoracic surgeon approaches the treatment of valvular heart disease. Although much of this evolution has come with the advent of transcatheter aortic valve replacement, considerable obstacles inherent to…
◆ The 2014 American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines strongly recommend (class I) prompt surgical correction of mitral regurgitation (MR) for patients in stages D (severe symptomatic MR) and C2 (severe asymptomatic MR with left ventricular ejection…
◆ Mitral valve dysfunction is a common pathologic process. The process may involve any component of the valve or subvalvular structures, including the valve leaflets, the annulus, the papillary muscles, the chordae tendineae, and the left ventricular wall. ◆ The…
Step 1 Anatomy ◆ The mitral valve is a complex structure comprised of an anterior and posterior leaflet that is connected to the left ventricle via attachments to papillary muscles through the chordae tendineae. ◆ It is anchored to the…