Abstract
Article1 May 1960MILD PULMONIC STENOSIS: A CLINICAL AND HEMODYNAMIC STUDY OF ELEVEN CASESSTEPHEN M. AYRES, M.D., DANIEL S. LUKAS, M.D.STEPHEN M. AYRES, M.D.Search for more papers by this author, DANIEL S. LUKAS, M.D.Search for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, and Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-52-5-1076 SectionsAboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ExcerptWith recent widespread use of cardiac catheterization as a diagnostic tool, it has become increasingly apparent that isolated pulmonic stenosis, uncomplicated by defects of the septum, is a relatively common congenital anomaly. Of 750 patients with congenital heart disease in whom a definite diagnosis was established either clinically or by catheterization, Wood1 found that 13% had this anomaly. The older autopsy data are at variance with this experience. Abbott2 reported only nine examples of the condition in her series of 1,000 autopsied cases. Taussig,3 writing in 1947, described it as an extremely rare entity.In 1949 Greene and co-workers4could...Bibliography1. WoodMagidsonWilson POPA: Ventricular septal defect with a note on acyanotic Fallot's tetralogy, Brit. Heart J. 16: 387, 1954. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar2. Abbott ME: Atlas of congenital cardiac disease, 1936, American Heart Association, New York. Google Scholar3. Taussig HB: Congenital malformations of the heart, 1947, The Commonwealth Fund, New York, p. 175. Google Scholar4. GreeneBaldwinBaldwinHimmelsteinRobCournand DGEdJSACEA: Pure congenital pulmonic stenosis and idiopathic dilatation of the pulmonary artery, Am. J. Med. 6: 24, 1949. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar5. JoosYuLovejoyNyeSimpson HAPNFWREJH: Clinical and hemodynamic studies of congenital pulmonic stenosis with intact ventricular septum, Am. J. Med. 17: 6, 1954. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar6. 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AbrahamsWood DGP: Pulmonary stenosis with normal aortic root, Brit. Heart J. 13: 519, 1951. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar19. ReinholdNadas JDAS: The role of auscultation in the diagnosis of congenital heart disease, Am. Heart J. 47: 405, 1954. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar20. LeathamWeitzman AD: Auscultatory and phonocardiographic signs of pulmonary stenosis, Brit. Heart J. 19: 303, 1957. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar21. JohnsonFerrerWestCournand JBMIJRA: The relation between electrocardiographic evidence of right ventricular hypertrophy and pulmonary arterial pressure in patients with chronic pulmonary disease, Circulation 1: 536, 1950. CrossrefGoogle Scholar22. BlountMunyanHoffman SGEAMS: Hypertrophy of the right ventricular outflow tract, Am. J. Med. 22: 784, 1957. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar23. Brock R: Congenital pulmonary stenosis, Am. J. Med. 12: 706, 1952. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar This content is PDF only. To continue reading please click on the PDF icon. Author, Article, and Disclosure InformationAffiliations: New York, N. Y.*Received for publication January 26, 1960.From the Department of Medicine and Cardio-Pulmonary Laboratory, New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, N. Y.†Supported by grants from the National Heart Institute (H-3918), The American Heart Association and New York Heart Association.Requests for reprints should be addressed to Daniel S. Lukas, M.D., 525 East Sixty-eighth Street, New York 21, N. Y. PreviousarticleNextarticle Advertisement FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Metrics Cited byOutcome in Pulmonary StenosisAssessment of severity of isolated valvar pulmonic stenosis using isoproterenolPulmonary Stenosis: Plain Films and FluoroscopyTraumatic calcific nonconstrictive pericarditisHemodynamic Response to Exercise in Isolated Pulmonic Stenosis 1 May 1960Volume 52, Issue 5Page: 1076-1087KeywordsCatheterizationCongenital heart diseaseDyspneaElectrocardiographyHeartHemodynamicsHypertensionLesionsResearch laboratoriesStenosis ePublished: 1 December 2008 Issue Published: 1 May 1960 PDF downloadLoading ...
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