1.Estimation of Exercise Intensity and Ramp Load in Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing Using the Maximum Walking Speed in Elderly Hospitalized Patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome
Hiroaki TATSUKI ; Yasuhiro NOMA ; Masashi KAWABATA ; Tomoko KAWAHARA ; Daichi NAOI ; Ryo SHIMADA ; Kazuhiro MIBU ; Toru AIZAWA ; Harukazu ISEKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2016;65(2):202-214
This study investigated data on cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) indices in order to estimate exercise intensity and ramp load from maximum walking speed (MWS) in elderly hospitalized patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Subjects were 66 male patients hospitalized with ACS (49 young-old patients and 17 old-old patients). We measured exercise intensity by CPX using a cycle ergometer and MWS over 10 m, and examined the patients’ clinical characteristics. Stepwise multiple regression analysis was performed to identify variables that most closely predicted exercise intensity. We then estimated the ramp load from the relationship between exercise load at anaerobic threshold and MWS. The results indicated that MWS was an independent predictor of exercise intensity in old-old patients (adjusted R2=0.278, p=0.037) but not in young-old patients. The regression formula predicted the proper ramp load to be 5 and 10 watts as MWS was less than 1.5m/s or more than 1.5m/s, respectively. MWS was related to exercise intensity and could be used to consider the ramp load in CPX in old-old male patients with ACS.
2.Bicuspidization of the Unicuspid Aortic Valve by Preserving the Free Margin Tissue
Ryo KAWABATA ; Koutaro TSUNEMI ; Takanori OKA ; Yutaka OKITA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2020;49(3):99-101
A 35-year-old man was referred to our hospital for surgical repair of grade IV/IV aortic regurgitation secondary to a congenital unicuspid aortic valve accompanied by aneurysm of the ascending aorta. The aortic valve was the unicuspid unicommissural type and a fully developed commissure was located in the left lateral position (left coronary/right coronary). The anterior (non-coronary/right coronary) and posterior (non-coronary/left coronary) borders were rudimentary with calcified raphe. We performed aortic valve repair in combination with valve sparing root replacement (reimplantation) and partial arch replacement. We converted the unicuspid into a bicuspid aortic valve by preserving his own free margin tissue and creating a neocommissure to the 180 degrees opposite side of the left lateral commissure at the same height by enlarging the cusp with a glutaraldehyde-treated autologous pericardium patch to the cusp belly. The patient was discharged on the 17th postoperative day with trace aortic regurgitation. We successfully repaired the unicuspid aortic valve by augmenting the cusp size using a pericardium patch in order to preserve the free margin of the cusp.