1 From the Departments of Physiology and Medicine of Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and from Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio.
This communication deals with the altered ventricular dynamics occasioned by temporary opening of a large artificial interventricular shunt. Since the left ventricular discharge into the right ventricle begins some time after ejection of blood into the aorta, the left ventricle assists the right in propelling larger quantities of blood through the pulmonary circuit. This late systolic flow through a shunt causes characteristic deformations of central arterial pressure pulses and a midsystolic murmur similar to those observed in several clinical cases.
© 1950 American Heart Association, Inc.
Further Studies of the Cardiodynamics of Experimental Intraventricular Communications
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. SELZER and G. L. LAQUEUR THE EISENMENGER COMPLEX AND ITS RELATION TO THE UNCOMPLICATED DEFECT OF THE VENTRICULAR SEPTUM: Review of Thirty-Five Autopsied Cases of Eisenmenger's Complex, Including Two New Cases Arch Intern Med, February 1, 1951; 87(2): 218 - 241. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
|
Circulation Home | Subscriptions | Archives | Feedback | Authors | Help | AHA Journals Home | Search Copyright © 1950 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. |