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Case Reports in Cardiology: Congenital Heart Disease [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 310 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 33 Tables, black and white; 39 Line drawings, black and white; 177 Halftones, black and white; 216 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Case Reports in Cardiology
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032529458
  • ISBN-13: 9781032529455
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 310 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 33 Tables, black and white; 39 Line drawings, black and white; 177 Halftones, black and white; 216 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Case Reports in Cardiology
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Nov-2023
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032529458
  • ISBN-13: 9781032529455
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

From the earliest days of medicine to the present, case reports have been a critical aspect of clinical education and knowledge development. In this comprehensive volume, Dr. William C. Roberts, a renowned expert in the field, explores the rich history and ongoing importance of case reports in cardiology.

Through engaging and insightful analysis, the book demonstrates how case reports have provided physicians with crucial insights into rare diseases, complex conditions, and groundbreaking treatments. Drawing on a vast range of sources, from ancient manuscripts to cutting-edge journals, it offers a unique perspective on the role of case reports in medical education and practice of congenital heart diseases and associated cardiac complications. It underscores how case reports can be used to enhance diagnostic accuracy, identify new treatment options, and promote innovation in the field. In addition, the book provides valuable insights into the process of writing and publishing case reports, including tips for young physicians looking to break into the field.

The book will be an indispensable guide to the history, practice, and ongoing significance of case reports for medical students, physicians, and researchers alike.

Key features:

  • Provides a rich repository of diverse case reports in cardiology published by the editor and his colleagues over 61 years
  • Features 52 clinical case studies related to Congenital Heart Disease useful for medical students and practicing cardiologists
  • Valuable resource for young physicians seeking to establish a foothold in medical research and academics



Drawing on a vast range of sources, from ancient manuscripts to cutting-edge journals, it offers a unique perspective on the role of case reports in medical education and practice of congenital heart diseases and associated cardiac complications.

*Note: Cases are numbered based on their number in WCRs CV.

Introduction

1. Braunwald E, Ross RS, Morrow AG, Roberts WC. Differential diagnosis of
mitral regurgitation in childhood; Clinical pathological conference at the
National Institutes of Health. Ann Intern Med. 1961;54(6):1223-1242

3. Folse R, Roberts WC, Cornell WP. Increased bronchial collateral
circulation in a patient with transposition of the great vessels and
pulmonary hypertension. Am J Cardiol. 1961;8(2):282-287.

12. Roberts WC. Anomalous origin of both coronary arteries from the pulmonary
artery. Am J Cardiol. 1962;10(4):595-600.

15. Roberts WC, Mason DT, Braunwald E. Survival to adulthood in a patient
with complete transposition of the great vessels: including a note on the
association of endocrine tumors with heart disease. Ann Intern Med.
1962;57(5):834-842.

16. Roberts WC, Goldblatt A, Mason DT, Morrow AG. Combined congenital
pulmonic and mitral stenosis. N Engl J Med. 1962;267(25):1298-1299.

17. Roberts WC, Berry WB, Morrow AG. The significance of asplenia in the
recognition of inoperable congenital heart disease. Circulation.
1962;26(6):1251-1253.

18. Roberts WC, Morrow AG, Mason DT, Braunwald E. Spontaneous closure of
ventricular septal defect, anatomic proof in an adult with tricuspid atresia.
Circulation. 1963;27(1):90-94.

30. Roberts WC, Morrow AG. Aortico-left ventricular tunnel. A cause of
massive aortic regurgitation and of intracardiac aneurysm. Am J Med.
1965;39(4):662-667.

51. Roberts WC, Eggleston JC, Humphries JO. Complex congenital cardiac
malformation: corrected transposition, origin of both great vessels from the
anatomic right ventricle, common ventricle, and dextroversion. Johns Hopkins
Med J. 1967;120(3):155-161.

79. Perloff JK, Urschell CW, Roberts WC, Caulfield WH Jr. Aneurysmal
dilatation of the coronary arteries in cyanotic congenital cardiac disease.
Report of a forty-year-old patient with the Taussig-Bing complex. Am J Med.
1968;45(5):802-810.

84. Glancy DL, Braunwald NS, OBrien KP, Roberts WC. Scimitar syndrome
associated with patent ductus arteriosus, aortic coarctation and irreversible
pulmonary hypertension. Johns Hopkins Med J. 1968;123(6):297-304.

92. Roberts WC. Anomalous left ventricular band. An unemphasized cause of a
precordial musical murmur. Am J Cardiol. 1969;23(5):735-738.

93. Dean DC, Pamukcoglu T, Roberts WC. Rocks in the right ventricle. A
complication of congenital right ventricular infundibular obstruction
associated with chronic pulmonary parenchymal disease. Am J Cardiol.
1969;23(5):744-747.

94. Simon AL, Friedman WF, Roberts WC. The angiographic features of a case of
parachute mitral valve. Am Heart J. 1969;77(6):809-813.

108. Liddy TJ, Roberts WC. Chronic intravascular hemolysis (renal
hemosiderosis) after incomplete prosthetic closure of a ventricular septal
defect and noncalcific aortic regurgitation. Am J Clin Pathol.
1970;53(6):839-842.

122. Fortuin NJ, Roberts WC. Congenital atresia of the left main coronary
artery. Am J Med. 1971;50(3):385-389.

138. Falcone MW, Perloff JK, Roberts WC. Aneurysm of the nonpatent ductus
arteriosus. Am J Cardiol. 1972;29(3):422-426.

145. Falcone MW, Roberts WC. Atresia of the right atrial ostium of the
coronary sinus unassociated with persistence of the left superior vena cava:
a clinicopathologic study of four adult patients. Am Heart J.
1972;83(5):604-611.

215. Fishbein MC, Obma R, Roberts WC. Unruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm.
Am J Cardiol. 1975;35(6):918-922.

327. Scott LP, Chandra RS, Roberts WC. Complex congenital heart disease: a
multiplicity of therapeutic options. Am Heart J. 1978;96(6):806-810.

332. Covarrubias EA, Sheikh MU, Isner JM, Gomes M, Hufnagel CA, Roberts WC.
Calcific pulmonic stenosis in adulthood: treatment by valve replacement
(porcine xenograft) with postoperative hemodynamic evaluation. Chest.
1979;75(3):399-402.

387. Cabin HS, Lester LA, Roberts WC. Congenital heart disease with trisomy
13: use of the echocardiogram in delineating the location of a left-to-right
shunt. Am Heart J. 1980;100(4):563-566.

399. Arnett EN, Aisner SC, Lewis KB, Tecklenberg P, Brawley RK, Roberts WC.
Pulmonic valve stenosis, atrial septal defect and left-to-right interatrial
shunting with intact ventricular septum. A distinct hemodynamic-morphologic
syndrome. Chest. 1980;78(5):759-762.

406. Waller BF, Sheikh MU, Roberts WC. Prolapsing atrioventricular valve in
partial atrioventricular defect. Am Heart J. 1981;101(1):108-110.

435. Cabin HS, Wood TP, Smith JO, Roberts WC. Structurefunction correlations
in cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases (CPC): Ebsteins anomaly in the
elderly. Chest. 1981;80(2):212-214.

460. McManus BM, Luetzeler J, Roberts WC. Total anomalous pulmonary venous
connection: survival for 62 years without surgical intervention. Am Heart J.
1982;103(2):298-301.

479. Waller BF, Smith FA, Kerwin DM, Roberts WC. Fetal rubella 27 years
later. Chest. 1982;81(6):735-738.

482. Dicicco BS, McManus BM, Waller BF, Roberts WC. Separate aortic ostium of
the left anterior descending and left circumflex coronary arteries from the
left aortic sinus of Valsalva (absent left main coronary artery). Am Heart J.
1982;104(1):153-154.

490. Roberts WC, Dicicco BS, Waller BF, et al. Origin of the left main from
the right coronary artery or from the right aortic sinus with intramyocardial
tunneling to the left side of the heart via the ventricular septum. The case
against clinical significance of myocardial bridge or coronary tunnel. Am
Heart J. 1982;104(2 Pt 1):303-305.

508. Roberts WC, Spray TL, Shemin RJ, Maron BJ. Crisscrossed atrioventricular
valves and prolonged survival. Am J Cardiol. 1982;50(6):1436-1439.

534. Saffitz JE, McIntosh CL, Roberts WC. Massive right ventricular outflow
tract aneurysm after ventriculotomy for subvalvular pulmonic stenosis
associated with peripheral pulmonary arterial stenoses. Am J Cardiol.
1983;51(8):1460-1462.

598. Warnes CA, Boger JE, Roberts WC. Eisenmenger ventricular septal defect
with prolonged survival. Am J Cardiol. 1984;54(3):460-462.

599. McManus BM, Hahn PF, Smith JA, Roberts WC, Jackson JH. Eisenmenger
ductus arteriosus with prolonged survival. Am J Cardiol. 1984;54(3):462-464.

604. Warnes CA, Shugoll GI, Wallace RB, Roberts WC. Atrioventricular septal
defect (primum atrial septal defect) with prolonged survival (despite severe
mitral regurgitation and pulmonary hypertension) and associated cardiac
calcification (mitral anulus, coronary artery and pulmonary trunk). Am J
Cardiol. 1984;54(6):689-69.

605. Ross EM, McIntosh CL, Roberts WC. "Massive" calcification of a right
ventricular outflow parietal pericardial patch in tetralogy of Fallot. Am J
Cardiol. 1984;54(6):691-692.

616. Roberts WC, Robinowitz M. Anomalous origin of the left anterior
descending coronary artery from the pulmonary trunk with origin of the right
and left circumflex coronary arteries from the aorta. Am J Cardiol.
1984;54(10):1381-1383.

617. Warnes CA, Maron BJ, Jones M, Roberts WC. Asymptomatic sinus of Valsalva
aneurysm causing right ventricular outflow obstruction before and after
rupture. Am J Cardiol. 1984;54(10):1383-1384.

635. Barbour DJ, Roberts WC. Origin of the right from the left main coronary
artery (single coronary ostium in aorta). Am J Cardiol. 1985;55(5):609.

642. Barth CW III, Dibdin JD, Roberts WC. Mitral valve cleft without cardiac
septal defect causing severe mitral regurgitation but allowing long survival.
Am J Cardiol. 1985;55(9):1229-1231.

673. Barth CW III, Bray M, Roberts WC. Sudden death in infancy associated
with origin of both left main and right coronary arteries from a common
ostium above the left sinus of Valsalva. Am J Cardiol. 1986;57(4):365-366.

725. Barbour DJ, Roberts WC. Aneurysm of the pulmonary trunk unassociated
with intracardiac or great vessel left-to-right shunting. Am J Cardiol.
1987;59(1):192-194.

848. Dollar AL, Roberts WC. Retroaortic epicardial course of the left
circumflex coronary artery and anteroaortic intramyocardial (ventricular
septum) course of the left anterior descending coronary artery: an unusual
coronary anomaly and a proposed classification based on the number of
coronary ostia in the aorta. Am J Cardiol. 1989;64(12):828-829.

897. Brabham KR, Roberts WC. Fatal intrapericardial rupture of sinus of
Valsalva aneurysm. Am Heart J. 1990;120(6 Pt 1):1455-1456.

968. Fernicola DJ, Boodhoo VR, Roberts WC. Prolonged survival (74 years) in
unoperated tetralogy of Fallot with associated mitral valve prolapse. Am J
Cardiol. 1993;71(5):479-483.

983. Shirani J, Roberts WC. Coronary ostial dimple (in the posterior aortic
sinus) in the absence of other coronary arterial abnormalities. Am J Cardiol.
1993;72(1):118-119.

990. Shirani J, Zafari AM, Roberts WC. Sudden death, right ventricular
infarction, and abnormal right ventricular intramural coronary arteries in
isolated congenital valvular pulmonic stenosis. Am J Cardiol.
1993;72(3):368-370.

1545. George BA, Ko JM, Lensing FD, Kuiper JJ, Roberts WC. "Repaired"
tetralogy of Fallot mimicking arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
(another phenocopy). Am J Cardiol. 2011;108(2):326-329.

1629. Donaldson EE, Ko JM, Gonzalez-Stawinski G, Hall SA, Roberts WC.
Secondary arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy decades after
operative repair of tetralogy of Fallot. Am J Cardiol. 2014;114(5):806-809.

1649. Roberts CC, Roberts WC. Large patent ductus arteriosus in a 44-year-old
woman leading to calcium deposition in the left atrium and mitral and aortic
valves. Tex Heart Inst J. 2015;42(3):262-264.

1686. Roberts WC, Grayburn PA, Guileyardo JM, Stoler RC. Full development of
consequences of congenital pulmonic stenosis in eighty-four years. Am J
Cardiol. 2017;119(8):1284-1287.

1697. Roberts WC, Sing AC, Guileyardo JM. Combined atresia of one left-sided
and one right-sided cardiac valve in a premature newborn. Proc Bayl Univ Med
Cent. 2017;30(4):437-438.

1766. Roberts WC, Siddiqui S. Huge right ventricular outflow tract aneurysm
late following total repair of tetralogy of Fallot leading to orthotopic
heart transplantation. Cardiovasc Pathol. 2021;52:107332.
William C. Roberts, MD, was born in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 11, 1932. He graduated from Southern Methodist University and Emory University School of Medicine. He did his training in internal medicine at the Boston City Hospital and at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, and his training in pathology at the National Institutes of Health. From July 1964 to March 1993, he was Chief of Pathology at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. He has published more than 1,700 articles, authored or edited 31 books, and lectured in more than 2,200 cities worldwide. He has contributed information on many cardiovascular conditions. During the past 44 years, Dr. Roberts has been program director for the Williamsburg Conference on Heart Disease held every December in Williamsburg, Virginia. The American College of Cardiology Foundation has sponsored this conference for 30 years. Since March 1993, Dr. Roberts has been the executive director of the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. He was also the editor-in-chief of the Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings and Dean of the A. Webb Roberts Center for Continuing Medical Education at Baylor Scott & White Health. He had been the editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Cardiology since June 1982. He received many honors including the 1978 Gifted Teacher Award from The American College of Cardiology; the 1983 College Medalist Award of the American College of Chest Physicians; the Public Health Service Commendation Medal in 1979; the 1984 Richard and Hilda Rosenthal Foundation Award from the Council of Cardiology of the American Heart Association; an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Far Eastern University, Manila, Philippines in 1995; the designation of Master from The American College of Cardiology in 2004, and the Lifetime Achievement Award of The American College of Cardiology in 2016, and the Lifetime Achievement Award for Ds CEOs Excellence in Healthcare Awards in 2021.

Sadly, Dr. William C. Roberts passed away in June 2023 at the age of 90, just as this book series went into production.