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  • Title: Echocardiographic and roentgenographic determination of left ventricular size after coronary arterial bypass graft surgery.
    Author: Righetti A, Crawford MH, O'Rourke RA, Daily PO, Ross J.
    Journal: Chest; 1977 Oct; 72(4):455-8. PubMed ID: 302779.
    Abstract:
    In 38 patients undergoing elective coronary arterial bypass graft surgery, the radiographic dimension of the left side of the heart was determined and echocardiographic studies were performed before and after surgery. On the plain chest x-ray film one week after surgery, all patients showed an increase in the size of the left side of the heart, which usually was not accompanied by an increase in the echocardiographic left ventricular end-diastolic dimension; however, in 25 patients, pericardial fluid was detected soon after surgery, which would explain the enlarged cardiac silhouettes. Several months after surgery, the radiographic size of the heart returned to the preoperative value in most patients, and pericardial fluid was no longer demonstrated on the echocardiogram. Thus, pericardial fluid frequently is found in the first week following coronary arterial bypass graft surgery and may give the impression of increased cardiac size on plain chest x-ray films; however, echocardiographic studies provide a more accurate estimate of left ventricular size and reveal the presence of pericardial effusion.
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