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16,800
A real-time system for selectively sensing and pacing the His-bundle during sinus rhythm and ventricular fibrillation.
The His-Purkinje (HP) system provides a pathway for the time-synchronous contraction of the heart. His bundle (HB) of the HP system is gaining relevance as a pacing site for treating non-reversible bradyarrhythmia despite limited availability of tools to identify the HB. In this paper, we describe a real-time stimulation and recording system (rt-SRS) to investigate using multi-electrode techniques to identify and selectively pace the HB. The rt-SRS can not only be used in sinus rhythm, but also during ventricular fibrillation (VF). The rt-SRS will also help investigate the so far unknown causal effects of selectively pacing the HB during VF.</AbstractText>The rt-SRS consists of preamplifiers, data acquisition cards interfaced with a real-time controller, a current source, and current routing switches on a remote computer, which may be interrupted to stimulate using a host machine. The remote computer hosts a series of algorithms designed to aid in identifying electrodes directly over the HB, to accurately detect activation rates without over-picking, and to deliver stimulation pulses. The performance of the rt-SRS was demonstrated in seven isolated, perfused rabbit hearts.</AbstractText>The rt-SRS can visualize up to 96 channels of raw data, and spatial derivative data at 6.25-kHz sampling rate with an input-referred noise of 100&#xa0;&#xb5;V. The rt-SRS can send up to&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;150&#xa0;V of stimuli pulses to any of the 96 channels. In the rabbit experiments, HB activations were detected in 18&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;6.8% of the 64 electrodes used during VF.</AbstractText>The rt-SRS is capable of measuring and responding to cardiac electrophysiological phenomena in real-time with precisely timed and placed electrical stimuli. This rt-SRS was shown to be an effective research tool by successfully detecting and quantifying HB activations and delivering stimulation pulses to selected electrodes in real-time.</AbstractText>
16,801
Left cardiac sympathetic denervation reduces skin sympathetic nerve activity in patients with long QT syndrome.
Although left cardiac sympathetic denervation (LCSD) is an effective antiarrhythmic therapy for patients with long QT syndrome (LQTS), direct evidence of reduced sympathetic activity after LCSD in humans is limited.</AbstractText>The purpose of this study was to assess skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA) in patients with LQTS undergoing LCSD.</AbstractText>We prospectively enrolled 17 patients with LQTS who underwent LCSD between 2017 and 2019. SKNA recordings from the left arm (L-SKNA) and chest (C-SKNA) leads were performed before and after LCSD. Mean SKNA, burst activity, and nonburst activity of L-SKNA and C-SKNA were analyzed.</AbstractText>The mean patient age was 21 &#xb1; 9 years (8 men 47%). The longest baseline corrected QT value was 497 &#xb1; 55 ms at rest and 531 &#xb1; 38 ms on exercise stress testing. Five patients (29.4%) had previous LQTS-triggered cardiac events including syncope, documented torsades de pointes, and ventricular fibrillation. In the 24 hours after LCSD, mean L-SKNA decreased from 1.25 &#xb1; 0.64 to 0.85 &#xb1; 0.33 &#x3bc;V (P = .005) and mean C-SKNA from 1.36 &#xb1; 0.67 to 1.05 &#xb1; 0.49 &#x3bc;V (P = .11). The frequency of episodes of SKNA bursts recorded from the left-arm lead (2.87 &#xb1; 1.61 bursts per minute vs 1.13 &#xb1; 0.99 bursts per minute; P &lt; .001) and mean L-SKNA during burst (1.82 &#xb1; 0.79 &#x3bc;V vs 1.15 &#xb1; 0.44 &#x3bc;V; P &lt; .001) and nonburst (1.09 &#xb1; 0.60 &#x3bc;V vs 0.75 &#xb1; 0.32 &#x3bc;V; P = .03) periods significantly decreased after LCSD, while the frequency of episodes of SKNA bursts recorded from the chest lead (P = .57) and mean C-SKNA during burst (P = .44) and nonburst (P = .10) periods did not change significantly. No arrhythmic events were documented after 11.9 months (range 3.0-22.2 months) of follow-up.</AbstractText>LCSD provides an inhibitory effect on cardiac sympathetic activity by suppressing burst discharge as measured by SKNA.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,802
Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator lead revision following left ventricular assist device implantation.
Lead dysfunction can lead to serious consequences including failure to treat ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation (VT/VF). The incidence and mechanisms of lead dysfunction following left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation are not well-described. We sought to determine the incidence, mechanisms, timing, and complications of right ventricular lead dysfunction requiring revision following LVAD implantation.</AbstractText>Retrospective observational chart review of all LVAD recipients with pre-existing implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) from 2009 to 2018 was performed including device interrogation reports, laboratory and imaging data, procedural reports, and clinical outcomes.</AbstractText>Among 583 patients with an ICD in situ undergoing LVAD implant, the median (interquartile range) age was 62.5 (15.7) years, 21% were female, and the types of LVADs included HeartWare HVAD (26%), HeartMate II (52%), and HeartMate III (22%). Right ventricular lead revision was performed in 38 patients (6.5%) at a median (25th, 75th) of 16.4 (3.6, 29.2) months following LVAD. Mechanisms of lead dysfunction included macrodislodgement (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;4), surgical lead injury (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;4), recall (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;3), insulation failure (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;8) or conductor fracture (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;7), and alterations in the lead-myocardial interface (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;12). Undersensing requiring revision occurred in 22 (58%) cases. Clinical sequelae of undersensing included failure to detect VT/VF (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;4) and pacing-induced torsade de pointes (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;1). Oversensing occurred in 12 (32%) and sequelae included inappropriate antitachycardia pacing ([ATP], n&#x2009;=&#x2009;8), inappropriate ICD shock (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;6), and ATP-induced VT (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;1).</AbstractText>The incidence of right ventricular lead dysfunction following LVAD implantation is significant and has important clinical sequelae. Physicians should remain vigilant for lead dysfunction after LVAD surgery and test lead function before discharge.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,803
Contact-Force-Sensing-Based Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation in Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardias (COBRA-PATH): a randomized controlled trial.
Multiple studies have demonstrated the importance of adequate catheter-tissue contact in the creation of effective lesions during radiofrequency catheter ablation. The development of contact force (CF)-sensing catheters has contributed significantly to improve clinical outcomes in atrial fibrillation. However, CF-sensing technology is not used in the ablation of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT). The possible reason for this is that PSVT ablation with the conventional approach (i.e. nonirrigated, non-CF-sensing catheters) is considered a relatively low-risk procedure with fairly high success rates (short and long term). The aim of this study is to determine whether CF sensing can further improve the outcomes of PSVT ablation.</AbstractText><AbstractText Label="METHODS/DESIGN" NlmCategory="METHODS">The COBRA-PATH study is a single-center, two-armed, randomized controlled trial. Patients without structural heart disease being referred for electrophysiology study, because of PSVT and potential treatment with radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation, will be randomly assigned to either manual ablation with standard nonirrigated ablation catheters or manual ablation with an open-irrigated ablation catheter equipped with CF sensing (used in a virtual nonirrigated modus). The primary study endpoint is the difference in the number of RF applications during the ablation of atrioventricular nodal re-entry tachycardia, and that of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and atrioventricular re-entrant tachycardia. Secondary outcome parameters include acute and long-term procedural success rates, overall duration of RF applications, procedure/fluoroscopy durations and safety parameters.</AbstractText>We expect to see a reduced number/duration of RF applications required to achieve effective lesion creation, and consequently a decrease in total procedure/fluoroscopy times. Although a significant improvement in procedural success rates (acute/long term) might not be feasible to demonstrate (given the relatively high success rate of the standard ablation method), the possible decrease in procedure duration and the consequential reduction of radiation exposure has important clinical implications for both operators and patients undergoing the procedure.</AbstractText>ClinicalTrials, NCT04078685. Retrospectively registered on 2 September 2019.</AbstractText>
16,804
New-onset extreme right axis deviation in acute myocardial infarction: clinical characteristics and outcomes.
QRS axis deviation can occur during myocardial infarction (MI); to date, little is known about the significance of extreme right axis deviation (ERAD) in the frontal plane, i.e. a shift in QRS axis between +180&#xb0; and +270&#xb0;, during MI. We sought to investigate the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with new-onset ERAD in the absence of complete bundle branch blocks (BBB) in the setting of acute coronary syndromes (ACS).</AbstractText>A single-center retrospective observational study was conducted, including patients with new-onset ERAD in the absence of complete BBB admitted for ACS to our Cardiac Intensive Care Unit. Clinical, electrocardiographic, echocardiographic, angiographic features at baseline and cardiovascular events during hospitalization and at mid-term follow-up were collected.</AbstractText>The study population consisted of 30 consecutive patients (23 men) from January 2014 to September 2018. The most frequent clinical presentation was ST-segment elevation MI (n =&#xa0;22, 73.4%) and the most frequent electrocardiographic MI location was anterolateral (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;11, 36.7%). Left anterior descending (LAD) was the most frequent infarct-related artery (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;21, 70%); 15 patients (50%) had multivessel coronary artery disease. Cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation (VF) at presentation (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;5, 16.6%), cardiogenic shock during the hospital stay (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;10, 33.3%), cardiac arrest due to VF after revascularization (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;6, 20%) and cardiac death (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;7, 23.3%) were common.</AbstractText>New-onset ERAD during MI may be related to extensive myocardial ischemia and/or necrosis causing an "electrical escaping" with an extreme dislocation of the QRS axis. In our limited series we found several acute arrhythmic and hemodynamic complications and high mortality.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,805
Thoracoscopic Pulmonary Vein and Left Atrial Posterior Wall Isolation Combined with Left Atrial Appendage Resection in Patients with Long-Standing Persistent Atrial Fibrillation.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of a modified technique for totally thoracoscopic left atrial posterior wall and pulmonary vein isolation in patients with long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation.</AbstractText>From April 2017 to December 2018, we included in this study 28 consecutive patients who underwent thoracoscopic left atrial posterior wall and pulmonary vein radiofrequency isolation combined with left atrial appendage resection. We used a device with irrigated electrodes (Medtronic Cardioblate Gemini-s). The original surgical technique "GALAXY" proposed by Doty in 2012 was modified. The number of ablations was significantly increased, and frequent position changing of the ablation device and change of device angulation were added.</AbstractText>Sinus rhythm was restored in all patients. There was no operative mortality, no myocardial infarction, and no stroke or transient ischemic attack. One patient required sternotomy and another survived left anterolateral thoracotomy due to bleeding. A 180-day follow-up (24-hour Holter monitoring) revealed no sign of recurrence of atrial fibrillation or other supraventricular arrhythmia in any patient. Mean follow-up was nine months (range: 6-16 months). At the last follow-up, 26 patients (92,9%) were in sinus rhythm (24-hour Holter monitoring).</AbstractText>A frequent ablation device position changing during the surgery makes it possible to achieve complete left atrial posterior wall and pulmonary veins isolation.&#xa0; An increased number of applications allows to avoid a false positive transmural damage assessment showed by impedance drop. Also, frequent position changing of the ablation device and increased number of applications do not affect the number of postoperative complications.</AbstractText>
16,806
Myocarditis in the Athlete: Arrhythmogenic Substrates, Clinical Manifestations, Management, and Eligibility Decisions.
Myocarditis is as an important cause of sudden cardiac death (SCD) among athletes. The incidence of SCD ascribed to myocarditis did not change after the introduction of pre-participation screening in Italy, due to the transient nature of the disease and problems in the differential diagnosis with the athlete's heart. The arrhythmic burden and the underlying mechanisms differ between the acute and chronic setting, depending on the relative impact of acute inflammation versus post-inflammatory myocardial fibrosis. In the acute phase, ventricular arrhythmias vary from isolated ventricular ectopic beats to complex tachycardias that can lead to SCD. Atrioventricular blocks are typical of specific forms of myocarditis, and supraventricular arrhythmias may be observed in case of atrial inflammation. Athletes with acute myocarditis should be temporarily restricted from physical exercise, until complete recovery. However, ventricular tachycardia may also occur in the chronic phase in the context of post-inflammatory myocardial scar.
16,807
Association between advanced interatrial block and small vessel diseases in the brain.
The latest evidence shows the association of atrial cardiopathy with embolic strokes of undetermined source. Advanced interatrial block (aIAB) is an electrophysiological mark of atrial cardiopathy. This study investigated the relationship between aIAB and the burden of silent cerebral small vessel diseases (SVD) on magnetic resonance imaging in the absence of atrial fibrillation (AF) and atrial flutter.</AbstractText>This cross-sectional study included 499 patients with normal left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), who were free of AF, atrial flutter, stroke, and acute coronary syndrome in our hospital. aIAB was ascertained by digital electrocardiograms. Left atrial diameter, LVEF, and left ventricular posterior wall thickness (LVPWT) were measured on echocardiograms. Based on the presence of 4 manifestations of SVD, including white matter hyperintensity (WMH), lacunes, microbleeds, and enlarged perivascular spaces (EPVS) on magnetic resonance imaging, an ordinal SVD score (range, 0-4) was devised to reflect the total burden of cerebral SVD. The ordinal regression model was used to explore the association of aIAB with SVD burden after adjusting for confounding factors.</AbstractText>The mean age was 67.7 years, and 327 (65.5%) were male. A total of 23 (4.6%) patients had aIAB. The number of patients with cerebral SVD scores of 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 was 92 (18.4%), 122 (24.4%), 190 (38.1%), 83 (16.6%), and 12 (2.4%), respectively. After adjusting for age, sex, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, left atrial diameter, LVEF, and LVPWT, the regression model showed a significant association of aIAB with cerebral SVD score (OR =2.408, 95% CI, 1.082-5.366).</AbstractText>Atrial cardiopathy indexed by aIAB was independently associated with a high burden of SVD in the brain.</AbstractText>2020 Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,808
Video-based AI for beat-to-beat assessment of cardiac function.
Accurate assessment of cardiac function is crucial for the diagnosis of cardiovascular disease<sup>1</sup>, screening for cardiotoxicity<sup>2</sup> and decisions regarding the clinical management of patients with a critical illness<sup>3</sup>. However, human assessment of cardiac function focuses on a limited sampling of cardiac cycles and has considerable inter-observer variability despite years of training<sup>4,5</sup>. Here, to overcome this challenge, we present a video-based deep&#xa0;learning algorithm-EchoNet-Dynamic-that surpasses the performance of human experts in the critical tasks of segmenting the left ventricle, estimating ejection fraction and assessing cardiomyopathy. Trained on echocardiogram videos, our model accurately segments the left ventricle with a Dice similarity coefficient of 0.92, predicts ejection fraction with a mean absolute error of 4.1% and reliably classifies heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (area under the curve of 0.97). In an external dataset from another healthcare system, EchoNet-Dynamic predicts the ejection fraction with a mean absolute error of 6.0% and classifies heart failure with reduced ejection fraction with an area under the curve of 0.96. Prospective evaluation with repeated human measurements confirms that the model has variance that is comparable to or less than that of human experts. By leveraging information across multiple cardiac cycles, our model can rapidly identify subtle changes in ejection fraction, is more reproducible than human evaluation and lays the foundation for precise diagnosis of cardiovascular disease in real time. As a resource to promote further innovation, we also make publicly available a large dataset of 10,030 annotated echocardiogram videos.
16,809
The association of cannabis use and cardiac dysrhythmias: a systematic review.
<b>Introduction:</b> Cannabis use results in elevation of heart rate and blood pressure immediately after use, primarily due to sympathetic nervous system stimulation and parasympathetic nervous system inhibition. These effects may precipitate cardiac dysrhythmia. The objective of our study was to analyze systematically the pertinent medical literature regarding the putative association between cannabis use and cardiac dysrhythmia.<b>Methods:</b> We queried PubMed, Google Scholar, and OpenGrey, and reviewed results for relevance. We graded clinical trials, observational and retrospective studies, case series and reports using Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine guidelines.<b>Results:</b> The relevant publications identified included one Level I systematic review and meta-analysis of six human studies, 16 Level II studies with 6,942 subjects, nine Level III studies with 3,797,096 subjects and two systematic and scoping reviews with 30 cases. Cannabis-induced tachycardia was highlighted in 17 of 28 (61%) Level I-III articles followed by a generalized description of dysrhythmia in eight (29%). Specific dysrhythmias noted in the Level I-III articles included atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, atrioventricular block, premature ventricular contractions, premature atrial contractions, ventricular tachycardia, and ventricular fibrillation. Other reported findings on electrocardiogram included ST segment elevation, P, and T wave changes. Only one Level III study reported a decreased risk of atrial fibrillation from cannabis use in patients hospitalized for heart failure (Odds ratio = 0.87). There were 39 case series (Level IV) and case reports (Level V) with 42 subjects. Average age was 30&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;12&#x2009;years, and only ten (24%) were female. The most common dysrhythmia mentioned in the Level IV and V articles was ventricular fibrillation (21%), followed by atrial fibrillation (19%), ventricular tachycardia (12%), third degree atrioventricular block (12%), and asystole (12%). There were four cases (10%) of symptomatic bradycardia. Notable electrocardiographic changes included ST segment elevation (29%), Brugada pattern in leads V1, V2 (14%), and right bundle branch block (12%). There were eight cases of cardiac arrest, of whom five expired.<b>Conclusion:</b> Cannabis use is associated with increased risk of cardiac dysrhythmia, which is rare but may be life-threatening. Clinicians and nurses should inquire about acute and chronic cannabis use in their patients presenting with tachycardia, bradycardia, dysrhythmia, chest pain, and/or unexplained syncope. Patients who use cannabis should be educated on this deleterious association, especially those with underlying cardiac disease or risk factors.
16,810
Long-term echocardiographic evaluation of asymptomatic patients undergoing minimally invasive valve repair for severe primary mitral regurgitation.
Asymptomatic patients with newly diagnosed severe primary mitral regurgitation (MR) may not be candidates for surgery according to clinical guidelines.</AbstractText>We aimed to determine whether asymptomatic patients with severe primary MR benefit from minimally invasive mitral valve repair.</AbstractText>This prospective registry study assessed consecutive asymptomatic patients who underwent mitral valve repair using right minithoracotomy. Left ventricular ejection fraction, end&#x2011;diastolic and end&#x2011;&#x2011;systolic volumes, end&#x2011;diastolic and end&#x2011;systolic diameters, as well as left atrial (LA) area and volume were measured. Major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) were assessed at 6, 12, and 24 months after surgery.</AbstractText>The study included 114 patients, of whom 16 (14%) were lost to follow&#x2011;up (except the endpoint of death). No deaths were reported during follow&#x2011;up. A comparison of median echocardiographic parameters at baseline and 24 months revealed significant reverse remodeling: left ventricular ejection fraction, 68% vs 60% (P &lt;0.001); end&#x2011;diastolic volume, 165 cm3 vs 107.5 cm3 (P &lt;0.001); end&#x2011;systolic volume, 51 cm3 vs 43.5 cm3 (P = 0.02), end&#x2011;diastolic diameter, 58 mm vs 49 mm (P &lt;0.001); end&#x2011;systolic diameter, 35 mm vs 30 mm (P &lt;0.001); LA area, 26 cm2 vs 18 cm2 (P &lt;0.001); and LA volume, 96 cm3 vs 49.5 cm3(P &lt;0.001). There were 9 MACCEs (9.2%): 2 reoperations (2%), 1 hospitalization for heart failure (1%), and 6 cases of new&#x2011;onset atrial fibrillation (6.1%).</AbstractText>Minimally invasive mitral valve repair is safe and effective in asymptomatic patients with severe primary MR. It should be recommended regardless of ventricular and atrial dimensions.</AbstractText>
16,811
Surgery for Mesothelioma After Radiation Therapy (SMART); A Single Institution Experience.
<b>Background:</b> The optimal treatment sequence for localized malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is controversial. We aimed to assess outcomes and toxicities of treating localized MPM with neoadjuvant radiation therapy (RT) followed by extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP). <b>Methods:</b> Patients were enrolled on an institutional protocol of surgery for mesothelioma after radiation therapy (SMART) between June 2016 and May 2017. Eligible patients were adults with MPM localized to the ipsilateral pleura. Patients underwent staging with PET/CT, pleuroscopy, bronchoscopy/EBUS, mediastinoscopy, and laparoscopy. Five fractions of RT were delivered using intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), with 30 Gy delivered to gross disease and 25 Gy to the entire pleura. EPP was performed 4-10 days following completion of RT. <b>Results:</b> Five patients were treated on protocol. Median age was 62 years (range 36-66). Histology was epithelioid on initial biopsy in all patients, but one was found to have biphasic histology after surgery. Three patients had surgeon-assessed gross total resection, and two had gross residual disease. While all patients were clinically node negative by pretreatment staging, three had positive nodal disease at surgery. Patients were hospitalized for a median 24 days (range 5-69) following surgery. Two patients developed empyema, one of whom developed respiratory failure and subsequently renal failure requiring dialysis, while the other required multiple surgical debridements. Two patients developed atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response after surgery, one of whom developed acute respiratory distress requiring intubation and tracheostomy. At last follow-up, one patient died at 1.4 years after local and distant progression, two were alive with local and distant progression, and the remaining two were alive without evidence of disease at 0.1 and 2.7 years. Median time to progression was 9 months. Three patients received salvage chemotherapy. <b>Conclusions:</b> SMART provided promising oncologic outcomes at the cost of significant treatment related morbidity. Due to the significant treatment associated morbidity and favorable treatment alternatives, we have not broadly adopted SMART at our institution.
16,812
Safety, Performance, and Efficacy of Cardiac Contractility Modulation Delivered by the 2-Lead Optimizer Smart System: The FIX-HF-5C2 Study.
Prior studies of cardiac contractility modulation (CCM) employed a 3-lead Optimizer system. A new 2-lead system eliminated the need for an atrial lead. This study tested the safety and effectiveness of this 2-lead system compared with the 3-lead system.</AbstractText>Patients with New York Heart Association III/IVa symptoms despite medical therapy, left ventricular ejection fraction 25% to 45%, and not eligible for cardiac resynchronization therapy could participate. All subjects received an Optimizer 2-lead implant. The primary end point was the estimated difference in the change of peak VO2</sub> from baseline to 24 weeks between FIX-HF-5C2 (2-lead system) subjects relative to control subjects from the prior FIX-HF-5C (3-lead system) study. Changes in New York Heart Association were a secondary end point. The primary safety end point was a comparison of device-related adverse events between FIX-HF-5C2 and FIX-HF-5C subjects.</AbstractText>Sixty subjects, 88% male, 66&#xb1;9 years old with left ventricular ejection fraction 34&#xb1;6% were included. Baseline characteristics were similar between FIX-HF-5C and FIX-HF-5C2 subjects except that 15% of FIX-HF-5C2 subjects had permanent atrial fibrillation versus 0% in FIX-HF-5C. CCM delivery did not differ significantly between 2- and 3-lead systems (19 892&#xb1;3472 versus 19 583&#xb1;4998 CCM signals/day, CI of difference [-1228 to 1847]). The change of peak VO2</sub> from baseline to 24 weeks was 1.72 (95% Bayesian credible interval, 1.02-2.42) mL/kg per minute greater in the 2-lead device group versus controls. 83.1% of 2-lead subjects compared with 42.7% of controls experienced &#x2265;1 class New York Heart Association improvement (P</i>&lt;0.001). There were decreased Optimizer-related adverse events with the 2-lead system compared with the 3-lead system (0% versus 8%; P</i>=0.03).</AbstractText>The 2-lead system effectively delivers comparable amount of CCM signals (including in subjects with atrial fibrillation) as the 3-lead system, is equally safe and improves peak VO2</sub> and New York Heart Association. Device-related adverse effects are less with the 2-lead system. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03339310.</AbstractText>
16,813
Identification, clinical manifestation and structural mechanisms of mutations in AMPK associated cardiac glycogen storage disease.
Although 21 causative mutations have been associated with PRKAG2 syndrome, our understanding of the syndrome remains incomplete. The aim of this project is to further investigate its unique genetic background, clinical manifestations, and underlying structural changes.</AbstractText>We recruited 885 hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) probands and their families internationally. Targeted next-generation sequencing of sudden cardiac death (SCD) genes was performed. The role of the identified variants was assessed using histological techniques and computational modeling.</AbstractText>Twelve PRKAG2 syndrome kindreds harboring 5 distinct variants were identified. The clinical penetrance of 25 carriers was 100.0%. Twenty-two family members died of SCD or heart failure (HF). All probands developed bradycardia (HRmin, 36.3&#x202f;&#xb1;&#x202f;9.8&#x202f;bpm) and cardiac conduction defects, and 33% had evidence of atrial fibrillation/paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT) and 67% had ventricular preexcitation, respectively. Some carriers presented with apical hypertrophy, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and renal insufficiency. Histological study revealed reduced AMPK activity and major cardiac channels in the heart tissue with K485E mutation. Computational modelling suggests that K485E disrupts the salt bridge connecting the &#x3b2; and &#x3b3; subunits of AMPK, R302Q/P decreases the binding affinity for ATP, T400N and H401D alter the orientation of H383 and R531 residues, thus altering nucleotide binding, and N488I and L341S lead to structural instability in the Bateman domain, which disrupts the intramolecular regulation.</AbstractText>Including 4 families with 3 new mutations, we describe a cohort of 12 kindreds with PRKAG2 syndrome with novel pathogenic mechanisms by computational modelling. Severe clinical cardiac phenotypes may be developed, including HF, requiring close follow-up.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,814
Diagnostic accuracy of R-wave detection by insertable cardiac monitors.
Insertable cardiac monitors (ICM) allow prolonged rhythm monitoring, but the diagnostic performance can be hampered by false positive arrhythmia alerts related to inadequate R-wave sensing. This study assesses the prevalence and predictors of inadequate R-wave sensing (both over- and undersensing) among different ICM types.</AbstractText>Patients implanted with an ICM at Ghent University Hospital between January 2017 and August 2018 were included. ICM tracings recorded at interrogation or transmitted by remote monitoring were reviewed for inadequate R-wave sensing leading to false arrhythmia alerts. Patient and implant characteristics were retrieved from the medical records and implant reports.</AbstractText>The study screened 135 patients (age 59 &#xb1; 19 years, 44% female) implanted with different ICM types: Reveal LINQ&#x2122; and XT (Medtronic): n&#xa0;=&#xa0;92 (68%), Confirm and Confirm Rx (Abbott): n&#xa0;=&#xa0;35 (26%), and BioMonitor 2 (Biotronik): n&#xa0;=&#xa0;8 (6%). ICM tracings were analyzed in 112 patients (83%). False arrhythmia alerts occurred in 22 (20%) patients, most frequently related to undersensing (77%). False diagnosis of bradycardia or pause was documented in 64%, false high ventricular rates in 14%, and false atrial fibrillation alerts in 22%. Occurrence of R-wave changes was not related to patient characteristics or implant R-wave sensing. A trend toward higher number of inadequate R-wave sensing seems to occur with nonparasternal implant sites (P&#xa0;=&#xa0;.074).</AbstractText>False arrhythmia alerts due to inadequate R-wave sensing occurred in 20% of ICM patients independent of implant features and patient characteristics.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,815
The Evolving Role of Esmolol in Management of Pre-Hospital Refractory Ventricular Fibrillation; a Scoping Review.
Few studies have described their experience using esmolol, an ultra-short acting &#x3b2;-adrenergic antagonist, in the emergency department (ED) as a feasible adjuvant therapy for the treatment of refractory ventricular fibrillation/pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VF/pVT) out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. However, there is currently insufficient evidence to support the widespread implementation of this therapy. The aim of this scoping review was to summarize the current available evidence on the use of esmolol as an adjuvant therapy for refractory VF/pVT out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, as well as to identify gaps within the literature that may require further research.</AbstractText>We conducted a comprehensive literature search of MEDLINE via PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) on July 5, 2019. The search was restricted to articles that were published from January 2000 to July 2019. Google Scholar was searched and reference lists of relevant papers were examined to identify additional studies. We included any controlled clinical study design (randomized controlled trials and non-randomized controlled trials) and observational studies (cohort studies and case-control studies) in adults providing information on the use of esmolol as an adjuvant therapy for refractory VF/pVT out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.</AbstractText>The search yielded 2817 unique records, out of which 2 peer-reviewed articles were found relating to the research purpose totaling 66 patients 33.3% (n = 22) of which received esmolol. These studies found that sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was significantly more common in the patients that received esmolol compared to the control group. However, no statistically significant outcomes were found regarding survival to discharge and favorable neurological outcome. No randomized controlled trials were identified.</AbstractText>To date, it is difficult to conclude the real benefit of esmolol as an adjuvant therapy for refractory VF/pVT out-of-hospital cardiac arrest based on the available evidence. The findings of this scoping review suggest that there is a paucity of research and limited evidence to support this therapy.</AbstractText>
16,816
A case of takotsubo cardiomyopathy developing ventricular fibrillation after a pacemaker implantation.
Pacemaker implantations are minimally invasive procedures commonly used for patients with bradycardic arrhythmias. Takotsubo cardiomyopathy, which is usually induced by life-threatening stress hardly ever occurs after this minimally invasive procedure. Here, we experienced a patient who developed takotsubo cardiomyopathy leading to ventricular fibrillation the day after a pacemaker implantation. At that time, a cardiac echocardiogram and left ventriculogram revealed hypercontraction of the base of the heart and a decreased contraction of the apex. A coronary angiogram revealed no significant coronary stenosis. Ten days later, the electrocardiogram findings normalized, and an echocardiogram revealed that the left ventricular function had fully recovered. Therefore, we diagnosed this patient with takotsubo cardiomyopathy. In general, pacemaker implantations are routine procedures and fatal complications are low. We report a case that developed potentially fatal complications after a pacemaker implantation. &lt;<b>Learning objective:</b> This patient developed in-hospital cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation from takotsubo cardiomyopathy after a pacemaker implantation, which is of special interest because complications leading to in-hospital cardiac arrest just after a pacemaker implantation are rare. We consider this case report as an educational case that caused potentially fatal complications even after pacemaker implantation.&gt;.
16,817
Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Appraising Efficacy and Safety of Vernakalant for Cardioversion of Recent-Onset Atrial Fibrillation.
Vernakalant is a novel, relatively atrial-selective antiarrhythmic agent. Despite its good efficacy profile and rapid onset of action, there was still controversial evidence regarding vernakalant-related adverse events. We searched PubMed and Embase for studies that compared intravenous vernakalant with placebo or antiarrhythmic agents in patients with recent-onset atrial fibrillation (AF) lasting no more than 7 days. Efficacy and safety outcomes were the treatment-induced cardioversion rate within 90 minutes and adverse events after first exposure to study drug respectively. Nine randomized controlled trials enrolling 1296 patients were analyzed. Quantitative synthesis showed that vernakalant was superior to placebo for cardioversion of recent-onset AF within 90 minutes [49.7% vs. 6.2%, risk ratio (RR) 8.13, 95% confidence interval (CI) 5.35-12.36, P &lt; 0.00001], and it did not achieve statistical significance in cardioversion when vernakalant was compared with ibutilide (62.4% vs. 47.3%, RR 1.32, 95% CI 1.00-1.73, P = 0.05). As for safety assessment, no significant differences were found in occurring serious adverse events (9.9% vs. 10.4%, RR 0.91, 95% CI 0.67-1.25, P = 0.57) and hypotension (5.3% vs. 3.3%, RR 1.53, 95% CI 0.86-2.73, P = 0.15) between vernakalant and comparator (either placebo, ibutilide, or amiodarone). There were trends that patients receiving vernakalant experienced more drug discontinuation (2.5% vs. 1.0%, RR 2.21, 95% CI 0.96-5.11, P = 0.06) and less any ventricular tachycardia (6.1% vs. 8.1%, RR 0.70, 95% CI 0.49-1.00, P = 0.05) than those receiving comparator, but the differences were not statistically significant. Furthermore, vernakalant was associated with a higher risk of bradycardia in comparison with comparator (6.3% vs. 1.1%, RR 4.04, 95% CI 1.67-9.75, P = 0.002). Vernakalant is effective in converting recent-onset AF to sinus rhythm rapidly, while significantly more bradycardia events are related to vernakalant in our meta-analysis.
16,818
Del Nido cardioplegia in coronary surgery: a propensity-matched analysis.
Del Nido cardioplegia (DNC) has been shown to be safe in adults with normal coronary arteries who are undergoing valve surgery. This study compared the effects of DNC versus traditional blood-based cardioplegia on postoperative complications in patients who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).</AbstractText>A retrospective analysis was performed on 863 patients who underwent CABG with DNC (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;420) or control cardioplegia (CC) (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;443) between 2014 and 2017. The full cohort of DNC and CC recipients, as well as propensity score-matched pairs, was compared regarding preoperative risk variables and outcomes.</AbstractText>The DNC and CC groups showed no significant differences in mean cardiopulmonary bypass time (53.09 vs 52.10&#x2009;min, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.206) or aortic cross-clamp time (32.82 vs 33.28&#x2009;min, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.967). The groups also showed no difference in operative mortality (2.1% vs 2.5%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.734); however, DNC use resulted in lower rates of overall infections (1.7% vs 4.3%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.024), total sternal infections (0.9% vs 3.2%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.023), postoperative atrial fibrillation (23.8% vs 30.7%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.023) and postoperative ventricular tachycardia (0.5% vs 3.4%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.002). A propensity-matching analysis (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;335 pairs) showed similar statistically significant decreases with DNC.</AbstractText>In this large cohort of CABG patients, DNC was shown as a safe alternative to CC and was associated with lower postoperative dysrhythmia and infection rates. These findings show that DNC is safe and effective in patients whose operative interventions may require only single-dosing cardioplegia; its use in longer cases should be further explored given its low complication rate.</AbstractText>&#xa9; The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,819
Femoral vascular complications after catheter ablation in the current era: The utility of computed tomography imaging.
Few studies have examined the characteristics of catheter ablation vascular complications, and recently physicians increasingly use computed tomography angiography (CTA) for diagnosing.</AbstractText>We sought to investigate the incidence of femoral vascular complications in catheter ablation and factors associated with complications in the current era.</AbstractText>This single-center observational study consisted of 311 consecutive (atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, and ventricular arrhythmias in 222 [71.4%], 7 [2.3%], 43 [13.8%], and 39 [12.5%]) patients who underwent catheter ablation. The detailed patient data and clinical outcomes were obtained from the medical records.</AbstractText>Emergent CTA was performed in a total of 8 (2.6%) patients at a median of 4.5 (2.0-12.5) days postprocedure, and the precise diagnosis was obtained in all. Among them, pseudoaneurysms, arteriovenous fistulae (AVF), and actively bleeding hematomas were identified in two, one, and one patient, respectively, and all required readmissions after discharge. AVF was diagnosed by a Doppler ultrasound examination in another patient. In total, 5 (1.6%) patients exhibited major femoral vascular complications including two pseudoaneurysms, two AVFs, and one active bleeding hematoma. The pseudoaneurysms and AVFs were successfully eliminated by direct compression, and extravasation from the femoral circumflex artery required coil embolization. Antiplatelet therapy and the use of larger arterial sheaths (&#x2265;7-Fr) increased the major femoral arterial complications, but atrial fibrillation ablation under uninterrupted anticoagulation therapy or the use of larger venous sheaths did not.</AbstractText>Vascular complications are still not negligible procedure-related complications during catheter ablation in the current era. CTA provides a rapid and precise diagnosis for optimal treatment strategies.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,820
A Novel Risk Stratification Score for Sudden Cardiac Death Prediction in Middle-Aged, Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy Patients: The ESTIMATED Score.
We aimed to develop a risk score (LGE Based Prediction of SCD Risk in Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy [ESTIMATED]) based on late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance to predict sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (NIDCM) and left ventricular ejection fraction &#x2264; 35%.</AbstractText>We recruited 395 consecutive middle-aged patients with NIDCM and performed 3-year follow-up for SCD events. The score was developed and verified in 295 primary prevention patients, and the predictive value was confirmed by comparing the SCD events between the high-risk patients stratified by the score and 100 secondary prevention patients.</AbstractText>The ESTIMATED score (constructed by the LGE extent &gt; 14%, syncope, atrial flutter/fibrillation, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, advanced atrioventricular block, and age &#x2264; 20 or &gt; 50 years) showed good calibrations for SCD prediction in the derivation (C-statistic: 0.80, 95% confidence interval: 0.74-0.86) and validation set (C-statistic: 0.80, 95% confidence interval: 0.71-0.87). By the score, 20.3% of primary prevention patients were categorized as high risk (&#x2265; 3 points), 28.1% as intermediate risk (2 points), and 51.6% as low risk (0-1 points) for 3-year SCD events (45.9% vs 20.1% vs 5.1%, P &lt; 0.0001). The 3-year SCD events were also well in agreement with the score stratification in patients without implantable cardioverter-defibrillator. High-risk primary prevention patients selected by the score in the derivation and validation sets had 3-year SCD events comparable with that in secondary prevention patients (47.6% vs 40.6% vs 38.7%, P&#xa0;= 0.81).</AbstractText>Our study derived and validated an LGE-based (ESTIMATED) risk score providing refined SCD prediction. The score may help to identify candidates for primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator in patients with NIDCM.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Canadian Cardiovascular Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,821
Clinical utility of genetic testing in the early diagnosis of Danon disease mimicking hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: a case report.
Danon disease (OMIM 300257) is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder, characterized by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), skeletal myopathy, variable intellectual disability, and other minor clinical features. This condition accounts for ~&#x2009;4% of HCM patients, with a more severe and early onset phenotype in males, causing sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the first three decades of life. Genetic alterations in the LAMP2 gene are the main cause of this inherited fatal condition. Up to date, more than 100 different pathogenic variants have been reported in the literature. However, the majority of cases are misdiagnosed as HCM or have a delay in the diagnosis.</AbstractText>Here, we describe a young boy with an early diagnosis of HCM. After 2 episodes of ventricular fibrillation within 2&#x2009;years, genetic testing identified a novel LAMP2 pathogenic variant. Subsequently, further clinical evaluations showing muscle weakness and mild intellectual disability confirmed the diagnosis of Danon disease.</AbstractText>This report highlights the role of genetic testing in the rapid diagnosis of Danon disease, underscoring the need to routinely consider the inclusion of LAMP2 gene in the genetic screening for HCM, since an early diagnosis of Danon disease in patients with a phenotype mimicking HCM is essential to plan appropriate treatment, ie cardiac transplantation.</AbstractText>
16,822
Patients with atrial fibrillation and mid-range ejection fraction differ in anticoagulation pattern, thrombotic and mortality risk independently of CHA<sub>2</sub>DS<sub>2</sub>-VAS<sub>C</sub> score.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) patients with mid-range left ventricular ejection fraction (mrEF) of 40-49% have neither preserved (pEF&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;50%) nor reduced (rEF&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;40%) EF and are increasingly being recognized as a distinct group with specific clinical risks. We aimed to retrospectively investigate clinical characteristics and associated thrombotic, bleeding and mortality risks of mrEF in comparison to pEF and rEF in a cohort of 1000 non-valvular AF patients presenting in our institution during the period 2013-2018. Patients with mrEF presented with older age (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) and a higher frequency of arterial hypertension (P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.001) in comparison to both pEF and rEF patients. In comparison to pEF, mrEF patients were more likely to have diabetes mellitus (P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.004), lower HDL-cholesterol (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) and lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), significantly higher CHA<sub>2</sub>DS<sub>2</sub>-VAS<sub>C</sub> score (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), significantly higher HAS-BLED score (P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.002) and had a higher likelihood of receiving anticoagulant therapy, mostly warfarin (P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.001). In addition, mrEF patients had a significantly higher risk of thrombotic events (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;2.22; P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.015), death (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;1.71; P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.005) and composite endpoint of thrombosis, bleeding or death (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;1.65; P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.003) in comparison to pEF patients, but did not significantly differ in comparison to rEF patients. There was no significant difference regarding major bleeding risk. Associations with clinical outcomes remained statistically significant in multivariate models independently of CHA<sub>2</sub>DS<sub>2</sub>-VAS<sub>C</sub>. Our findings support defining AF patients with mrEF as a subgroup with distinct clinical characteristics and increased risk for thrombotic events and death, irrespective of predetermined CHA<sub>2</sub>DS<sub>2</sub>-VAS<sub>C</sub> risk. These patients seem to require special clinical considerations and more intensive control of cardiovascular risk factors.
16,823
Impact of left atrial diameter on outcome in patients undergoing edge-to-edge mitral valve repair: results from the German TRAnscatheter Mitral valve Interventions (TRAMI) registry.
Left atrial (LA) dimension is a marker of disease severity and outcome in primary and secondary mitral regurgitation. In transcatheter mitral valve repair, LA enlargement might additionally impact on device handling and technical success through an altered anatomy and atrial annular dilatation.</AbstractText>Data from the multicentre German TRAnscatheter Mitral valve Interventions registry (TRAMI) were used to analyse the association of baseline LA diameter by tertiles with efficacy, safety and long-term clinical outcome in patients undergoing edge-to-edge repair with MitraClip. In 520 of 843 patients prospectively enrolled in TRAMI, baseline LA diameter were reported [median (interquartile range) LA diameter in tertiles: 44 (40-46)&#xa0;mm, 51 (48-53)&#xa0;mm and 60 (55-66)&#xa0;mm]. Larger LA diameters were significantly associated with secondary aetiology of mitral regurgitation, lower ejection fraction, larger left ventricle, male sex and atrial fibrillation (all P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05). Technical success was not different across tertiles (96%, 95.4% and 98.4%, respectively; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.43) as were major in-hospital cardiovascular and cerebral adverse events (mortality, myocardial infarction or stroke: 1.8%, 1.2% and 4.4%, respectively; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.11 across tertiles). However, 4-year mortality significantly increased with larger LA diameter (32.9%, 46.4% and 51.7%, respectively; P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.01), as did hospitalization in survivors (60%, 67.6% and 78.9%, respectively; P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05). The association between LA diameter and outcome remained significant after multivariable adjustment including baseline left ventricular end-diastolic diameter.</AbstractText>Left atrial enlargement is a strong and independent predictor of adverse long-term outcome after transcatheter mitral valve repair. Further study is warranted to examine whether timely intervention may have the potential to modify outcome.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley &amp; Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.</CopyrightInformation>
16,824
Validation of the diagnosis and triage algorithm for acute myocardial infarction in the setting of left bundle branch block.
Detecting acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in the setting of left bundle branch block (LBBB) remains a challenge to clinicians. Several diagnostic and triage algorithms have been proposed to accurately identify LBBB patients with an acute culprit vessel. We aimed to validate the algorithm proposed by Cai et al., which uses patients' hemodynamic status and the modified Sgarbossa electrocardiography criteria to guide reperfusion therapy.</AbstractText>This retrospective study was performed with a chart review in emergency departments (EDs) of 2 medical centers, 2 regional hospitals, and 1 local hospital. From January 2010 to December 2014, 2432 consecutive patients were diagnosed as having STEMI in the ED, including 65 patients with LBBB (2.6%).</AbstractText>The patients with LBBB were older and more frequently presented with acute pulmonary edema (58.5% vs 22.1%, p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.001), cardiogenic shock (16.9% vs 6.3% p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.006), and VT/VF episodes (7.7% vs 2.2%, p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.034) and had a higher 30-day mortality rate (20.0% vs 10.4% p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.032) than those without LBBB. We then tested the algorithm proposed by Cai et al. and noted a sensitivity of 93.8% in identifying a culprit lesion.</AbstractText>The inconsistency of the guideline recommendations reflects the uncertainty of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies and the pressing need for tools to accurately identify the true acute myocardial infarction in patients presenting with chest pain and LBBB. The algorithm proposed by Cai et al. had good sensitivity and would allow emergency physicians to implement the timely treatment protocol for this high-risk population.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,825
Clinical features and prognosis of patients with spontaneous coronary artery dissection.
There have been inconsistent reports regarding the clinical features and characteristics of patients diagnosed with spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD). In addition, predictors of mortality in SCAD patients are unknown. We evaluated the prevalence, clinical characteristics, medical management, and predictors of in-hospital mortality of SCAD-related hospitalizations using data from a single health care system from January 1, 2008, to December 31, 2018. Among 30,425 patients who presented with an acute coronary syndrome, 375 (1.2%) patients were diagnosed with SCAD. Of these, the mean age was 52.2&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;12.8&#xa0;years, 64.3% were women, and 44% were white. SCAD was significantly associated with emotional stress, fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), chronic kidney disease (CKD), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), peripheral artery disease (PAD), and carotid artery disease compared with non-SCAD acute coronary syndrome (all p-values&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.05). Multivariable analysis showed that atrial fibrillation (OR 2.56; 95% CI 1.01-6.23; p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.04), steroid use (OR 7.11; 95% CI 1.31-31.2; p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.01), ventricular arrhythmias (OR 4.53; 95% CI 1.58-12.3; p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.003), and cardiac arrest (OR 16.82; 95% CI 5.14-56.5; p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.001) were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality in SCAD patients. In conclusion, SCAD is an uncommon diagnosis that should be considered across all ages and both sexes and in patients with FMD, carotid artery disease, or PAD. Cardiac arrest, ventricular arrhythmia, steroid use, and atrial fibrillation were independently associated with in-hospital mortality in patients with SCAD.
16,826
High Risk of Sustained Ventricular Arrhythmia Recurrence After Acute Myocarditis.
Acute myocarditis is associated with cardiac arrhythmia in 25% of cases; a third of these arrhythmias are ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation (VF). The implantation of a cardiac defibrillator (ICD) following sustained ventricular arrhythmia remains controversial in these patients. We sought to assess the risk of major arrhythmic ventricular events (MAEs) over time in patients implanted with an ICD following sustained VT/VF in the acute phase of myocarditis compared to those implanted for VT/VF occurring on myocarditis sequelae. Our retrospective observational study included patients implanted with an ICD following VT/VF during acute myocarditis or VT/VF on myocarditis sequelae, from 2007 to 2017, in 15 French university hospitals. Over a median follow-up period of 3 years, MAE occurred in 11 (39%) patients of the acute myocarditis group and 24 (60%) patients of the myocarditis sequelae group. Kaplan-Meier MAE rate estimates at one and three years of follow-up were 19% and 45% in the acute group, and 43% and 64% in the sequelae group. Patients who experienced sustained ventricular arrhythmias during acute myocarditis had a very high risk of VT/VF recurrence during follow-up. These results show that the risk of MAE recurrence remains high after resolution of the acute episode.
16,827
Susceptibility to Cardiac Arrhythmias and Sympathetic Nerve Growth in VEGF-B Overexpressing Myocardium.
VEGF-B gene therapy is a promising proangiogenic treatment for ischemic heart disease, but, unexpectedly, we found that high doses of VEGF-B promote ventricular arrhythmias (VAs). VEGF-B knockout, alpha myosin heavy-chain promoter (&#x3b1;MHC)-VEGF-B transgenic mice, and pigs transduced intramyocardially with adenoviral (Ad)VEGF- B186 were studied. Immunostaining showed a 2-fold increase in the number of nerves per field (76 vs. 39 in controls, p&#xa0;&lt; 0.001) and an abnormal nerve distribution in the hypertrophic hearts of 11- to 20-month-old &#x3b1;MHC-VEGF-B mice. AdVEGF-B186 gene transfer (GT) led to local sprouting of nerve endings in pig myocardium (141 vs. 78 nerves per field in controls, p&#xa0;&lt; 0.05). During dobutamine stress, 60% of the &#x3b1;MHC-VEGF-B hypertrophic mice had arrhythmias as compared to 7% in controls, and 20% of the AdVEGF-B186-transduced pigs and 100% of the combination of AdVEGF-B186- and AdsVEGFR-1-transduced pigs displayed VAs and even ventricular fibrillation. AdVEGF-B186 GT significantly increased the risk of sudden cardiac death in pigs when compared to any other GT with different VEGFs (hazard ratio, 500.5; 95% confidence interval [CI] 46.4-5,396.7; p&#xa0;&lt; 0.0001). In gene expression analysis, VEGF-B induced the upregulation of Nr4a2, ATF6, and MANF in cardiomyocytes, molecules previously linked to nerve growth and differentiation. Thus, high AdVEGF-B186 overexpression induced nerve growth in the adult heart via a VEGFR-1 signaling-independent mechanism, leading to an increased risk of VA and sudden cardiac death.
16,828
Prevalence of atrial arrhythmia in patients with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
<AbstractText Label="BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES" NlmCategory="OBJECTIVE">Little is known about atrial involvement in patients with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC). Recent studies have suggested that atrial arrhythmia, including atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter (AFL), and atrial tachycardia, was common among these patients although the reported prevalence varied considerably across the studies. The current systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted with the aim of comprehensively investigating the prevalence of overall atrial arrhythmia and each atrial arrhythmia subtype in the setting of ARVC by identifying all relevant studies and combining their results together.</AbstractText>A comprehensive literature review was conducted by searching for published articles indexed in MEDLINE and EMBASE databases from inception through to 22 September 2019 to identify cohort studies of patients with ARVC that described the prevalence of atrial arrhythmia among the participants. The pooled prevalence across studies was calculated using a random-effect, generic inverse variance method of DerSimonian and Laird with a double arcsine transformation.</AbstractText>A total of 16 cohort studies with 1986 patients with ARVC were included in this meta-analysis. The pooled prevalence of overall atrial arrhythmia among patients with ARVC was 17.9% [95% confidence interval (CI), 13.0-24.0%; I 88%], the pooled prevalence of atrial fibrillation of 12.9% (95% CI, 9.6-17.0%; I 78%), the pooled prevalence of AFL of 5.9% (95% CI, 3.7-9.2%; I 70%), and the pooled prevalence of atrial tachycardia of 7.1% (95% CI, 3.7-13.0%; I 49%).</AbstractText>Atrial arrhythmia is common among patients with ARVC with the pooled prevalence of approximately 18%, which is substantially higher than the reported prevalence of atrial arrhythmia in the general population.</AbstractText>
16,829
Wolff Parkinson White and recreational (meth)amphetamine use: a potentially lethal combination.<Pagination><StartPage>406</StartPage><EndPage>409</EndPage><MedlinePgn>406-409</MedlinePgn></Pagination><ELocationID EIdType="doi" ValidYN="Y">10.1080/17843286.2020.1746885</ELocationID><Abstract><AbstractText>Cardiac arrest in Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) is a rare event, and although some patients appear to be at greater risk, there is no consensus on clear risk factors. We present a case of a 23-year-old male patient, with a known history of WPW pattern, who suffered an out of hospital ventricular fibrillation after the consumption of rather small dose of (meth)amphetamines. The use of illegal drug can predispose WPW patients to fatal arrhythmia and cardiac arrest. Patients with WPW pattern should be well informed about the risks of (meth)amphetamines and some might be considered for medical therapy or catheter ablation.</AbstractText></Abstract><AuthorList CompleteYN="Y"><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Aspeslagh</LastName><ForeName>B</ForeName><Initials>B</Initials><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Emergency Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Calle</LastName><ForeName>P</ForeName><Initials>P</Initials><Identifier Source="ORCID">0000-0003-2024-8276</Identifier><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Emergency Medicine, AZ Maria Middelares, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>De Pooter</LastName><ForeName>J</ForeName><Initials>J</Initials><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Cardiology, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author></AuthorList><Language>eng</Language><PublicationTypeList><PublicationType UI="D002363">Case Reports</PublicationType><PublicationType UI="D016428">Journal Article</PublicationType></PublicationTypeList><ArticleDate DateType="Electronic"><Year>2020</Year><Month>04</Month><Day>03</Day></ArticleDate></Article><MedlineJournalInfo><Country>England</Country><MedlineTA>Acta Clin Belg</MedlineTA><NlmUniqueID>0370306</NlmUniqueID><ISSNLinking>1784-3286</ISSNLinking></MedlineJournalInfo><CitationSubset>IM</CitationSubset><MeshHeadingList><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D000328" MajorTopicYN="N">Adult</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D001145" MajorTopicYN="N">Arrhythmias, Cardiac</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D017115" MajorTopicYN="Y">Catheter Ablation</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D004562" MajorTopicYN="N">Electrocardiography</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D006801" MajorTopicYN="N">Humans</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D008297" MajorTopicYN="N">Male</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D012307" MajorTopicYN="N">Risk Factors</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D014927" MajorTopicYN="Y">Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000601" MajorTopicYN="N">surgery</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D055815" MajorTopicYN="N">Young Adult</DescriptorName></MeshHeading></MeshHeadingList><KeywordList Owner="NOTNLM"><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">Ventricular fibrillation</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">Wolff-Parkinson-White</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">amphetamine</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">recreational drugs</Keyword></KeywordList></MedlineCitation><PubmedData><History><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="pubmed"><Year>2020</Year><Month>4</Month><Day>4</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="medline"><Year>2021</Year><Month>10</Month><Day>26</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="entrez"><Year>2020</Year><Month>4</Month><Day>4</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate></History><PublicationStatus>ppublish</PublicationStatus><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">32243227</ArticleId><ArticleId IdType="doi">10.1080/17843286.2020.1746885</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></PubmedData></PubmedArticle><PubmedArticle><MedlineCitation Status="MEDLINE" Owner="NLM" IndexingMethod="Curated"><PMID Version="1">32242846</PMID><DateCompleted><Year>2020</Year><Month>08</Month><Day>20</Day></DateCompleted><DateRevised><Year>2020</Year><Month>08</Month><Day>20</Day></DateRevised><Article PubModel="Print"><Journal><ISSN IssnType="Print">1512-0112</ISSN><JournalIssue CitedMedium="Internet"><Issue>299</Issue><PubDate><Year>2020</Year><Month>Feb</Month></PubDate></JournalIssue><Title>Georgian medical news</Title><ISOAbbreviation>Georgian Med News</ISOAbbreviation></Journal>[INDICATORS OF CARDIOHEMODYNAMICS OF RHYTHM DISTURBANCES IN ELDERLY PEOPLE WITH CHRONIC HEART FAILURE].
Cardiac arrest in Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) is a rare event, and although some patients appear to be at greater risk, there is no consensus on clear risk factors. We present a case of a 23-year-old male patient, with a known history of WPW pattern, who suffered an out of hospital ventricular fibrillation after the consumption of rather small dose of (meth)amphetamines. The use of illegal drug can predispose WPW patients to fatal arrhythmia and cardiac arrest. Patients with WPW pattern should be well informed about the risks of (meth)amphetamines and some might be considered for medical therapy or catheter ablation.</Abstract><AuthorList CompleteYN="Y"><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Aspeslagh</LastName><ForeName>B</ForeName><Initials>B</Initials><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Emergency Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Calle</LastName><ForeName>P</ForeName><Initials>P</Initials><Identifier Source="ORCID">0000-0003-2024-8276</Identifier><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Emergency Medicine, AZ Maria Middelares, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>De Pooter</LastName><ForeName>J</ForeName><Initials>J</Initials><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Cardiology, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author></AuthorList><Language>eng</Language><PublicationTypeList><PublicationType UI="D002363">Case Reports</PublicationType><PublicationType UI="D016428">Journal Article</PublicationType></PublicationTypeList><ArticleDate DateType="Electronic"><Year>2020</Year><Month>04</Month><Day>03</Day></ArticleDate></Article><MedlineJournalInfo><Country>England</Country><MedlineTA>Acta Clin Belg</MedlineTA><NlmUniqueID>0370306</NlmUniqueID><ISSNLinking>1784-3286</ISSNLinking></MedlineJournalInfo><CitationSubset>IM</CitationSubset><MeshHeadingList><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D000328" MajorTopicYN="N">Adult</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D001145" MajorTopicYN="N">Arrhythmias, Cardiac</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D017115" MajorTopicYN="Y">Catheter Ablation</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D004562" MajorTopicYN="N">Electrocardiography</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D006801" MajorTopicYN="N">Humans</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D008297" MajorTopicYN="N">Male</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D012307" MajorTopicYN="N">Risk Factors</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D014927" MajorTopicYN="Y">Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000601" MajorTopicYN="N">surgery</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D055815" MajorTopicYN="N">Young Adult</DescriptorName></MeshHeading></MeshHeadingList><KeywordList Owner="NOTNLM"><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">Ventricular fibrillation</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">Wolff-Parkinson-White</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">amphetamine</Keyword><Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">recreational drugs</Keyword></KeywordList></MedlineCitation><PubmedData><History><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="pubmed"><Year>2020</Year><Month>4</Month><Day>4</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="medline"><Year>2021</Year><Month>10</Month><Day>26</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="entrez"><Year>2020</Year><Month>4</Month><Day>4</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate></History><PublicationStatus>ppublish</PublicationStatus><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">32243227</ArticleId><ArticleId IdType="doi">10.1080/17843286.2020.1746885</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></PubmedData></PubmedArticle><PubmedArticle><MedlineCitation Status="MEDLINE" Owner="NLM" IndexingMethod="Curated"><PMID Version="1">32242846</PMID><DateCompleted><Year>2020</Year><Month>08</Month><Day>20</Day></DateCompleted><DateRevised><Year>2020</Year><Month>08</Month><Day>20</Day></DateRevised><Article PubModel="Print"><Journal><ISSN IssnType="Print">1512-0112</ISSN><JournalIssue CitedMedium="Internet"><Issue>299</Issue><PubDate><Year>2020</Year><Month>Feb</Month></PubDate></JournalIssue><Title>Georgian medical news</Title><ISOAbbreviation>Georgian Med News</ISOAbbreviation></Journal><ArticleTitle>[INDICATORS OF CARDIOHEMODYNAMICS OF RHYTHM DISTURBANCES IN ELDERLY PEOPLE WITH CHRONIC HEART FAILURE].</ArticleTitle><Pagination><StartPage>61</StartPage><EndPage>65</EndPage><MedlinePgn>61-65</MedlinePgn></Pagination><Abstract>The aim of our study was to study and analyze the electrophysiological indicators of rhythm disturbances in heart failure in elderly people who participated in the elimination of the consequences of the Chernobyl accident in the distant period. In order to assess the functional features, 50 elderly patients (65-74 years old) who participated in the liquidation of the consequences of the Chernobyl accident were examined. Patients were divided into 4 groups depending on the length of stay in an environmentally disadvantaged zone: group 1 (April-June 1986) - 8 (16%) people; 2 (June-December 1986) -14 (28%); 3 (1987-1989) -17 (34%) and group 4 (1990-91gg) -11 (22%) people. All patients were on basic therapy. To study cardiogemodynamics in this category of patients, the following electrophysiological research methods were performed: ECG, XM ECG, SMAD, EchoCG. When analyzing electrophysiological studies, the MSExcel and Statistica programs were used. The examined patients showed a high incidence of left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiac arrhythmias. So in the 1st and 2nd groups, atrial fibrillation, sinus tachy and bradycardia, AV blockade of 1-2 degrees were reliably detected. In groups 3 and 4, left ventricular hypertrophy and arrhythmias were detected with a lower frequency. It should be noted that these changes were observed in individuals participating in the LPA from April to December 1986, i.e. in the first year after the accident. According to echocardiography, diastolic dysfunction of the left ventricle was found mainly in individuals of 1-2 groups. High high indices of KDR, BWW and KSO in 1-2 groups are noted. LVMI exceeds its norm in all studied groups. Thus, statistically significant differences of some indicators are revealed with electrophysiological research methods in all groups of elderly patients with heart failure participating in the liquidation of the Chernobyl accident, as well as the high incidence of rhythm disturbances in patients with Chernobyl nuclear power plants.
16,830
Characterization, Pathogenesis, and Clinical Implications of Inflammation-Related Atrial Myopathy as an Important Cause of Atrial Fibrillation.
Historically, atrial fibrillation has been observed in clinical settings of prolonged hemodynamic stress, eg, hypertension and valvular heart disease. However, recently, the most prominent precedents to atrial fibrillation are metabolic diseases that are associated with adipose tissue inflammation (ie, obesity and diabetes mellitus) and systemic inflammatory disorders (ie, rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis). These patients typically have little evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy or dilatation; instead, imaging reveals abnormalities of the structure or function of the atria, particularly the left atrium, indicative of an atrial myopathy. The left atrium is enlarged, fibrotic and noncompliant, potentially because the predisposing disorder leads to an expansion of epicardial adipose tissue, which transmits proinflammatory mediators to the underlying left atrium. The development of an atrial myopathy not only leads to atrial fibrillation, but also contributes to pulmonary venous hypertension and systemic thromboembolism. These mechanisms explain why disorders of systemic or adipose tissue inflammation are accompanied an increased risk of atrial fibrillation, abnormalities of left atrium geometry and an enhanced risk of stroke. The risk of stroke exceeds that predicted by conventional cardiovascular risk factors or thromboembolism risk scores used to guide the use of anticoagulation, but it is strongly linked to clinical evidence and biomarkers of systemic inflammation.
16,831
Cardiac rhythm abnormalities - An underestimated cardiovascular risk in adult patients with Mucopolysaccharidoses.
Patients with Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) have an increased risk of cardiovascular complications, conduction tissue abnormalities and arrhythmia; all rare but underestimated. It has been reported that conduction system defects are progressive in this group of patients and may result in sudden cardiac death. The aim of this study is to review our current practice and suggest best practice guidelines regarding the frequency of cardiac rhythm monitoring in this patient group. Seventy-seven adult MPS patients who attended metabolic clinics between 2013 and 2019 were included in this retrospective observational study. Patients were affected with different MPS types: MPS I (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;33), MPS II (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;16), MPS IV (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;19), VI (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;8) and VII (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1). The assessments included: 12&#x2011;lead electrocardiogram (ECG), 24-h ECG (Holter monitor), loop recorder/pacemaker interrogation assessment. Data from 12&#x2011;lead ECG (available from 69 patients) showed a variety of abnormalities: T wave inversion in a single lead III (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;19), left ventricular hypertrophy (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;14), early repolarization (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;14), right axis deviation (RAD, n&#xa0;=&#xa0;11), partial RBBB (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;9), right bundle branch block (RBBB) (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1) and first degree AV block (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1). ECG changes of bundle branch block, RAD (left posterior fascicular block) could represent conduction tissue abnormality and equally could be related to the underlying lung tissue abnormality which is present in most of the patients with MPS. T wave abnormality in a single lead is usually insignificant in healthy individuals; however in MPS patients it could be as a result of chest shape. Among the 34 patients for who 24-hour ECG was available, sinus tachycardia was the most common rhythm noted (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;9), followed by sinus bradycardia (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;4), atrial fibrillation (AF) (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1) and atrio-ventricular nodal re-entry tachycardia (AVNRT) (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1). Permanent pacemaker was inserted in two patients. AF was observed in one patient with MPS II. In conclusion, we postulate that regular cardiac monitoring is required to warrant early detection of underlying conduction tissue abnormalities. In addition, 12&#x2011;lead ECG is the first line investigation that, if abnormal, should be followed up by 24-hour Holter monitoring. These findings warrant further research studies.
16,832
Effects of Sacubitril/Valsartan on N-Terminal Pro-B-Type Natriuretic Peptide in Heart&#xa0;Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction.
The authors sought to evaluate the prognostic significance of baseline N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic&#xa0;peptide (NT-proBNP), whether NT-proBNP modified the treatment response to sacubitril/valsartan, and the treatment effect of sacubitril/valsartan on NT-proBNP overall and in key subgroups.</AbstractText>Sacubitril/valsartan reduces NT-proBNP in heart failure (HF) with both reduced and preserved ejection fraction (EF), but did not significantly reduce total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular death compared with valsartan&#xa0;in patients with HF with preserved EF (HFpEF).</AbstractText>In the PARAGON-HF (Efficacy and Safety of LCZ696 Compared to Valsartan, on Morbidity and Mortality in Heart&#xa0;Failure Patients With Preserved Ejection Fraction) trial, 4,796 patients with HFpEF and elevated NT-proBNP were&#xa0;randomized to sacubitril/valsartan or valsartan. NT-proBNP was measured at screening in all patients and at 5&#xa0;subsequent times in &gt;2,700 patients: before, between, and after sequential valsartan and sacubitril/valsartan run-in periods, and 16 and 48&#xa0;weeks post-randomization.</AbstractText>Median NT-proBNP was 911 pg/ml (interquartile range: 464 to 1,613 pg/ml) at screening. Screening NT-proBNP was strongly associated with the primary endpoint, total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular death (rate ratio [RR]: 1.68&#xa0;per log increase in NT-proBNP, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.53 to 1.85; p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.001). This relationship was stronger in patients with atrial fibrillation (adjusted RR: 2.33 [95%&#xa0;CI: 1.89 to 2.87] vs. 1.58 [95%&#xa0;CI: 1.42 to 1.75] in&#xa0;patients without&#xa0;atrial fibrillation; p interaction&#xa0;&lt;0.001) and weaker in obese patients (adjusted RR: 1.50 [95% CI:&#xa0;1.31&#xa0;to 1.71] vs. 1.92 [95%&#xa0;CI: 1.70 to 2.17] in nonobese patients; p interaction&#xa0;&lt;0.001). Screening NT-proBNP did not modify the treatment effect of sacubitril/valsartan compared with valsartan (p interaction&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.96). Sacubitril/valsartan&#xa0;reduced NT-proBNP by 19% (95%&#xa0;CI: 14% to 23%; p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.001) compared with valsartan 16&#xa0;weeks post-randomization, with similar reductions in men (20%) and women (18%), and in patients with left ventricular EF&#xa0;&#x2264;57% (20%) and &gt;57% (18%). Decreases in NT-proBNP predicted lower subsequent risk of the primary endpoint.</AbstractText>Baseline NT-proBNP predicted HF events but did not modify the sacubitril/valsartan treatment effect in patients with HFpEF. Sacubitril/valsartan reduced NT-proBNP consistently in men and women, and in patients with lower or higher EF. (Efficacy and Safety of LCZ696 Compared to Valsartan, on Morbidity and Mortality in Heart Failure&#xa0;Patients With Preserved Ejection Fraction [PARAGON-HF]; NCT01920711).</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,833
Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation in heart failure: clinical, prognostic, and echocardiographic outcome.
Catheter ablation (CA) for atrial fibrillation (AF) in heart failure (HF) patients is associated with a lower rate of cardiac events compared with medical therapy. This study deals with the clinical, echocardiographic, and prognostic outcomes in these patients. Prognostic scores, as MAGGIC (Meta-analysis Global Group in Chronic Heart Failure) score, may help to predict the outcomes.</AbstractText>From a single center, 47 patients with AF, HF, and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) &lt;&#x2009;50% underwent CA. The primary endpoints were NYHA functional class, LVEF, and MAGGIC score.</AbstractText>The median age of patients was 59&#xa0;years; 49% had paroxysmal AF. At 12&#xa0;months, a significant improvement of NYHA class (median before II [interquartile range (IQR) II-III] vs median after I [IQR I-II]) and of LVEF (median before 44% [IQR 37-47] vs median after 55% [IQR49-57]) was observed (p value &lt;&#x2009;0.001). The MAGGIC 1-year and 3-year probability of death was estimated before (mean score 13 [IQR 11-17]) and at 12-month (mean score 11 [IQR 8-13]), showing a significant decrease in the probability of death (p value &lt;0.001). At 12-month, a lower LVEF was associated with more HF hospitalizations (p value 0.035). Coronary artery disease (CAD) (HR 5, p value 0.035) and MAGGIC score (HR 1.2, p value 0.030) were predictors of HF hospitalization.</AbstractText>CA for AF in HF patients was associated with a significant improvement of NYHA functional class and LVEF and a higher life expectation. CAD history, LVEF &lt;&#x2009;40%, and MAGGIC score before ablation were predictors of HF hospitalization.</AbstractText>
16,834
[Efficacy and safety of Wenxin Granules in treatment of chronic heart failure with atrial fibrillation: a systematic review].
This systematic review aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Wenxin Granules in the treatment of chronic heart failure with atrial fibrillation. Databases,such as CNKI,Wan Fang Date,VIP,PubMed,Cochrane Library,were electronically retrieved for relevant randomized controlled trials of Wenxin Granules in the treatment of chronic heart failure with atrial fibrillation. Two researchers independently screened out the literatures,extracted data according to the inclusion criteria,and conducted a quality assessment by the risk bias assessment tool in the Cochrane evaluation manual. Cochrane systematic evaluation software Rev Man 5. 3 was used for data analysis. Totally 11 randomized controlled trials,including 941 subjects. The intervention measures were the conventional treatment recommended by the guidelines combined with Wenxin Granules; and the control measures were the conventional treatment recommended by the guidelines alone. The results showed that compared with conventional treatment alone,Wenxin Granules combined with conventional treatment can better reduce the BNP level in patients with heart failure with atrial fibrillation( MD =-258. 18,95% CI[-464. 06,-52. 30],P= 0. 01) or NT-proBNP level,better improve left ventricular ejection fraction( MD = 6. 72,95%CI[4. 61,8. 84],P&amp;lt;0. 000 01),I~2= 65%,And the ventricular rate decreased more significantly( MD =-11. 66,95% CI[-15. 79,-7. 54],P&amp;lt;0. 000 01),and the cardiac function was improved more efficiently( RR = 1. 20,95%CI [1. 11,1. 31],P&amp;lt;0. 000 1),I~2= 23%.In conclusion,compared with the single administration of conventional Western medicine,the combined administration of Wenxin Granules has better effects in reducing the level of BNP or NT-proBNP,slowing down the ventricular rate,and improving the left ventricular ejection fraction,with fewer adverse reactions. However,due to the small sample size and the low quality of literatures included in this systematic review,it is shall be carefully applied in clinic. More rigorous randomized controlled trials shall be conducted to determine the efficacy of Wenxin Granules in improving cardiac function in the treatment of chronic heart failure with atrial fibrillation.
16,835
Left atrial appendage closure in patients with a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction: results from the multicenter German LAARGE registry.
Interventional left atrial appendage closure (LAAC) effectively prevents thromboembolic events in atrial fibrillation patients. Impaired left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) increases not only the thromboembolic risk but also the complication rates of cardiac interventions. The LAAC procedure's benefit in patients with an impaired LVEF, therefore, has yet to be investigated.</AbstractText>LAARGE is a&#xa0;prospective, non-randomized registry depicting the clinical reality of LAAC in Germany. Procedure was conducted with different standard commercial devices, and follow-up period was one year. In the sense of an as-treated analysis, patients with started procedure and documented LVEF were selected from the whole database.</AbstractText>619 patients from 37 centers were categorized into one of three groups: LVEF&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;55% (56%),&#x2009;36-55% (36%), and&#x2009;&#x2264;&#x2009;35% (8%). Prevalence of cardiovascular comorbidity increased with LVEF reduction (p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001 for trend). CHA2</sub>DS2</sub>-VASc score was 4.3, 4.8, and 5.1 (p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), and HAS-BLED score was 3.7, 4.1, and 4.2 (p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001). Implantation success was consistently high (97.9%), rates of intra-hospital MACCE (0.5%), and other major complications (4.2%) were low (each p&#x2009;=&#x2009;NS). Kaplan-Meier estimation showed a decrease in survival free of stroke with LVEF reduction during one-year follow-up (89.3 vs. 87.0 vs. 79.8%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.067), a trend which was no longer evident after adjustment for relevant confounding factors. Rates of non-fatal strokes (0.4 vs. 1.1 vs. 0%) and severe bleedings (0.7 vs. 0.0 vs. 3.1%) were consistently low across all groups (each p&#x2009;=&#x2009;NS).</AbstractText>LVEF reduction neither influenced the procedural success nor the effectiveness and safety of stroke prevention by LAAC.</AbstractText>ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02230748.</AbstractText>
16,836
Prognostic impact of potassium levels in patients with ventricular tachyarrhythmias.
The study sought to assess the prognostic impact of potassium levels (K) in patients with ventricular tachyarrhythmias.</AbstractText>A large retrospective registry was used including all consecutive patients presenting with ventricular tachyarrhythmias on admission from 2002 to 2016. Patients with hypokalemia (i.e., K&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;3.3&#xa0;mmol/L), normokalemia (i.e., K 3.3-4.5&#xa0;mmol/L), and hyperkalemia (i.e., K&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;4.5&#xa0;mmol/L) were compared applying multi-variable Cox regression models and propensity-score matching for evaluation of the primary endpoint of all-cause mortality at 3&#xa0;years. Secondary endpoints were early cardiac death at 24&#xa0;h, in-hospital death, death at 30&#xa0;days, as well as the composite endpoint of early cardiac death at 24&#xa0;h, recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias, and appropriate ICD therapies at 3&#xa0;years.</AbstractText>In 1990 consecutive patients with ventricular tachyarrhythmias, 63% of the patients presented with normokalemia, 30% with hyperkalemia, and 7% with hypokalemia. After propensity matching, both hypokalemic (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;1.545; 95% CI 0.970-2.459; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.067) and hyperkalemic patients (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;1.371; 95% CI 1.094-1.718; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.006) were associated with the primary endpoint of all-cause mortality at 3&#xa0;years compared to normokalemic patients. Hyperkalemia was associated with even worse prognosis directly compared to hypokalemia (HR&#x2009;=&#x2009;1.496; 95% CI 1.002-2.233; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.049). In contrast, potassium measurements were not associated with the composite endpoint&#xa0;at 3 years.</AbstractText>In patients presenting with ventricular tachyarrhythmias, normokalemia was associated with best short- and long-term survival, whereas hyperkalemia and hypokalemia were associated with increased mortality at 30&#xa0;days and at 3&#xa0;years.</AbstractText>
16,837
The effect of levosimendan on survival and cardiac performance in an ischemic cardiac arrest model - A blinded randomized placebo-controlled study in swine.
Survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest remains poor. Levosimendan could be a new intervention in this setting. Therefore, we conducted a blinded, placebo controlled randomized study investigating the effects of levosimendan on survival and cardiac performance in an ischemic cardiac arrest model in swine.</AbstractText>Twenty-four anesthetised swines underwent experimentally-induced acute myocardial infarction and ventricular fibrillation. At the start of CPR, a bolus dose of levosimendan (12&#x202f;&#x3bc;g&#x202f;kg-1</sup>) or placebo was given followed by a 24-h infusion (0.2&#x202f;&#x3bc;g&#x202f;kg-1</sup>&#x202f;min-1</sup>) after return of spontaneously circulation. Animals were evaluated by risk of death, post-resuscitation hemodynamics and infarction size by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) up to 32&#x202f;h post arrest.</AbstractText>Spontaneous circulation was restored in all (12/12) animals in the levosimendan group compared to two thirds (8/12) in the placebo group (P&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.09). Protocol survival was higher for the levosimendan group (P&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.02) with an estimated 88% lower risk of death compared to placebo (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval] 0.12 [0.01-0.96], P&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.046). Cardiac output (CO) recovered 40% faster during the first hour of the intensive care period for the levosimendan group (difference 0.13 [0.01-0.26] L&#x202f;min-1</sup>P&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.04). The placebo group required higher inotropic support during the intensive care period which masked an even bigger recovery in CO in the levosimendan group (58%). The MRI showed no difference in myocardial scar size or in myocardial area at risk.</AbstractText>Levosimendan given intra-arrest and during the first 24-h of post-resuscitation care improved survival and cardiac performance in this ischemic cardiac arrest model. Institutional Protocol Number; KERIC 5.2.18-14933.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,838
Atrial Fibrillation and Cognitive Impairment: An Associated Burden or Burden by Association?
Growing evidence suggests that atrial fibrillation (AF), in addition to its thromboembolic risk, is a risk factor for cognitive impairment (CI) via several pathways and mechanisms, further contributing to morbidity/mortality. Prior stroke is a contributor to CI, but AF is also associated with CI independently from prior stroke. Silent brain infarctions, microemboli and microbleeds, brain atrophy, cerebral hypoperfusion from widely fluctuating ventricular rates, altered hemostatic function, vascular oxidative stress, and inflammation may all exacerbate CI, particularly in patients with persistent/permanent rather than paroxysmal AF and with increased duration/burden of the arrhythmia. Brain magnetic resonance imaging is an important screening tool in eliciting and monitoring vascular and nonvascular lesions contributing to CI. Evidence is also emerging about the role of genetics in CI development. Anticoagulation and rhythm/rate control strategies may protect against CI preventing or slowing its progression or conversion to dementia, particularly at the early stages when CI may still be a treatable condition. Importantly, AF and CI share many common risk factors. Thus, screening for these 2 conditions and searching for and managing modifiable risk factors and potentially reversible causes for both AF and CI remains an important step toward prevention or amelioration of the impact incurred by these 2 conditions.
16,839
Characteristic Histopathological Findings and Cardiac Arrest Rhythm in Isolated Mitral Valve Prolapse and Sudden Cardiac Death.
Background The association between mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and sudden death remains controversial. We aimed to describe histopathological changes in individuals with autopsy-determined isolated MVP (iMVP) and sudden death and document cardiac arrest rhythm. Methods and Results The Australian National Coronial Information System database was used to identify cases of iMVP between 2000 and 2018. Histopathological changes in iMVP and sudden death were compared with 2 control cohorts matched for age, sex, height, and weight (1 group with noncardiac death and 1 group with cardiac death). Data linkage with ambulance services provided cardiac arrest rhythm for iMVP cases. From 77&#xa0;221 cardiovascular deaths in the National Coronial Information System database, there were 376 cases with MVP. Individual case review yielded 71 cases of iMVP. Mean age was 49&#xb1;18&#xa0;years, and 51% were women. Individuals with iMVP had higher cardiac mass (447&#xa0;g versus 355&#xa0;g; <i>P</i>&lt;0.001) compared with noncardiac death, but similar cardiac mass (447&#xa0;g versus 438&#xa0;g; <i>P</i>=0.64) compared with cardiac death. Individuals with iMVP had larger mitral valve annulus compared with noncardiac death (121&#xa0;versus 108&#xa0;mm; <i>P</i>&lt;0.001) and cardiac death&#xa0;(121&#xa0;versus 110&#xa0;mm; <i>P</i>=0.002), and more left ventricular fibrosis (79% versus 38%; <i>P</i>&lt;0.001) compared with noncardiac death controls. In those with iMVP and witnessed cardiac arrest, 94% had ventricular fibrillation. Conclusions Individuals with iMVP and sudden death have increased cardiac mass, mitral annulus size, and left ventricular fibrosis compared with a matched cohort, with cardiac arrest caused by ventricular fibrillation. The histopathological changes in iMVP may provide the substrate necessary for development of malignant ventricular arrhythmias.
16,840
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome: De novo variants and evidence for mutational burden in genes associated with atrial fibrillation.
Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome is a relatively common arrhythmia affecting ~1-3/1,000 individuals. Mutations in PRKAG2 have been described in rare patients in association with cardiomyopathy. However, the genetic basis of WPW in individuals with a structurally normal heart remains poorly understood. Sudden death due to atrial fibrillation (AF) can also occur in these individuals. Several studies have indicated that despite ablation of an accessory pathway, the risk of AF remains high in patients compared to general population.</AbstractText>We applied exome sequencing in 305 subjects, including 65 trios, 80 singletons, and 6 multiple affected families. We used de novo analysis, candidate gene approach, and burden testing to explore the genetic contributions to WPW.</AbstractText>A heterozygous deleterious variant in PRKAG2 was identified in one subject, accounting for 0.6% (1/151) of the genetic basis of WPW in this study. Another individual with WPW and left ventricular hypertrophy carried a known pathogenic variant in MYH7. We found rare de novo variants in genes associated with arrhythmia and cardiomyopathy (ANK2, NEBL, PITX2, and PRDM16) in this cohort. There was an increased burden of rare deleterious variants (MAF&#x2009;&#x2264;&#x2009;0.005) with CADD score&#x2009;&#x2265;&#x2009;25 in genes linked to AF in cases compared to controls (P = .0023).</AbstractText>Our findings show an increased burden of rare deleterious variants in genes linked to AF in WPW syndrome, suggesting that genetic factors that determine the development of accessory pathways may be linked to an increased susceptibility of atrial muscle to AF in a subset of patients.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,841
Cardioprotective Effect of Olive Oil Against Ischemia Reperfusion-induced Cardiac Arrhythmia in Isolated Diabetic Rat Heart.
Background Olive oil is rich in monounsaturated fatty acids&#xa0;and has been reported for a variety of beneficial cardiovascular effects, including blood pressure lowering, anti-platelet, anti-diabetic, and anti-inflammatory effects. Diabetes is a major risk factor for cardiac dysfunctions, and olive oil prevents diabetes-induced adverse myocardial remodeling. Objective The study aimed&#xa0;to evaluate the effects of olive oil against streptozotocin-induced cardiac dysfunction in animal models of diabetes and ischemia and reperfusion (I/R)-induced cardiac arrhythmias. Methods Diabetes was induced in male rats with a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (60 mg/kg i.p), rats were treated for five, 15, or 56 days with olive oil (1 ml/kg p.o). Control animals received saline. Blood glucose and body weight were monitored every two weeks. At the end of the treatment, rats were sacrificed and hearts were isolated for mounting on Langedorff's apparatus. The effect of olive oil on oxidative stress and histopathological changes in the cardiac tissues were studied. Results The initial blood glucose and body weight were not significantly different in the control and olive-treated animals. Streptozotocin&#xa0;(60 mg/kg i.p) caused a significant increase in the blood glucose of animals as compared to saline-treated animals.&#xa0;The control, saline-treated diabetic animals exhibited a 100% incidence of I/R-induced ventricular fibrillation, which was reduced to 0% with olive oil treatment. The protective effects of olive oil were evident after 15 and 56 days of treatment.&#xa0;Diltiazem, a calcium channel blocker (1 &#xb5;m/L) showed similar results and protected the I/R-induced cardiac disorders. The cardiac tissues isolated from diabetic rats exhibited marked pathological changes in the cardiomyocytes, including decreased glutathione (GSH) and increased oxidative stress (malondialdehyde; MDA). Pretreatment of animals with olive oil (1 ml/kg p.o) increased GSH and decreased MDA levels. Olive oil also improved the diabetic-induced histopathological changes in the cardiomyocytes. Conclusion Olive oil possesses cardiac protective properties against I/R-induced cardiac arrhythmias in rats. It&#xa0;attenuated oxidative stress and diabetes-induced histopathological changes in cardiac tissues. The observed cardiac protectiveness of olive oil in the present investigation may be related to its antioxidant potential.
16,842
Early repolarisation among athletes.
Traditionally, early repolarisation (ER) is considered a benign ECG variant, predominantly found in youths and athletes. However, a limited number of studies have reported an association between ER and the incidental occurrence of ventricular fibrillation or sudden cardiac death. Yet definite, direct comparisons of the incidence of ER in unselected, contemporary populations in athletes as compared with non-athletes and across different sports are lacking. This study therefore aimed to investigate whether ER is more common among athletes as compared with non-athletes, and if ER patterns differ between sport disciplines based on static and dynamic intensity.</AbstractText>To assess ER we retrospectively analysed ECGs of 2241 adult subjects (2090 athletes, 151 non-athletes), who had a sports medical screening between 2010 and 2014 in an outpatient clinic. The outcome was tested for confounders in a multivariable logistic regression analysis.</AbstractText>ER was found in 502 athletes (24%). We found a 50% higher prevalence of ER in the athlete group compared with the control group (OR 1.5 (SE 0.34), adjusted 95% CI 1.0 to 2.4) in multivariable analysis. A 30% higher prevalence of ER in the inferior leads only (OR 1.3 (SE 0.38), adjusted 95%&#x2009;CI 0.74 to 2.3), a 120% higher prevalence of ER in the lateral leads only (OR 2.2 (SE 1.0), adjusted 95%&#x2009;CI 0.87 to 5.4), and a 20% higher prevalence of ER in the inferior and lateral leads (OR 1.2 (SE 0.49), adjusted 95%&#x2009;CI 0.55 to 2.7) was found in athletes.</AbstractText>Athletes had a 50% higher prevalence of ER and a 30% higher prevalence of ER in the inferior leads specifically. There was no association between training duration or sports discipline and ER.</AbstractText>&#xa9; Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.</CopyrightInformation>
16,843
Clinical features and prognosis of acute myocardial infarction caused by non-tumor origin coronary artery embolism.
Several studies have indicated that acute myocardial infarction (AMI) secondary to coronary artery embolism (CE) has a poor prognosis. However, in the latter studies, CE of tumor origin accounts for a considerable proportion of cases and the clinical features and contribution to overall prognosis of non-tumor CE are unknown and therefore the subject of this study.</AbstractText>We retrospectively studied 2006 consecutive patients with AMI at our medical center from January 2014 to October 2018. Non-tumor CE was diagnosed based on angiographic, biochemical, and imaging criteria. Patients were divided into two groups: patients without CE (control) and patients with non-tumor CE.</AbstractText>Atrial fibrillation was the most frequent etiology (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;32, 69.6%) in the non-tumor CE group (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;46). Compared with the control group, the non-tumor CE group had (all p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.05): higher incidence of atrial fibrillation; larger left atrial diameter, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter and left ventricular end-systolic diameter; lower left ventricular ejection fraction, ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction incidence and low density lipoprotein cholesterol level; lower incidence of multivessel coronary stenosis, level of culprit lesion stenosis and proportion of angioplasty; higher ratio of manual thrombectomy and antithrombotic drugs alone therapy; lower thrombolysis in myocardial infarction (TIMI) grade and higher corrected TIMI frame counts (CTFC) after reperfusion; and statistically similar overall survival at median 864 (interquartile range, 413-1272) days.</AbstractText>The overall incidence of non-tumor CE was 2.3%, with atrial fibrillation as its most common etiology. Midterm overall survival was similar between AMI patients secondary to non-tumor CE and those without CE.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,844
Direct Anticoagulants Versus Vitamin K Antagonists in Patients Aged 80 Years or Older With Atrial Fibrillation in a "Real-world" Nationwide Registry: Insights From the FANTASIIA Study.
To describe major events at follow up in octogenarian patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) according to anticoagulant treatment: direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) versus vitamin K antagonists (VKAs).</AbstractText>A total of 578 anticoagulated patients aged &#x2265;80 years with AF were included in a prospective, observational, multicenter study. Basal features, embolic events (stroke and systemic embolism), severe bleedings, and all-cause mortality at follow up were investigated according to the anticoagulant treatment received.</AbstractText>Mean age was 84.0 &#xb1; 3.4 years, 56% were women. Direct oral anticoagulants were prescribed to 123 (21.3%) patients. Compared with 455 (78.7%) patients treated with VKAs, those treated with DOACs presented a lower frequency of permanent AF (52.9% vs 61.6%, P</i> = .01), cancer history (4.9% vs 10.9%, P</i> = .046), renal failure (21.1% vs 32.2%, P</i> = .02), and left ventricular dysfunction (2.4% vs 8.0%, P</i> = .03); and higher frequency of previous stroke (26.0% vs 16.6%, P</i> = .02) and previous major bleeding (8.1% vs 3.6%, P</i> = .03). There were no significant differences in Charlson, CHA2DS2VASc, nor HAS-BLED scores. At 3-year follow up, rates of embolic events, severe bleedings, and all-cause death (per 100 patients-year) were similar in both groups (DOACs vs VKAs): 0.34 vs 1.35 (P</i> = .15), 3.45 vs 4.41 (P</i> = .48), and 8.2 vs 11.0 (P</i> = .18), respectively, without significant differences after multivariate analysis (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.25, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.03-1.93, P</i> = .19; HR: 0.88, 95% CI: 0.44-1.76, P</i> = .72 and HR: 0.84, 95% CI: 0.53-1.33, P</i> = .46, respectively).</AbstractText>In this "real-world" registry, the differences in major events rates in octogenarians with AF were not statistically significant in those treated with DOACs versus VKAs.</AbstractText>
16,845
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy With Left Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction: Insights From the SHaRe Registry.
The term "end stage" has been used to describe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) with left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD), defined as occurring when left ventricular ejection fraction is &lt;50%. The prognosis of HCM-LVSD has reportedly been poor, but because of its relative rarity, the natural history remains incompletely characterized.</AbstractText>Data from 11 high-volume HCM specialty centers making up the international SHaRe Registry (Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry) were used to describe the natural history of patients with HCM-LVSD. Cox proportional hazards models were used to identify predictors of prognosis and incident development.</AbstractText>From a cohort of 6793 patients with HCM, 553 (8%) met the criteria for HCM-LVSD. Overall, 75% of patients with HCM-LVSD experienced clinically relevant events, and 35% met the composite outcome (all-cause death [n=128], cardiac transplantation [n=55], or left ventricular assist device implantation [n=9]). After recognition of HCM-LVSD, the median time to composite outcome was 8.4 years. However, there was substantial individual variation in natural history. Significant predictors of the composite outcome included the presence of multiple pathogenic/likely pathogenic sarcomeric variants (hazard ratio [HR], 5.6 [95% CI, 2.3-13.5]), atrial fibrillation (HR, 2.6 [95% CI, 1.7-3.5]), and left ventricular ejection fraction &lt;35% (HR, 2.0 [95% CI, 1.3-2.8]). The incidence of new HCM-LVSD was &#x2248;7.5% over 15 years. Significant predictors of developing incident HCM-LVSD included greater left ventricular cavity size (HR, 1.1 [95% CI, 1.0-1.3] and wall thickness (HR, 1.3 [95% CI, 1.1-1.4]), left ventricular ejection fraction of 50% to 60% (HR, 1.8 [95% CI, 1.2, 2.8]-2.8 [95% CI, 1.8-4.2]) at baseline evaluation, the presence of late gadolinium enhancement on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (HR, 2.3 [95% CI, 1.0-4.9]), and the presence of a pathogenic/likely pathogenic sarcomeric variant, particularly in thin filament genes (HR, 1.5 [95% CI, 1.0-2.1] and 2.5 [95% CI, 1.2-5.1], respectively).</AbstractText>HCM-LVSD affects &#x2248;8% of patients with HCM. Although the natural history of HCM-LVSD was variable, 75% of patients experienced adverse events, including 35% experiencing a death equivalent an estimated median time of 8.4 years after developing systolic dysfunction. In addition to clinical features, genetic substrate appears to play a role in both prognosis (multiple sarcomeric variants) and the risk for incident development of HCM-LVSD (thin filament variants).</AbstractText>
16,846
Trans-myocardial bipolar electrogram: A strategy for mapping and determining efficacy of bipolar ablation of deep foci.
Mapping and ablation of intramural ventricular tachycardia (VT) remain a challenge. We developed a trans-myocardial electrogram recording across distal tips of two separate ablation catheters placed on contralateral sides of the myocardium to record a trans-myocardial bipole and a novel pacing electrode configuration. This trans-myocardial bipole was applied during bipolar ablation in a patient with septal VT. Local activation in this trans-myocardial bipole was similar to the earliest activation recorded from detailed activation maps from both sides of the septum. Pacing from this trans-myocardial bipole resulted in a perfect morphology match. After bipolar ablation, the trans-myocardial bipolar voltage decreased by 82%, and pacing threshold increased by 800%. These findings correlated with VT noninducibility.
16,847
Cardioprotective effect of sonic hedgehog ligand in pig models of ischemia reperfusion.
Sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling pathway is involved in embryonic tissue patterning and development. Our previous work identified, in small rodent model of ischemia reperfusion, SHH as a specific efficient tool to reduce infarct size and subsequent arrhythmias by preventing ventricular repolarization abnormalities. The goal of the present study was to provide a proof of concept of the cardioprotective effect of SHH ligand in a porcine model of acute ischemia. <b>Methods</b>: The antiarrhythmic effect of SHH, either by a recombinant peptide (N-SHH) or shed membrane microparticles harboring SHH ligand (MPs<sup>SHH+</sup>), was evaluated in a first set of pigs following a short (25 min) coronary artery occlusion (CAO) followed by 24 hours-reperfusion (CAR) (Protocol A). The infarct-limiting effect was evaluated on a second set of pigs with 40 min of coronary artery occlusion followed by 24 hours reperfusion (Protocol B). Electrocardiogram (ECG) was recorded and arrhythmia's scores were evaluated. Area at risk and myocardial infarct size were quantified. <b>Results</b>: In protocol A, administration of N-SHH 15 min. after the onset of coronary occlusion significantly reduced the occurrence of ventricular fibrillation compared to control group. Evaluation of arrhythmic score showed that N-SHH treatment significantly reduced the overall occurrence of arrhythmias. In protocol B, massive infarction was observed in control animals. Either N-SHH or MPs<sup>SHH+</sup> treatment reduced significantly the infarct size with a concomitant increase of salvaged area. The reduction in infarct size was both accompanied by a significant decrease in systemic biomarkers of myocardial injury, i.e., cardiac troponin I and fatty acid-binding protein and an increase of eNOS activation. <b>Conclusions</b>: We show for the first time in a large mammalian model that the activation of the SHH pathway by N-SHH or MPs<sup>SHH+</sup> offers a potent protection of the heart to ischemia-reperfusion by preventing the reperfusion arrhythmias, reducing the infarct area and the circulating levels of biomarkers for myocardial injury. These data open up potentially theranostic prospects for patients suffering from myocardial infarction to prevent the occurrence of arrhythmias and reduce myocardial tissue damage.
16,848
Modified volumetric capnography-derived parameter: A potentially stable indicator in monitoring cardiopulmonary resuscitation efficacy in a porcine model.
We aimed to investigate whether the ability of the volumetric capnography-derived parameter, the volume of CO2</sub> eliminated per minute and per kg body weight (V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup>), in monitoring the quality of CPR and predicting the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) remains undisturbed by hyperventilation.</AbstractText>This randomised crossover study included 12 male domestic pigs. After 4&#x202f;min of untreated ventricular fibrillation, mechanical CPR was administered. Following 5-min washout periods, each animal underwent two sessions of experiments; four 5-min ventilation trials followed by advanced life support, consecutively in the two sessions.</AbstractText>Different ventilation types had no significant impact on V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> or haemodynamics. However, PETCO2</sub> was significantly affected by the ventilation type and coronary perfusion pressure (P&#x202f;&lt;&#x202f;0.05). The means&#x202f;&#xb1;&#x202f;standard deviations of PETCO2</sub> decreased linearly with an increase in the respiratory rate (RR) (P&#x202f;&lt;&#x202f;0.05). The PETCO2</sub> decreased from 20.42&#x202f;&#xb1;&#x202f;9.51 to 16.16&#x202f;&#xb1;&#x202f;5.07 (P&#x202f;&lt;&#x202f;0.05) as the tidal volume increased from 10 to 20&#x202f;mL min-1</sup>. No significant differences in V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> were observed between the three RR levels of ventilation types (P&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.274). Post hoc analysis demonstrated a significant difference between the highest value of V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> in double tidal volume hyperventilation and normal ventilation and triple respiratory rate hyperventilation (P&#x202f;&lt;&#x202f;0.05). The AUC for V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> and PETCO2</sub> in discriminating between survivors and non-survivors was 0.80 and 0.71, respectively.</AbstractText>V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> performs better than PETCO2</sub> in monitoring the quality of CPR during hyperventilation. In predicting ROSC during variations in a ventilation state, V'CO2</sub>&#x202f;kg-1</sup> has good predictive ability.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,849
Predictors of movable type left atrial appendage thrombi in patients with atrial fibrillation.
Left atrial appendage thrombi (LAAT) are the main cause of thromboembolic events. Especially, movable type LAAT is high-risk for thromboembolic events. We aimed to investigate the predictors of the movable type LAAT in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). We retrospectively studied 827 consecutive patients who underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TEE) prior to cardioversion or catheter ablation for AF. Sixty-nine patients who underwent cardiac surgery or significant valvular disease were excluded. The remaining 758 patients (age 67.6&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;9.3, 535 males) were included in this study. Clinical data were evaluated at the time of TEE. The LAAT were classified into movable and fixed type LAAT by three independent observers who did not know clinical data. LAAT were detected in 57 (11 with movable and 46 with fixed type) of 758 patients (7.5%). Patients with movable type LAAT had an elevated E/e' ratio, lower left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), larger left atrial volume index, elevated C-reactive protein, higher prevalence of non-paroxysmal AF, patients taking warfarin (73% vs. 21%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.0001), and structural heart disease than control group (fixed type LAAT and without LAAT). On multivariate analysis, E/e' ratio, LVEF, and taking warfarin were significantly associated with movable type LAAT. The rate of movable type LAAT was the highest (7 of 49 patients, 14.3%) in patients with elevated E/e' ratio (&gt;&#x2009;12.7) and decrease LVEF (&lt;&#x2009;44%). E/e' ratio and LVEF could predict movable type LAAT in patients with AF. High-risk patients might need powerful antithrombotic therapy or taking early TEE.
16,850
Long-Term Follow-Up of Patients with Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Arrhythmia.
Background<b>:</b> Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is a rare inherited disorder causing life-threatening arrhythmias. Long-term outcome studies of the channelopathy are limited. Objective<b>:</b> The aim of the present study was to summarize our knowledge on CPVT patients, including the clinical profile treatment approach and long-term outcome. Methods<b>:</b> In this single center study, we retrospectively and prospectively collected data from nine CPVT patients and analyzed them. Results<b>:</b> We reviewed nine patients with CPVT in seven families (22% male), with a median follow-up time of 8.6 years. Mean age at diagnosis was 26.4 12 years. Symptoms at admission were syncope (four patients) and aborted cardiac arrest (four patients). Family history of sudden cardiac death was screened in five patients. In genetic analyses, we found five patients with ryanodine type 2 receptor (<i>RYR2</i>) mutations. Seven patients were treated with beta-blockers, and if symptoms persisted flecainide was added (four patients). Despite beta-blocker treatment, three patients suffered from seven adverse cardiac events. An implantable cardioverter defibrillator was implanted in seven patients (one primary, six secondary prevention). Over the follow-up period, three patients suffered from ventricular tachycardia (ten times) and five patients from ventricular fibrillation (nine times). No one died during follow-up. Conclusion<b>:</b> Our CPVT cohort showed a high risk of cardiac events. Family screening, optimal medical therapy and individualized treatment are necessary in affected patients in referral centers.
16,851
Incidence of Ischemic Stroke in Individuals With and Without Aortic Valve Stenosis: A Danish Retrospective Cohort Study.
Background and Purpose- Aortic valve stenosis may lead to atrial and ventricular remodeling, predisposes to atrial fibrillation, and may also be an independent risk factor of ischemic stroke. However, information on stroke rates among persons with aortic valve stenosis are sparse. We aimed to determine the incidence rates and relative risks of ischemic stroke in individuals with diagnosed aortic valve stenosis compared with age- and sex-matched controls. Methods- All patients with incident aortic valve stenosis aged &gt;18 years (n=79 310) and age- and sex-matched controls were identified using the Danish nationwide registries (1997-2017). Incidence rates per 1000 person-years (PY) and multivariable adjusted hazard ratios with 95% CIs were reported. Results- In total, 873 373 individuals (median age 77 years, 51.5% men, 9.1% with aortic valve stenosis) were included. Ischemic stroke occurred in 70 205 (8.0%) individuals during 4 880 862 PY of follow-up. Incidence rates of ischemic stroke were 13.3/1000 PY among the controls compared with 30.4/1000 PY in patients with aortic valve stenosis, corresponding to a hazard ratio of 1.31 (95% CI, 1.28-1.34). In all age-groups, the incidence rates and relative risks were significantly increased in patients with aortic valve stenosis compared with controls, but the relative risk was greater for younger individuals (eg, age group, 18-45 years: hazard ratio, 5.94 [95% CI, 4.10-8.36]). In patients with aortic valve stenosis above 65 years of age, the risk of ischemic stroke was markedly lower after aortic valve replacement (30.3 versus 19.6/1000 PY before and after valve replacement). Among people with atrial fibrillation the incidence rate of ischemic stroke was 1.5 times higher when aortic valve stenosis was present (33.0/1000 PY versus 49.9/1000 PY). Conclusions- People with aortic valve stenosis have a significantly increased risk of ischemic stroke compared with age- and sex-matched controls. Future studies are warranted to explore whether antithrombotic therapy may be beneficial in some individuals.
16,852
Characteristics and outcomes of atrial fibrillation in patients without traditional risk factors: an RE-LY AF registry analysis.
Data on patient characteristics, prevalence, and outcomes of atrial fibrillation (AF) patients without traditional risk factors, often labelled 'lone AF', are sparse.</AbstractText>The RE-LY AF registry included 15&#xa0;400 individuals who presented to emergency departments with AF in 47 countries. This analysis focused on patients without traditional risk factors, including age &#x2265;60&#x2009;years, hypertension, coronary artery disease, heart failure, left ventricular hypertrophy, congenital heart disease, pulmonary disease, valve heart disease, hyperthyroidism, and prior cardiac surgery. Patients without traditional risk factors were compared with age- and region-matched controls with traditional risk factors (1:3 fashion). In 796 (5%) patients, no traditional risk factors were present. However, 98% (779/796) had less-established or borderline risk factors, including borderline hypertension (130-140/80-90&#x2009;mmHg; 47%), chronic kidney disease (eGFR&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;60&#x2009;mL/min; 57%), obesity (body mass index&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;30; 19%), diabetes (5%), excessive alcohol intake (&gt;14 units/week; 4%), and smoking (25%). Compared with patients with traditional risk factors (n&#x2009;=&#x2009;2388), patients without traditional risk factors were more often men (74% vs. 59%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) had paroxysmal AF (55% vs. 37%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) and less AF persistence after 1 year (21% vs. 49%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001). Furthermore, 1-year stroke occurrence rate (0.6% vs. 2.0%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.013) and heart failure hospitalizations (0.9% vs. 12.5%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) were lower. However, risk of AF-related re-hospitalization was similar (18% vs. 21%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.09).</AbstractText>Almost all patients without traditionally defined AF risk factors have less-established or borderline risk factors. These patients have a favourable 1-year prognosis, but risk of AF-related re-hospitalization remains high. Greater emphasis should be placed on recognition and management of less-established or borderline risk factors.</AbstractText>Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. &#xa9; The Author(s) 2020. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.</CopyrightInformation>
16,853
Prognostic Prediction of Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Parameters in Heart Failure Patients with Atrial Fibrillation.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with increased mortality in heart failure (HF) patients.</AbstractText>To evaluate whether the risk of AF patients can be precisely stratified by relation with cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) cut-offs for heart transplantation (HT) selection.</AbstractText>Prospective evaluation of 274 consecutive HF patients with left ventricular ejection fraction &#x2264; 40%. The primary endpoint was a composite of cardiac death or urgent HT in 1-year follow-up. The primary endpoint was analysed by several CPET parameters for the highest area under the curve and for positive (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) in AF and sinus rhythm (SR) patients to detect if the current cut-offs for HT selection can precisely stratify the AF group. Statistical differences with a p-value &lt;0.05 were considered significant.</AbstractText>There were 51 patients in the AF group and 223 in the SR group. The primary outcome was higher in the AF group (17.6% vs 8.1%, p = 0.038). The cut-off value of pVO2 for HT selection showed a PPV of 100% and an NPV of 95.5% for the primary outcome in the AF group, with a PPV of 38.5% and an NPV of 94.3% in the SR group. The cut-off value of VE/VCO2 slope showed lower values of PPV (33.3%) and similar NPV (92.3%) to pVO2 results in the AF group.</AbstractText>Despite the fact that AF carries a worse prognosis for HF patients, the current cut-off of pVO2 for HT selection can precisely stratify this high-risk group.</AbstractText>
16,854
Outcomes in Brugada Syndrome Patients With Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillators: Insights From the SGLT2 Registry.
Brugada syndrome (BrS) is a cardiac ion channelopathy with characteristic electrocardiographic patterns, predisposing affected individuals to sudden cardiac death (SCD). Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is used for primary or secondary prevention in BrS, but its use remains controversial amongst low-risk asymptomatic patients. The present study aims to examine indicators for ICD implantation amongst BrS patients with different disease manifestations.</AbstractText>This study included BrS patients who received ICDs between 1997 and 2018. The cohort was divided into three categories based on presentations before ICD implantation: asymptomatic, syncope, ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation (VT/VF). Univariate and multivariate Cox-regression analysis were performed to identify independent predictors of appropriate and inappropriate shock delivery.</AbstractText>A total of 136 consecutive patients were included with a median follow-up of 95 (IQR: 80) months. Appropriate shocks were delivered in 34 patients (25.0%) whereas inappropriate shocks were delivered in 24 patients (17.6%). Complications occurred in 30 patients (22.1%). Type 1 Brugada pattern were found to be an independent predictor of appropriate shock delivery, whilst the presence of other arrhythmia was predictive for both appropriate and inappropriate ICD shock delivery under multivariate Cox regression analysis.</AbstractText>ICD therapy is effective for primary and secondary prevention of SCD in BrS. Whilst appropriate shocks occur more frequently in BrS patients presenting with VT/VF, they also occur in asymptomatic patients. Further research in risk stratification can improve patient prognosis while avoid unnecessary ICD implantation.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Lee, Li, Zhou, Leung, Lai, Li, Liu, Letsas, Mok, Zhang and Tse.</CopyrightInformation>
16,855
Natural History of Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy.
Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (AC) is a heart muscle disease characterized by a scarred ventricular myocardium with a distinctive propensity to ventricular arrhythmias (VAs) and sudden cardiac death, especially in young athletes. Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) represents the best characterized variant of AC, with a peculiar genetic background, established diagnostic criteria and management guidelines; however, the identification of nongenetic causes of the disease, combined with the common demonstration of biventricular and left-dominant forms, has led to coin the term of "arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy", to better define the broad spectrum of the disease phenotypic expressions. The genetic basis of AC are pathogenic mutations in genes encoding the cardiac desmosomes, but also non-desmosomal and nongenetic variants were reported in patients with AC, some of which showing overlapping phenotypes with other non-ischemic diseases. The natural history of AC is characterized by VAs and progressive deterioration of cardiac performance. Different phases of the disease are recognized, each characterized by pathological and clinical features. Arrhythmic manifestations are age-related: Ventricular fibrillation and SCD are more frequent in young people, while sustained ventricular tachycardia is more common in the elderly, depending on the different nature of the myocardial lesions. This review aims to address the genetic basis, the clinical course and the phenotypic variants of AC.
16,856
Testing for Coronary Artery Disease in Older Patients With New-Onset Heart Failure: Findings From Get With The Guidelines-Heart Failure.
Current guidelines recommend evaluation for underlying heart disease and reversible conditions for patients with new-onset heart failure (HF). There are limited data on contemporary testing for coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with new-onset HF.</AbstractText>We performed an observational cohort study using the Get With The Guidelines-Heart Failure registry linked to Medicare claims. All patients were aged &#x2265;65 and hospitalized for new-onset HF from 2009 to 2015. We collected left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), prior HF history, and in-hospital CAD testing from the registry, as well as testing for CAD using claims from 90 days before to 90 days after index HF hospitalization.</AbstractText>Among 17 185 patients with new-onset HF, 6672 (39%) received testing for CAD, including 3997 (23%) during the index hospitalization. Testing for CAD differed by LVEF: 53% in HF with reduced EF (LVEF &#x2264;40%), 42% in HF with borderline EF (LVEF, 41%-49%), and 31% in HF with preserved EF (LVEF &#x2265;50%). After multivariable adjustment, patients who received testing for CAD, compared with those who did not, were younger and more likely to be male, have a smoking history, have hyperlipidemia, and have HF with reduced ejection fraction or HF with borderline ejection fraction (all P</i>&lt;0.05).</AbstractText>The majority of patients hospitalized for new-onset HF did not receive testing for CAD either during the hospitalization or in the 90 days before and after. The rates of testing for CAD were higher in patients with LVEF &#x2264;40% though remained low. These data highlight an opportunity to improve care by identifying appropriate candidates for optimal CAD medical therapy and revascularization.</AbstractText>
16,857
Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Secondary to Thrombophilia and Incidentally Diagnosed Atrial Septal Defect.
A 46-year-old man developed chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension and atrial fibrillation after acute pulmonary embolism. He was found incidentally to have an isolated secundum atrial septal defect, as well as a homozygous mutation for the plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 gene. He was successfully treated with pulmonary endarterectomy and atrial septal defect repair. He has continued to do well on a regimen of dabigatran. (<b>Level of Difficulty: Beginner.</b>).
16,858
Impact of single versus double transseptal puncture on outcome and complications in pulmonary vein isolation procedures.
The aim of the current study was to analyze the impact of single versus double transseptal puncture (TSP) for atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation.</AbstractText>Consecutive patients undergoing AF ablation were prospectively included in the AF ablation registry and were analyzed according to single versus double TSP.</AbstractText>A total of 478 patients (female 35%, persistent AF 67%) undergoing AF ablation between 01/2014 and 09/2014 were included. Single TSP was performed in 202 (42%) patients, double TSP in 276 (58%) patients. Age, gender, body mass index, CHA2DS2-VASc score, left ventricular ejection fraction and operator experience (experienced operator defined as &#x2265; 5 years of experience in invasive electrophysiology) were equally distributed between the two groups. Repeat procedures (re-dos) were more frequently performed using single TSP access (p &lt; 0.001). Left atrial (LA) diameter was larger in patients with double TSP (p = 0.001). Procedure duration in single TSP was identical to double TSP procedures (p = 0.823). Radiation duration was similar between the two groups (p = 0.217). There were 49 (10%) patients with complications after catheter ablation. There were no differences between complication rates and TSP type (p = 0.555). Similarly, recurrence rates were comparable between both TSP groups (p = 0.788).</AbstractText>There was no clear benefit of single or double TSP in AF ablation.</AbstractText>
16,859
Polyunsaturated fatty acid analogues differentially affect cardiac Na<sub>V</sub>, Ca<sub>V</sub>, and K<sub>V</sub> channels through unique mechanisms.
The cardiac ventricular action potential depends on several voltage-gated ion channels, including Na<sub>V</sub>, Ca<sub>V</sub>, and K<sub>V</sub> channels. Mutations in these channels can cause Long QT Syndrome (LQTS) which increases the risk for ventricular fibrillation and sudden cardiac death. Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have emerged as potential therapeutics for LQTS because they are modulators of voltage-gated ion channels. Here we demonstrate that PUFA analogues vary in their selectivity for human voltage-gated ion channels involved in the ventricular action potential. The effects of specific PUFA analogues range from selective for a specific ion channel to broadly modulating cardiac ion channels from all three families (Na<sub>V</sub>, Ca<sub>V</sub>, and K<sub>V</sub>). In addition, a PUFA analogue selective for the cardiac I<sub>Ks</sub> channel (Kv7.1/KCNE1) is effective in shortening the cardiac action potential in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes. Our data suggest that PUFA analogues could potentially be developed as therapeutics for LQTS and cardiac arrhythmia.
16,860
Gag Reflex-Mediated Restoration of Sinus Rhythm during TEE Probe Insertion for Atrial Fibrillation: A Word of Caution.
It is recommended to attempt vagal maneuvers as initial therapy in various types of supraventricular tachycardia. While various forms of vagal techniques have been described, a gag reflex-mediated vagal technique, to the best of our knowledge, has not been. We present a case of gag reflex-mediated restoration of sinus rhythm in a patient with atrial fibrillation and rapid ventricular response upon transesophageal probe insertion. This case is unique due to the mechanism of vagally mediated cardioversion. It emphasizes that operators must be cautious regarding the risk of embolization of a potential thrombus from vagal-mediated cardioversion with unknown thrombus burden.
16,861
Cardiac radioablation-A systematic review.
Failure of drugs and catheter ablation procedures for the treatment of ventricular arrhythmias is still extremely relevant. Recently, stereotactic body radiotherapy has been introduced to treat therapy refractory patients. In this systematic review (International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews, CRD42019133212), we aimed to summarize electrophysiological and histopathological effects of radioablation in animals, patients, and extracted and perfused hearts. A systematic search was performed in OVID MEDLINE, OVID Embase, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, Google Scholar, ClinicalTrials.gov, and World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP) from inception to September 2019. Identified records were independently screened for eligibility by 2 reviewers. Risk of bias and methodological quality were assessed using the SYRCLE, ROBINS-I, or Murad tool and tailored to the different study designs. We included 13 preclinical and 10 clinical publications. Large heterogeneity in study designs prompted a narrative synthesis approach. Baseline, (pre-)procedural details, outcome, target tissue analyses, and safety data were extracted and summarized. In animal studies evaluating electrophysiological parameters, radioablation induced a reduction in voltage/potential amplitude or bidirectional block in target areas in 93.2% of animals. Atrioventricular block (first to third degree) was induced in 78.3% of animals, and in studies evaluating ventricular arrhythmia inducibility, 75% reduction was achieved. In patients, predominantly ventricular tachycardias were targeted with &gt;85% reduction in arrhythmia episodes during follow-up with an encouraging short-term safety profile. Preclinical and clinical evidence on the efficacy and safety of radioablation is limited in both quantity and quality. The results of radioablation for therapy refractory patients with ventricular tachycardia are promising, but further research is needed.
16,862
Case Report Stimulant-Induced Atrial Flutter in a Remote Setting.
Atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation are among the most commonly encountered cardiac arrhythmias; however, there is a dearth of clinical trials or case studies regarding its occurrence in the setting of stimulants such as caffeine and nicotine in otherwise healthy young patients. Described here is a case of a 29-year-old physically fit white man without significant past medical history who presented in stable condition complaining only of palpitations. He was found to have atrial flutter without rapid ventricular response on cardiac monitoring, most likely due to concomitant presence of high levels of nicotine and caffeine via chewing tobacco and energy drinks. He was treated conservatively with vagal maneuvers and intravenous fluids with complete resolution of symptoms and electrocardiographic abnormalities within 14 hours. This demonstrates an alternate conservative treatment strategy in appropriately risk stratified patients who present in an austere field setting with limited resources.
16,863
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance T2* mapping for the assessment of cardiovascular events in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiac events. Beyond classic risk factors, relative myocardial ischaemia and succeeding myocardial alterations, which can be detected using either contrast agents or parametric mapping in cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging, have shown an impact on outcome in HCM. CMR may help to risk stratify using parametric T2* mapping. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to evaluate the association of T2* values or fibrosis with cardiovascular events in HCM.</AbstractText>The relationship between T2* with supraventricular, ventricular arrhythmia or heart failure was retrospectively assessed in 91 patients with HCM referred for CMR on a 1.5T MR imaging system. Fibrosis as a reference was added to the model. Patients were subdivided into groups according to T2* value quartiles.</AbstractText>47 patients experienced an event of ventricular arrhythmia, 25 of atrial fibrillation/flutter and 17 of heart failure. T2*&#x2264;28.7 ms yielded no association with ventricular events in the whole HCM cohort. T2* of non-obstructive HCM showed a significant association with ventricular events in univariate analysis, but not in multivariate analysis. For the combined endpoint of arrhythmic events, there was already an association for the whole HCM cohort, but again only in univariate analyses. Fibrosis stayed the strongest predictor in all analyses. There was no association for T2* and fibrosis with heart failure.</AbstractText>Decreased T2* values by CMR only provide a small association with arrhythmic events in HCM, especially in non-obstructive HCM. No information is added for heart failure.</AbstractText>&#xa9; Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.</CopyrightInformation>
16,864
Left-ventricular innervation assessed by <sup>123</sup>I-SPECT/CT is associated with cardiac events in inherited arrhythmia syndromes.
Impaired myocardial sympathetic innervation assessed by 123</sup>Iodine-Metaiodobenzylguanidine (123</sup>I-MIBG) scintigraphy is associated with cardiac events. Since regional disparities of structural abnormalities are common in inherited arrhythmia syndromes (iAS), a chamber-specific innervation assessment of the right (RV) and left ventricle (LV) could provide important insights for a patient-individual therapy. Aim of this study was to evaluate chamber-specific patterns of autonomic innervation by Single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) in patients with iAS with respect to clinical outcome regarding cardiac events.</AbstractText>We assessed ventricular sympathetic innervation (LV, RV and planar heart/mediastinum-ratios, and washout-rates) by 123</sup>I-MIBG-SPECT/CT in 48 patients (arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy [ARVC], n&#xa0;=&#xa0;26; laminopathy, n&#xa0;=&#xa0;8; idiopathic ventricular fibrillation [iVF], n&#xa0;=&#xa0;14) in relation to a composite clinical endpoint (ventricular arrhythmia; cardiac death; cardiac hospitalization). RV tracer uptake was lower in patients with ARVC than in laminopathy and iVF patients (1.7&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.4 vs. 2.1&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.7 and 2.1&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.5, respectively). Over a median follow-up of 2.2&#xa0;years, the combined endpoint was met in 18 patients (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;12 ventricular tachyarrhythmias, n&#xa0;=&#xa0;5 hospitalizations, n&#xa0;=&#xa0;1 death). LV, but not RV H/M ratio was associated with the combined endpoint (hazard-ratio 2.82 [1.30-6.10], p&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.01). After adjustment for LV and RV function, LV H/M-ratio still remained a significant predictor for cardiac events (hazard-ratio 2.79 [1.06-7.35], p&#xa0;=&#xa0;0.04).</AbstractText>We demonstrated that chamber-specific 123</sup>MIBG-SPECT/CT imaging is feasible and that reduced LV sympathetic innervation was associated with worse outcome in iAS. These findings provide novel insights into the potential role of regional autonomic nervous system heterogeneity for the evolution of life-threatening cardiac events in iAS.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.</CopyrightInformation>
16,865
Preprocedural Troponin T Levels Predict the Improvement in the Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction After Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation/Flutter.
Background Left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction is reversible in some patients once the arrhythmia is controlled. However, identifying this arrhythmia-induced cardiomyopathy among patients with LV systolic dysfunction is challenging. We explored the factors predicting the reversibility of the LV ejection fraction (LVEF) after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation and/or atrial flutter in patients with LV systolic dysfunction. Methods and Results Forty patients with a reduced LVEF (LVEF &lt;50%; 66.2&#xb1;10.7&#xa0;years; 32 men) who underwent atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter ablation were included. Transthoracic echocardiography was performed before and during the early (&lt;4&#xa0;days) and late phases (&gt;3&#xa0;months) after the ablation. Responders were defined as having a normalized LVEF (&#x2265;50%) during the late phase after the ablation. The LVEF improved from 39.8&#xb1;8.8 to 50.9&#xb1;10.9% at 1.2&#xb1;0.6&#xa0;days after the procedure, and to 56.2&#xb1;12.2% at 9.6&#xb1;8.0&#xa0;months after the procedure (both for <i>P</i>&lt;0.001). Thirty (75.0%) patients were responders. The preprocedural echocardiographic parameters were comparable between the responders and nonresponders. In the multivariate analysis, the preprocedural high-sensitivity troponin T was the only independent predictor of the recovery of the LV dysfunction during the late phase after ablation (odds ratio, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.06-1.33; <i>P</i>=0.001), and a level of &#x2264;12&#xa0;pg/mL predicted recovery of the LV dysfunction with a high accuracy (sensitivity, 90.0%; specificity, 76.7%; positive predictive value, 56.3%; and negative predictive value, 95.8%). Conclusions Preprocedural high-sensitivity troponin T levels might be a simple and useful parameter for predicting the reversibility of the LV systolic dysfunction after atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter ablation in patients with a reduced LVEF.
16,866
Long-term clinical outcomes after placement of an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator: does the etiology of heart failure matter?
European and American guidelines for the placement of implantable cardioverter&#x2011;defibrillator (ICD) and cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator (CRT&#x2011;D) in patients with heart failure (HF) remain unchanged despite controversy and ongoing debate on the etiology of HF. However, there are limited data on the long&#x2011;term follow&#x2011;up in patients who received primary defibrillator therapy with regard to ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) and nonischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM). The prognostic significance of the etiology of HF is not well established.</AbstractText>The aim of the study was to assess the predictive value of the cause of HF.</AbstractText>A total of 1073 patients with the first implantation of ICD/CRT&#x2011;D between January 2009 and December 2013 from the COMMIT&#x2011;HF (Contemporary Modalities In Treatment of Heart Failure) registry were selected for the study. Patients were divided into 2 groups depending on the etiology of HF: ischemic (n = 705; 65.7%) and nonischemic (n = 368; 34.3%). The primary endpoint was long&#x2011;term all&#x2011;cause mortality.</AbstractText>The median follow&#x2011;up was 60.5 months. The primary endpoint occurred more often in the ICM as compared with the NICM group (35.7% vs 26.6%; P = 0.008). A higher out&#x2011;of&#x2011;hospital mortality in patients with ICM tended to be statistically significant (15.5% vs 10.6; P = 0.05). The multivariate analysis revealed that, among others, an ischemic etiology of HF was an independent factor of long&#x2011;term mortality (hazard ratio, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.30-1.81; P = 0.003). Other independent predictors for mortality are: age older than 65 years, impaired left ventricular ejection fraction, chronic kidney disease, atrial fibrillation, diabetes mellitus.</AbstractText>In the real&#x2011;world population, significantly worse survival of patients with ICM in comparison with those with NICM is observed, and an ischemic etiology of HF is a strong independent predictor of mortality among individuals following the placement of ICD/ CRT&#x2011;D.</AbstractText>
16,867
Sudden death in a patient with long QT syndrome presenting with an epileptic phenotype.
Patients with epilepsy suffer from a higher mortality rate than the general population, a portion of which is not due to epilepsy itself or comorbid conditions. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is a common but poorly understood cause of death in patients with intractable epilepsy and often afflicts younger patients. The pathophysiology of SUDEP is poorly defined but does not appear to be related to prolonged seizure activity or resultant injury. Interestingly, a subset of patients with confirmed long QT syndrome (LQTS) present with a seizure phenotype and may have concurrent epilepsy. In this case, we present a patient who initially presented with a seizure phenotype. Further workup captured PMVT on an outpatient event monitor, and the patient was subsequently diagnosed with LQTS1. A substantial number of patients with LQTS initially present with a seizure phenotype. These patients may represent a subset of SUDEP cases resulting from ventricular arrhythmias. Appropriate suspicion for ventricular arrhythmias is necessary for proper arrhythmia evaluation and management in patients presenting with epilepsy.
16,868
Survival of patients with pacing-induced cardiomyopathy upgraded to CRT does not depend on defibrillation therapy.
Permanent right ventricular pacing (RVP) results in cardiac dyssynchrony that may lead to heart failure and may be an indication for the use of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). The study aimed to evaluate predictors of outcomes in patients with pacing-induced cardiomyopathy (PICM) if upgraded to CRT.</AbstractText>One hundred fifteen patients, 75.0 years old (IQR 67.0-80.0), were upgraded to CRT due to the decline in left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) caused by the long-term RVP. A retrospective analysis was performed using data from hospital and outpatient clinic records and survival data from the National Health System.</AbstractText>The prior percentage of RVP was 100.0% (IQR 97.0-100.0), with a QRS duration of 180.0&#xa0;ms (IQR 160.0-200.0). LVEF at the time of the upgrade procedure was 27.0% (IQR 21.0-32.75). The mean follow-up was 980&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;522 days. The primary endpoint, death from any cause, was met by 26 (22%) patients. Age&#xa0;&gt;&#xa0;82 years (HR 5.96; 95% CI 2.24-15.89; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;.0004) and pre-CRT implantation LVEF&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;20% (HR 5.63; 95%CI 2.19-14.47; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;.0003), but neither the cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implantation (HR 1.00; 95%CI 0.45-2.22; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;1.00), nor the presence of atrial fibrillation (HR 1.22; 95%CI 0.56-2.64; P&#xa0;=&#xa0;.62), were independently associated with all-cause mortality.</AbstractText>Advanced age and an extremely low LVEF, but neither the presence of atrial fibrillation nor implanting an additional high voltage lead, influence the all-cause mortality in patients after long-term RVP, when upgraded to CRT.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,869
Does Resting Cardiac Power Index Affect Survival Post Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement?
Cardiac power index (CPI) is an integrative hemodynamic measure of cardiac pumping capability and is the product of the simultaneously measured mean arterial pressure and the cardiac output. We assessed the association between baseline resting CPI and survival post transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR).</AbstractText>We retrospectively abstracted data of patients who underwent TAVR at the Mayo Clinic Foundation with follow-up data available at 1 year. Baseline demographic, clinical, and echocardiographic data were abstracted. CPI was calculated using the formula, (cardiac output x mean arterial blood pressure) / (451 x body surface area) W/m&#xb2;. Patients were divided into CPI &lt;0.48 W/m&#xb2; (group 1) and CPI &#x2265;0.48 W/m&#xb2; (group 2). Survival according to CPI was determined using Kaplan-Meier method. Multivariate Cox regression analysis was performed to adjust for covariates. Nine hundred and seventy-five patients were included in the final analysis. CPI in group 1 vs group 2 was 0.41 &#xb1; 0.05 W/m&#xb2; vs 0.66 &#xb1; 0.14 W/m&#xb2;, respectively (P&lt;.001, two-sided t-test). Patients in group 1 were more likely to be male and to have a prior history of myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization, peripheral arterial disease, diabetes mellitus, transient ischemic attack, carotid artery disease, atrial fibrillation, lower left ventricular ejection fraction, and moderate to severe mitral and tricuspid regurgitation. After adjusting for baseline covariates, a lower CPI was associated with higher 1-year mortality among patients undergoing TAVR (24.39% in group 1 vs 8.28% in group 2; P&lt;.001).</AbstractText>Low baseline CPI (&lt;0.48 W/m&#xb2;) confers higher mortality risk among patients undergoing TAVR and provides additional prognostic information, which can help risk-stratify patients.</AbstractText>
16,870
Deep sedation as temporary bridge to definitive treatment of ventricular arrhythmia storm.
Electrical storm and incessant ventricular tachycardia (VT) are characterized by the clustering of episodes of VT or ventricular fibrillation (VF) and are associated with a poor prognosis. Autonomic nervous system activity influences VT threshold, and deep sedation may be useful for the treatment of VT emergencies.</AbstractText>We reviewed data from conscious patients admitted to our intensive care unit (ICU) due to monomorphic VT, polymorphic VT or VF at our tertiary center between 2010 and 2018.</AbstractText>A total of 46 conscious patients with recurrent ventricular arrhythmia, refractory to initial treatment, were referred to the ICU. The majority (n</i> = 31) were stabilized on usual care. The remaining treatment-refractory 15 patients (57 years (range 9-74), 80% males, seven with implantable cardioverter-defibrillators) with VT/VF storm (n</i> = 11) or incessant VT (n</i> = 4) due to ischemic heart disease (n</i> = 10), cardiomyopathy (n</i> = 2), primary arrhythmia (n</i> = 2) and one patient post valve surgery, were deeply sedated and intubated. A complete resolution of VT/VF within minutes to hours was achieved in 12 patients (80%), partial resolution in two (13%) and one (7%) patient died due to ventricular free-wall rupture. One patient with recurrent VT episodes needing repeated deep sedation developed necrotic caecum. No other major complications were seen. Thirteen (87%) patients were alive after a mean follow-up of 3.7 years.</AbstractText>Deep sedation was effective and safe for the temporary management of malignant VT/VF refractory to usual treatment. In emergencies, deep sedation may be widely accessible at both secondary and tertiary centers and a clinically useful bridge to definitive treatment of VT.</AbstractText>
16,871
Anxiety is associated with increased risk for atrial cardiopathy.
Anxiety is common in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). The mutual causal effect between anxiety and AF is expected with limited evidence. Atrial cardiopathy is a term to describe structural or electrophysiological atrium abnormality that precedes the onset of AF. This study aimed to investigate the association of anxiety with atrial cardiopathy, giving a clue to the causal relationship of this mind-heart link. This cross-sectional study analyzed 532 patients who were free of AF, atrial flutter, stroke, acute coronary syndrome and valvular heart disease. Atrial cardiopathy was defined as P-wave terminal force in lead V1&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;5000&#xa0;&#x3bc;V&#xb7;ms on electrocardiogram or severe left atrial enlargement on echocardiogram. Generalized anxiety disorder was ascertained by a score of &gt;&#x2009;17/56 on Hamilton anxiety rating scale. Multivariable logistic regression was used to explore the association of anxiety with atrial cardiopathy. A total of 65(12.2%) patients had atrial cardiopathy and 53(10.0%) had generalized anxiety disorder, respectively. Those with atrial cardiopathy were older (74.0 vs 67.0, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), had a bigger left ventricular posterior wall thickness (10.1 vs 9.7&#xa0;mm, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.030), and had a higher prevalence of hypertension (83.1% vs 65.5%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.005), premature complexes (20.0% vs 6.2%, P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), and generalized anxiety disorder (20.0% vs 8.6%, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.004), respectively. Multivariable logistic regression showed the significant association of anxiety with atrial cardiopathy (OR 2.788; 95% CI 1.304-5.960, P&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.008), independent of confounding factors. Anxiety is independently associated with atrial cardiopathy. This association indicates the triggering effect of anxiety on atrial remodeling.
16,872
Four Dimensions of the Cardiac Myocyte Epigenome: from Fetal to Adult Heart.
Development, physiological growth and the response of the heart to injury are accompanied by changes of the transcriptome and epigenome of cardiac myocytes. Recently, cell sorting and next generation sequencing techniques have been applied to determine cardiac myocyte-specific transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms. This review provides a comprehensive overview of studies analysing the transcriptome and epigenome of cardiac myocytes in mouse and human hearts during development, physiological growth and disease.</AbstractText>Adult cardiac myocytes express &gt;&#x2009;12,600 genes, and their expression levels correlate positively with active histone marks and inversely with gene body DNA methylation. DNA methylation accompanied the perinatal switch in sarcomere or metabolic isoform gene expression in cardiac myocytes, but remained rather stable in heart disease. DNA methylation and histone marks identified &gt;&#x2009;100,000 cis-regulatory regions in the cardiac myocyte epigenome with a dynamic spectrum of transcription factor binding sites. The ETS-related transcription factor ETV1 was identified as an atrial-specific element involved in the pathogenesis of atrial fibrillation. Thus, dynamic development of the atrial vs. ventricular cardiac myocyte epigenome provides a basis to identify location and time-dependent mechanisms of epigenetic control to shape pathological gene expression during heart disease. Identifying the four dimensions of the cardiac myocyte epigenome, atrial vs. ventricular location, time during development and growth, and disease-specific signals, may ultimately lead to new treatment strategies for heart disease.</AbstractText>
16,873
Refractory Electrical Storm in the Absence of Structural Ischemic Heart Disease.
Ventricular tachycardia (VT) is characterized as a ventricular rhythm with a QRS &gt;120 milliseconds (ms) and &gt;100 beats-per-minute (BPM) in the absence of an aberrant conduction. It is classified as sustained when lasting &gt;30 seconds. Risk factors associated with the development of VT include increasing age and coronary artery disease with concurrent left ventricular dysfunction, other forms of structural heart disease and acquired or congenital abnormalities in the cardiac sodium, potassium or calcium channels. Diagnosing VT is challenging based on history and physical exam alone. Combination of electrocardiogram (EKG), electrolytes and cardiac enzymes, echocardiogram, cardiac catheterization, and electrophysiology testing are required to appropriately diagnose and characterize the etiology.&#xa0;The case below describes an 84-year-old female with a known history of symptomatic bradycardia status post pacemaker who presented to the emergency department (ED) after a routine device check which revealed VT with associated dyspnea. The patient did not do well with medical therapy and required ablative therapy to resolve VT.
16,874
Correction to: Impact of early intravenous amiodarone administration on neurological outcome in refractory ventricular fibrillation: retrospective analysis of prospectively collected prehospital data.
Following the publication of the original article [1], the authors unfortunately became aware of some typesetting and resolution problems in Figs.&#xa0;1 and 2.
16,875
Relation of Fractionated Atrial Potentials With the Vagal Innervation Evaluated by Extracardiac Vagal Stimulation During Cardioneuroablation.
Vagal hyperactivity is directly related to several clinical conditions as reflex/functional bradyarrhythmias and vagal atrial fibrillation (AF). Cardioneuroablation provides therapeutic vagal denervation through endocardial radiofrequency ablation for these cases. The main challenges are neuromyocardium interface identification and the denervation control and validation. The finding that the AF-Nest (AFN) ablation eliminates the atropine response and decreases RR variability suggests that they are related to the vagal innervation.</AbstractText>Prospective, controlled, longitudinal, nonrandomized study enrolling 62 patients in 2 groups: AFN group (AFN group 32 patients) with functional or reflex bradyarrhythmias or vagal AF treated with AFN ablation and a control group (30 patients) with anomalous bundles, ventricular premature beats, atrial flutter, atrioventricular nodal reentry, and atrial tachycardia, treated with conventional ablation (non-AFN ablation). In AFN group, ablation delivered at AFN detected by fragmentation/fractionation of the endocardial electrograms and by 3-dimensional anatomic location of the ganglionated plexus. Vagal response was evaluated before, during, and postablation by 5 s noncontact vagal stimulation at the jugular foramen, through the internal jugular veins (extracardiac vagal stimulation [ECVS]), analyzing 15 s mean heart rate, longest RR, pauses, and atrioventricular block. All patients had current guidelines arrhythmia ablation indication.</AbstractText>Preablation ECVS induced sinus pauses, asystole, and transient atrioventricular block in both groups showing a strong vagal response (P</i>=0.96). Postablation ECVS in the AFN group showed complete abolishment of the cardiac vagal response in all cases (pre/postablation ECVS=P</i>&lt;0.0001), demonstrating robust vagal denervation. However, in the control group, vagal response remained practically unchanged postablation (P</i>=0.35), showing that non-AFN ablation promotes no significant denervation.</AbstractText>AFN ablation causes significant vagal denervation. Non-AFN ablation causes no significant vagal denervation. These results suggest that AFNs are intrinsically related to vagal innervation. ECVS was fundamental to stepwise vagal denervation validation during cardioneuroablation. Visual Overview A visual overview is available for this article.</AbstractText>
16,876
[Concomitant deployment of MitraClip devices and left atrial appendage closure. Report of one case].
We report a 65-years old woman with a history of permanent atrial fibrillation with high risk for ischemic and bleeding events. She developed a heart failure with severely impaired left ventricular ejection fraction and severe secondary mitral regurgitation. Given her high surgical risk, using transesophageal echocardiography guidance, a concomitant deployment of two MitraClip devices using a high-posterior septal puncture and a left atrial appendage closure with an Amplatzer Amulet occluder were performed through the same access.
16,877
Detection of arrhythmogenic substrate within QRS complex in patients with cardiac sarcoidosis using wavelet-transformed ECG.
Signal-averaged electrocardiography (SAECG) has been known to be useful for prediction of lethal ventricular arrhythmias (VA). However, this technique has limitations in patients with intraventricular conduction disturbance (IVCD), which is common in cardiac sarcoidosis (CS). Meanwhile, wavelet-transformed ECG (WTECG) has been reported to be useful for detecting arrhythmogenic substrate hidden within QRS complex. The objective of this study was to assess the utility of WTECG for detecting arrhythmogenic substrate in patients with CS. Forty-four CS patients including 18 patients with VA were retrospectively investigated. The parameters on the signal-averaged electrocardiography (SAECG) and the power of frequency components on WTECG were compared between VA group and non-VA group. Eighteen patients have VA (VT: n&#x2009;=&#x2009;17, VF: n&#x2009;=&#x2009;1). LP were detected in 17 in VA group and 24 in non-VA group. WTECG showed that high-frequency components (HFC; 80-150&#xa0;Hz) were developed in VA group. Peak power value at 150&#xa0;Hz (P150) was significantly higher in VA group than that in non-VA group (442.9&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;160.2 vs 316.7&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;100.8, p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.006). The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis showed an optimal cutoff point of 336 of P150 for detecting patients with VA, with 82.4% sensitivity, 61.5% specificity, and area under the curve of 0.74 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.59-0.89). WTECG may be useful for detecting CS patients who are prone to VA.
16,878
[Predictive factors of early readmission and mortality in patients with heart failure hospitalized in the Department of Internal Medicine of the San Carlos University Hospital, Spain].
Heart failure (HF) is a health problem in Spain where the prevalence rate for this disease is correlated with aging. Heart failure-related mortality and hospital readmissions are high. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical features of patients with HF hospitalized in the Department of Internal Medicine as well as factors associated with readmission and intra-hospital mortality.</AbstractText>We conducted a cross-sectional, descriptive, and retrospective study based on the review of the clinical records of patients with primary diagnosis of HF in the Basic Minimum Set of Data (BMSD, Conjunto M&#xed;nimo B&#xe1;sico de Datos),who were discharged from the Department of Internal Medicine of the San Carlos Clinical Hospital (HCSC) in 2014.</AbstractText>The study involved 199 patients, with an average age of 82.7 years (61.8% were females); 85% of them had left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) &gt; 40%, with an average pro-BNP of 9.101,3 pg/ml and 64.3% had ongoing atrial fibrillation. Thirty point two percent of patients were readmitted within 30 days, with an average rate of readmission/year of 1.45 (&#xb1;0.86). Twenty five percent of patients died during the follow-up period in hospital. Among factors associated with intra-hospital mortality, older age was an associated variable (OR 1,050)(1,002-1,101) (p = 0.04). The most important factors associated with early readmission were polypharmacy (p = 0.024) as well as pluripathology based on Ollero criteria 4,974 (1,396-17,730) (p = 0.024). Patients hospitalized for HF in our Department are elderly patients treated with polymedication.</AbstractText>Patients hospitalized for cardiac insufficiency are older and are characterized by pluripathology and polypharmacy. Short-term prognosis is associated with high rates of readmission and mortality in hospitalmainly for patients suffering from kidney disease and/or neurological disorders.</AbstractText>&#xa9; Noel Lorenzo Villalba et al.</CopyrightInformation>
16,879
The K<sub>Ca</sub>2 Channel Inhibitor AP30663 Selectively Increases Atrial Refractoriness, Converts Vernakalant-Resistant Atrial Fibrillation and Prevents Its Reinduction in Conscious Pigs.
To describe the effects of the KCa</sub>2 channel inhibitor AP30663 in pigs regarding tolerability, cardiac electrophysiology, pharmacokinetics, atrial functional selectivity, effectiveness in cardioversion of tachy-pacing induced vernakalant-resistant atrial fibrillation (AF), and prevention of reinduction of AF.</AbstractText>Six healthy pigs with implanted pacemakers and equipped with a Holter monitor were used to compare the effects of increasing doses (0, 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 mg/kg) of AP30663 on the right atrial effective refractory period (AERP) and on various ECG parameters, including the QT interval. Ten pigs with implanted neurostimulators were long-term atrially tachypaced (A-TP) until sustained vernakalant-resistant AF was present. 20 mg/kg AP30663 was tested to discover if it could successfully convert vernakalant-resistant AF to sinus rhythm (SR) and protect against reinduction of AF. Seven anesthetized pigs were used for pharmacokinetic experiments. Two pigs received an infusion of 20 mg/kg AP30663 over 60 min while five pigs received 5 mg/kg AP30663 over 30 min. Blood samples were collected before, during, and after infusion on AP30663. AP30663 was well-tolerated and prominently increased the AERP in pigs with little effect on ventricular repolarization. Furthermore, it converted A-TP induced AF that had become unresponsive to vernakalant, and it prevented reinduction of AF in pigs. Both a &gt;30 ms increase of the AERP and conversion of AF occurred in different pigs at a free plasma concentration level of around 1.0-1.4 &#xb5;M of AP30663, which was achieved at a dose level of 5 mg/kg.</AbstractText>AP30663 has shown properties in animals that would be of clinical interest in man.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Diness, Kirchhoff, Speerschneider, Abildgaard, Edvardsson, S&#xf8;rensen, Grunnet and Bentzen.</CopyrightInformation>
16,880
Influence of cardiac arrest and SCAI shock stage on cardiac intensive care unit mortality.
Patients with concomitant cardiac arrest (CA) and shock are at increased risk of mortality, even when stratified according to shock severity. We sought to determine whether the presence of ventricular fibrillation (VF) modified the relationship between CA and mortality in cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) patients.</AbstractText>We retrospectively analyzed unique Mayo Clinic CICU patients admitted between 2007 and 2015. Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) shock stages A through E were classified at admission. Hospital mortality in each SCAI shock stage was stratified by the presence of CA, VF CA, or non-VF CA.</AbstractText>We included 9,898 patients with a mean age of 68&#x2009;years (38% females). CA was present in 12%, including 53% with VF CA and 47% with non-VF CA. Hospital mortality was higher in patients with CA compared to patients without CA (34% vs. 6%; adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 3.1, 95% CI [2.4, 4.0], p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;.001), and patients with non-VF CA had higher hospital mortality than patients with VF CA (44% vs. 25%; adjusted OR = 2.1, 95% CI [1.4, 3.0], p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;.001). After adjustment, patients with any CA or non-VF CA had higher hospital mortality at each SCAI stage, except stage E (all other p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;.05), whereas patients with VF CA did not (all p&#x2009;&gt;&#x2009;.1).</AbstractText>CA rhythm modifies the relationship between CA and mortality in CICU patients, when accounting for coma, shock, and organ failure. Outcome studies examining CA in patients with cardiogenic shock need to account for important differences such as CA rhythm.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,881
Non-ischemic compared to ischemic cardiomyopathy is associated with increasing recurrent ventricular tachyarrhythmias and ICD-related therapies.
The study sought to assess the impact of ischemic (ICMP) compared to non-ischemic cardiomyopathy (NICMP) on recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias in implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) recipients.</AbstractText>Data comparing recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias in ICD recipients with ischemic or non-ischemic cardiomyopathy is limited.</AbstractText>A large retrospective registry was used including all consecutive ICD recipients with first episodes of ventricular tachycardia (VT) or fibrillation (VF) from 2002 to 2016. Patients with ICMP were compared to patients with NICMP. The primary prognostic endpoint was first recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias at one year. Secondary endpoints comprised ICD-related therapies, rehospitalization and all-cause mortality at one year. Statistics Kaplan-Meier survival and multivariable Cox regression analyses.</AbstractText>A total of 387 consecutive ICD recipients were included retrospectively (ICMP: 82%, NICMP: 18%). At one year of follow-up, freedom from first recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias was lower in NICMP (81% vs. 71%, log-rank p&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.063; HR&#x202f;=&#x202f;1.760; 95% CI 0.985-3.002; p&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.080), mainly attributed to higher rates of sustained VT (20% versus 12%, p&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.054). Accordingly, freedom from first appropriate device therapies was lower in NICMP (74% vs. 85%, log rank p&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.004; HR&#x202f;=&#x202f;1.951; 95% CI 1.121-3.397; p&#x202f;=&#x202f;0.028), especially in patients with sustained VT or VF at index. Both groups revealed comparable rates of rehospitalization and all-cause mortality at one year.</AbstractText>NICMP was associated with higher rates of recurrent ventricular tachyarrhythmias and appropriate ICD therapies compared to ICMP at one&#x202f;year of follow-up, whereas rates of rehospitalization and all-cause mortality were comparable.</AbstractText>This study retrospectively compared the impact of cardiomyopathy types (ICMP versus NICMP) on recurrences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias in 387 ICD recipients. Freedom from first episodes of ventricular tachyarrhythmias and first appropriate device therapies were lower in patients with NICMP compared to ICMP.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,882
Multiomics Analysis Coupled with Text Mining Identify Novel Biomarker Candidates for Recurrent Cardiovascular Events.
Recurrent cardiovascular events remain an enigma that accounts for &gt;30% of deaths worldwide. While heredity and human genetics variation play a key role, host-environment interactions offer a sound conceptual framework to dissect the molecular basis of recurrent cardiovascular events from genes and proteins to metabolites, thus accounting for environmental contributions as well. We report here a multiomics systems science approach so as to map interindividual variability in susceptibility to recurrent cardiovascular events. First, we performed data and text mining through a mixed-methods content analysis to select genomic variants, 10 single nucleotide polymorphisms, and microRNAs (miR-10a, miR-21, and miR-20a), minimizing bias in candidate marker selection. Next, we validated our <i>in silico</i> data in a patient cohort suffering from recurrent cardiovascular events (a cross-sectional study design and sampling). Our findings report a key role in low-density lipoprotein clearance for rs11206510 (<i>p</i>&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.01) and rs515135 (<i>p</i>&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05). miR-10a (<i>p</i>&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05) was significantly associated with heart failure, while increased expression levels for miR-21 and miR-20a associated with atherosclerosis. In addition, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based (LC-MS-based) proteomics analyses identified that vascular diameter and cholesterol levels are among the key factors to be considered in recurrent cardiovascular events. From a methodology innovation standpoint, this study offers a strategy to enhance the signal-to-noise ratios in mapping novel biomarker candidates wherein each research and conceptual step were interrogated for their validity and in turn, enriched one another, ideally translating information growth to knowledge growth.
16,883
Atrial arrhythmias in heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction.
Atrial arrhythmias are common among individuals with heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). This review describes management options for these arrhythmias and discusses emerging clinical data supporting catheter ablation.</AbstractText>Several recent clinical trials indicate that catheter ablation is superior to pharmacologic therapy for management of symptomatic atrial fibrillation in the setting of HFrEF. Restoration and maintenance of sinus rhythm appears to have the greatest benefit with regard to ejection fraction improvement among individuals with a nonischemic heart failure etiology and minimal left ventricular fibrosis.</AbstractText>A rhythm control strategy should be strongly considered in patients with HFrEF, especially when the atrial arrhythmia is symptomatic or is present at the time of a heart failure diagnosis. Catheter ablation may be the preferred strategy for maintenance of sinus rhythm in this patient population.</AbstractText>
16,884
Antiarrhythmic drug effects on premature beats are partly determined by prior cardiac activation frequency in perfused guinea-pig heart.
What is the central question of this study? Can antiarrhythmic drug effects on repolarization, conduction time and excitation wavelength in premature beats be determined by prior cardiac activation frequency? What is the main finding and its importance? In premature beats induced after a series of cardiac activations at a slow rate, antiarrhythmics prolong repolarization but evoke little or no conduction delay, thus increasing the excitation wavelength, which indicates an antiarrhythmic effect. Fast prior activation rate attenuates prolongation of repolarization, while amplifying the conduction delay induced by drugs, which translates into the reduced excitation wavelength, indicating proarrhythmia. These findings suggest that a sudden increase in heart rate can shape adverse pharmacological profiles in patients with ventricular ectopy.</AbstractText>Antiarrhythmic drugs used to treat atrial fibrillation can occasionally induce ventricular tachyarrhythmia, which is typically precipitated by a premature ectopic beat through a mechanism related, in part, to the shortening of the excitation wavelength (EW). The arrhythmia is likely to occur when a drug induces a reduction, rather than an increase, in the EW of ectopic beats. In this study, I examined whether the arrhythmic drug profile is shaped by the increased cardiac activation rate before ectopic excitation. Ventricular monophasic action potential durations, conduction times and EW values were assessed during programmed stimulations applied at long (S1</sub> -S1</sub> [basic drive cycle length] =&#xa0;550&#xa0;ms) and short (S1</sub> -S1</sub> &#xa0;=&#xa0;200&#xa0;ms) cycle lengths in perfused guinea-pig hearts. The premature activations were induced with extrastimulus application immediately upon termination of the refractory period. With dofetilide, a class&#xa0;III antiarrhythmic agent, a prolongation in action potential duration and the resulting increase in the EW obtained at S1</sub> -S1</sub> &#xa0;=&#xa0;550&#xa0;ms were significantly attenuated at S1</sub> -S1</sub> &#xa0;=&#xa0;200&#xa0;ms, in both the regular (S1</sub> ) and the premature (S2</sub> ) beats. With class&#xa0;I antiarrhythmic agents (quinidine, procainamide and flecainide), fast S1</sub> -S1</sub> pacing was found to attenuate the drug-induced increase in action potential duration, while amplifying drug-induced conduction slowing, in both S1</sub> and S2</sub> beats. As a result, although the EW was increased (quinidine and procainamide) or not changed (flecainide) at the long S1</sub> -S1</sub> intervals, it was invariably reduced by these agents at the short S1</sub> -S1</sub> intervals. These findings indicate that the increased heart rate before ectopic activation shapes the arrhythmic profiles by facilitating drug-induced EW reduction.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 The Authors. Experimental Physiology &#xa9; 2020 The Physiological Society.</CopyrightInformation>
16,885
Factors associated with renal impairment in Chinese patients with non-valvular AF and without an established renal disease: a cross-sectional study.
Renal impairment and atrial fibrillation (AF) often coexist. However, risk factors associated with renal impairment in AF patients have not been studied in a large population. Accordingly, this study investigated clinical factors associated with renal impairment in AF patients.</AbstractText>From January 2012 to December 2016, 2,298 inpatients with non-valvular AF (NVAF) mainly for catheter ablation were enrolled in this cross-sectional study. Data collection included past medical history, echocardiography measurements, current medicine use and biochemical results. The estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was calculated using the abbreviated Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation. Renal impairment was defined as a history of chronic kidney disease or an eGFR &#x2264;90&#xa0;ml/min/1.73 m2</sup>. Multivariate logistic regression was conducted to evaluate the relationship between the factors screened and eGFR.</AbstractText>The mean eGFR was 88.6&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;17.1&#xa0;ml/min/1.73 m2</sup>. The overall prevalence of renal impairment was 47.4%. Multivariate logistic regression showed that factors associated with renal impairment were age (OR: 1.12; 95% CI: 1.11-1.14), non-paroxysmal AF (OR: 1.28; 95% CI: 1.04-1.58), use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI)/angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) (OR: 1.58; 95% CI: 1.28-1.95), congestive heart failure (OR: 1.80; 95% CI: 1.05-3.07), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) &lt;50% (OR: 2.39; 95% CI: 1.34-4.28), and prior transient ischemic attack (TIA)/stroke/systematic embolism (SE) (OR: 2.69; 95% CI: 1.68-4.29).</AbstractText>Renal dysfunction is highly prevalent in Chinese NVAF patients and is significantly associated with older age, non-paroxysmal AF, use of ACEI/ARB, congestive heart failure, LVEF &lt;50% and prior TIA/stroke/SE. Further studies on the mechanisms by which these risk factors affect renal function in NVAF patients need to be conducted.</AbstractText>
16,886
Determinants of Sudden Cardiac Death in Adult Patients With Eisenmenger Syndrome.
Background Patients with Eisenmenger syndrome are known to have a high incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD), yet the underlying causes are not well understood. We sought to define the predictors of SCD in this population. Methods and Results A retrospective analysis of all patients with Eisenmenger syndrome from 2 large tertiary referral centers was performed. ECGs, prolonged ambulatory recordings, echocardiograms, and clinical histories were reviewed; and the cause of death was identified. A total of 246 patients (85 [34.6%] men) with a mean age of 37.3 (&#xb1;14.2) years were followed up for a median of 7&#xa0;years. Over the study period, 136 patients died, with 40 experiencing SCD and 74 experiencing cardiac death (sudden and nonsudden). Age, atrial fibrillation, prolonged QRS duration, complete heart block, right atrial enlargement, right bundle branch block, increased right atrial pressure, impaired biventricular function, and the presence of a pacemaker were associated with increased risk of SCD, whereas advanced pulmonary hypertension therapies were protective. Atrial fibrillation (11.45-fold increased risk; <i>P</i>&lt;0.001) and QRS duration &#x2265;120&#xa0;ms (2.06-fold increased risk; <i>P</i>=0.034) remained significant predictors of SCD in the multivariate analysis, whereas advanced pulmonary hypertension therapies were strongly protective against SCD (<i>P</i>&lt;0.001). Conclusions Atrial arrhythmias, impaired ventricular function, and conduction system disease were associated with increased risk of SCD in this cohort of patients with Eisenmenger syndrome, providing an opportunity for early risk stratification and potential intervention. Clinical heart failure symptoms (New York Heart Association class &#x2265;II) were predictive of increased mortality but not of SCD, suggesting a potential arrhythmic cause behind SCD.
16,887
Value of a Machine Learning Approach for Predicting Clinical Outcomes in Young Patients With Hypertension.
Risk stratification of young patients with hypertension remains challenging. Generally, machine learning (ML) is considered a promising alternative to traditional methods for clinical predictions because it is capable of processing large amounts of complex data. We, therefore, explored the feasibility of an ML approach for predicting outcomes in young patients with hypertension and compared its performance with that of approaches now commonly used in clinical practice. Baseline clinical data and a composite end point-comprising all-cause death, acute myocardial infarction, coronary artery revascularization, new-onset heart failure, new-onset atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter, sustained ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation, peripheral artery revascularization, new-onset stroke, end-stage renal disease-were evaluated in 508 young patients with hypertension (30.83&#xb1;6.17 years) who had been treated at a tertiary hospital. Construction of the ML model, which consisted of recursive feature elimination, extreme gradient boosting, and 10-fold cross-validation, was performed at the 33-month follow-up evaluation, and the model's performance was compared with that of the Cox regression and recalibrated Framingham Risk Score models. An 11-variable combination was considered most valuable for predicting outcomes using the ML approach. The C statistic for identifying patients with composite end points was 0.757 (95% CI, 0.660-0.854) for the ML model, whereas for Cox regression model and the recalibrated Framingham Risk Score model it was 0.723 (95% CI, 0.636-0.810) and 0.529 (95% CI, 0.403-0.655). The ML approach was comparable with Cox regression for determining the clinical prognosis of young patients with hypertension and was better than that of the recalibrated Framingham Risk Score model.
16,888
Characteristics of current heart failure patients admitted to internal medicine vs. cardiology hospital units: the VASCO study.
The majority of patients hospitalized for heart failure (HF) are admitted to internal medicine (IM) rather than to cardiology (CA) units, but to date few studies have analyzed the characteristics of these two populations. In this snapshot survey, we compared consecutive patients admitted for HF in six IM units vs. one non-intensive CA unit. During the 6-month survey period, 467 patients were enrolled (127 in CA, 27.2% vs. 340 in IM, 72.8%). IM patients were almost 10&#xa0;years older (CA 75&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;10, IM 82&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;8&#xa0;years; p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), more frequently female (CA 39%, IM 55%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.002) and living at home alone (CA 12%, IM 21%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.017). The leading cause of hospitalization in both groups was acute worsening of HF (CA 42%, IM 53%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.031), followed by atrial fibrillation (CA 29%, IM 12%; p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) and infections (CA 24%, IM 27%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.563). Ischemic (CA 43%, IM 30%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.008) and dilated cardiomyopathy patients (CA 21%, IM 12%; p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) were primarily admitted to CA unit, whereas those with hypertensive heart disease to IM (CA 3%, IM 39%; p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001). Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was available in 96% of CA patients, but only in 60% of IM patients (p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.001). Among patients with LVEF measured, those with LVEF&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;40% were predominantly admitted to CA (CA 60%, IM 14%; p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001), whereas those with LVEF&#x2009;&#x2265;&#x2009;50% were admitted to IM (CA 21%, IM 33%; p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.019); 26% of IM patients were discharged without a known LVEF. Medical treatments also significantly differed, according to patients' clinical and instrumental characteristics in each unit. This study demonstrates important differences between HF patients hospitalized in CA vs. IM, and the need for a greater interaction between these two medical specialties for a better care of HF patients.
16,889
Permanent Pacemaker Lead Insertion Connected to an External Pacemaker Generator for Temporary Pacing After Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation.
Outcomes after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) have been demonstrated to be at least equivalent in the short term compared to surgical valve implantation (SAVI). However, Conduction abnormalities are more common after TAVI than SAVI and the need for permanent pacemaker implantation is more common after TAVI with the currently commercially available self-expanding valves than after SAVI. Temporary pacemaker implantation may be associated with inability to ambulate, lead migration or perforation and infection. Depending on the monitoring system, some arrhythmias may not be detected. We examined the feasibility and safety of permanent pacemaker lead implantation connected to an external generator in patients undergoing TAVI at our institution.</AbstractText>This is a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients (between April 1st 2014 and April 30th 2016) at a single center without permanent pacemaker at the time of TAVI who underwent implantation of a permanent pacemaker lead after TAVI connected to an external generator. Focus was the examination of feasibility and safety of our aforementioned approach. In addition, data analysis was performed separating patients into two groups depending on whether (group 1) or not (group 2) permanent pacemaker implantation was ultimately needed.</AbstractText>Per our institutional protocol, all consecutive 114 patients underwent insertion of a permanent pacemaker lead after TAVI connected to an external generator. There was one pericardial effusion on postoperative day one that may have been related to the left ventricular wire for TAVI valve delivery. However, perforation due to the pacemaker lead cannot be excluded. Specifically, no access site complications, lead dislodgments or infections occurred. All patients were able to ambulate after the procedure without delay. The permanent pacemaker lead remained in place on average for 4.3&#xa0;days in group 1 (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;10) and 4.4&#xa0;days in group 2 (n&#xa0;=&#xa0;104) (variance of 3.8 and 3.4&#xa0;days respectively, [minimum/maximum 0/11&#xa0;days and 1 and 12&#xa0;days]). Of the ten patients (9%) who required permanent pacemaker implantation, 8 had a complete atrioventricular block and two had tachy-brady arrhythmias in the context of atrial fibrillation. None of the baseline characteristics including baseline conduction abnormalities were predictors for PPI.</AbstractText>Implantation of a permanent pacemaker lead connected to an external generator is feasible and safe and could be a better option than implantation of a temporary lead connected to an external generator. It may allow earlier ambulation and facilitate monitoring.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,890
Ventricular fibrillation waveform characteristics in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and cardiovascular medication use.
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) waveform analyses are considered a reliable proxy for OHCA characteristics in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), but patient characteristics such as cardiovascular medication use might also be associated with changes in VF waveform measures.</AbstractText>To assess associations between cardiovascular medication use and amplitude spectrum area (AMSA) of VF, while correcting for the presence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), CVD risk factors, and OHCA characteristics.</AbstractText>We included 990 VF patients from an OHCA registry in the Netherlands, with available information on medical history and cardiovascular medication use. Associations between cardiovascular medication use and AMSA were tested in a multivariate linear regression model, adjusting for CVD, CVD risk factors, and OHCA characteristics. Model performance was shown using R-square and R-change. We also calculated whether medication use was associated with faster dissolution of AMSA to lower values with increasing time delay.</AbstractText>In the multivariate analysis, when corrected for CVD, CVD risk factors and OHCA characteristics, only potassium-sparing agents were associated with a lower AMSA when compared to patients using other cardiovascular medications (OR 0.46 [95% CI 0.10-0.81]; P&#x202f;&lt;&#x202f;0.012). The decrease in AMSA with increasing EMS-call-to-ECG delay was the same for patients with and without cardiovascular medication use (all P&#x202f;&gt;&#x202f;0.05). Only a small part of the variance in AMSA could be explained by medication use (R-square 0.003- 0.026). Adding OHCA characteristics to the model resulted in the largest R square change (0.09-0.15).</AbstractText>It is unlikely that there is a strong and clinically relevant independent pharmacologic effect of cardiovascular medication use on AMSA. In OHCA, AMSA might be used as patient management tool without considering cardiovascular medication use.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,891
Refractoriness to subcutaneous implantable cardioverter defibrillator after frequent therapies for ventricular fibrillation storms in a Brugada syndrome case.
The subcutaneous implantable cardioverter defibrillator (S-ICD) is an alternative to the transvenous implantable cardioverter defibrillator for the prevention of sudden cardiac death. Here, we report a rare case of refractoriness to an S-ICD after frequent therapies for ventricular fibrillation (VF) storms.</AbstractText>A 24-year-old man underwent a bout of syncope with vomiting and incontinence at home. He was brought to the emergency room and was witnessed to spontaneously go into VF successfully converted by external defibrillation. Previously, he was diagnosed with a type I Brugada electrocardiogram pattern by a pilsicainide administration test in another hospital. Although he had a family history of sudden cardiac death in 3 relatives, including his brother, he was followed closely without any therapies because he had never had an episode of syncope. He was implanted with an S-ICD without any trouble. Seven months later, frequent S-ICD shocks for VF storms occurred. His VF was controlled by using intravenous amiodarone, which was converted to an oral preparation. However, his VF recurred after another 2&#x2009;months. The analysis of his S-ICD data revealed that 4 consecutive shock deliveries could not terminate his VF and the final shock delivered could fortunately terminate it because of a high defibrillation threshold test (DFT) due to an increasing shock impedance (64 to 90&#x2009;&#x3a9;). First, we performed an epicardial Brugada syndrome ablation and subsequently replaced and repositioned the S-ICD lead from a left to a right parasternal site. After the re-implantation of the S-ICD, the DFT test improved to within normal range. According to the pathological analysis, infiltration of inflammatory cells and extensive fibrosis were confirmed in the subcutaneous tissue around the shock lead and S-ICD body.</AbstractText>Frequent S-ICD shocks for VF storms might cause various pathological changes around the device and lead to a high DFT.</AbstractText>
16,892
Thyroid carcinoma with atypical metastasis to the pituitary gland and unexpected postmortal diagnosis.
Papillary thyroid gland carcinoma is the most common type of malignancy of the endocrine system. Metastases to the pituitary gland have been described as a complication of papillary thyroid cancer in few reported cases since 1965. We report the case of a 68-year-old female patient with a well-differentiated form of thyroid gland cancer. Despite it being the most common malignant cancer of the endocrine system, with its papillary form being one of the two most frequently diagnosed thyroid cancers, the case we present is extremely rare. Sudden cardiac arrest during ventricular fibrillation occurred during hospitalization. Autopsy of the patient revealed papillary carcinoma of the thyroid, follicular variant, with metastasis to the sella turcica, and concomitant sarcoidosis of heart, lung, and mediastinal and hilar lymph nodes. Not only does atypical metastasis make our patient's case most remarkable, but also the postmortem diagnosis of sarcoidosis makes her case particularly unusual.</AbstractText>The goal of presenting this case is to raise awareness of the clinical heterogeneity of papillary cancer and promote early diagnosis of unexpected metastasis and coexisting diseases to improve clinical outcomes. Clinicians must be skeptical. They should not fall into the trap of diagnostic momentum or accept diagnostic labels at face value. Regardless of the potential mechanisms, clinicians should be aware of the possibility of the coexistence of thyroid cancer and sarcoidosis as a differential diagnosis of lymphadenopathy. This case highlights the importance of the diagnostic and therapeutic planning process and raises awareness of the fact that one uncommon disease could be masked by another extremely rare disorder.</AbstractText>
16,893
Anisotropic shortening in the wavelength of electrical waves promotes onset of electrical turbulence in cardiac tissue: An in silico study.
Several pathological conditions introduce spatial variations in the electrical properties of cardiac tissue. These variations occur as localized or distributed gradients in ion-channel functionality over extended tissue media. Electrical waves, propagating through such affected tissue, demonstrate distortions, depending on the nature of the ionic gradient in the diseased substrate. If the degree of distortion is large, reentrant activity may develop, in the form of rotating spiral (2d) and scroll (3d) waves of electrical activity. These reentrant waves are associated with the occurrence of lethal cardiac rhythm disorders, known as arrhythmias, such as ventricular tachycardia (VT) and ventricular fibrillation (VF), which are believed to be common precursors of sudden cardiac arrest. By using state-of-the-art mathematical models for generic, and ionically-realistic (human) cardiac tissue, we study the detrimental effects of these ionic gradients on electrical wave propagation. We propose a possible mechanism for the development of instabilities in reentrant wave patterns, in the presence of ionic gradients in cardiac tissue, which may explain how one type of arrhythmia (VT) can degenerate into another (VF). Our proposed mechanism entails anisotropic reduction in the wavelength of the excitation waves because of anisotropic variation in its electrical properties, in particular the action potential duration (APD). We find that the variation in the APD, which we induce by varying ion-channel conductances, imposes a spatial variation in the spiral- or scroll-wave frequency &#x3c9;. Such gradients in &#x3c9; induce anisotropic shortening of wavelength of the spiral or scroll arms and eventually leads to instabilitites.
16,894
Indication and prognostic significance of programmed ventricular stimulation in asymptomatic patients with Brugada syndrome.
To establish the indication for programmed ventricular stimulation (PVS) for asymptomatic patients with Brugada syndrome (BrS), we evaluated the prognostic significance of PVS based on abnormal electrocardiogram (ECG) markers.</AbstractText>One hundred and twenty-five asymptomatic patients with BrS were included. We performed PVS at two sites of the right ventricle with up to three extrastimuli [two pacing cycle lengths and minimum coupling interval (MCI) of 180 ms]. We followed the patients for 133 months and evaluated ventricular fibrillation (VF) events. Fragmented QRS (fQRS) and Tpeak-Tend (Tpe) interval were evaluated as ECG markers for identifying high-risk patients. Fragmented QRS and long Tpe interval (&#x2265;100 ms) were observed in 66 and 37 patients, respectively. Ventricular fibrillation was induced by PVS in 60 patients. During follow-up, 10 patients experienced VF events. Fragmented QRS, long Tpe interval, and PVS-induced VF with an MCI of 180 ms or up to two extrastimuli were associated with future VF events (fQRS: P = 0.015, Tpe &#x2265; 100 ms: P = 0.038, VF induction: P &lt; 0.001). However, PVS-induced VF with an MCI of 200 ms was less specific (P = 0.049). The frequencies of ventricular tachyarrhythmia events during follow-up were 0%/year with no ECG markers and 0.1%/year with no VF induction. The existence of two ECG factors with induced VF was strongly associated with future VF events (event rate: 4.4%/year, P &lt; 0.001), and the existence of one ECG factor with induced VF was also associated (event rate: 1.3%/year, P = 0.011).</AbstractText>We propose PVS with a strict protocol for asymptomatic patients with fQRS and/or long Tpe interval to identify high-risk patients.</AbstractText>Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. &#xa9; The Author(s) 2020. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.</CopyrightInformation>
16,895
Retrospective observational cohort study of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes in Tasmania 2010-2014.
This study aims to present overall survival rates to hospital discharge for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) in Tasmania and to identify predictors of survival.</AbstractText>A retrospective observational cohort study was undertaken from 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2014. A probabilistically linked data set was created from paramedic electronic medical records and hospital patient records. Logistic regression was used to assess factors associated with survival of OHCA.</AbstractText>During the study, 2949 incidents of OHCA were reviewed and 1146 had emergency management provided, with an overall survival rate to hospital discharge of 135 (12%). A number of independent factors are associated with improved outcomes including if the initial presenting cardiac rhythm was either ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 8.75, 95% confidence interval [CI] 5.15-14.89) (P &lt;&#x2009;0.0001) relative to those who were found in a non-shockable rhythm. Another factor was age group (overall P &lt;&#x2009;0.001). Those aged 85+ years had a reduced overall survival rate (2.9%), which was lower than those &lt;16&#x2009;years of age (OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.07-1.94; adjusted OR 0.38, CI 0.03-1.00) (P &lt;&#x2009;0.001). The odds of surviving OHCA decreased by 9% for every minute defibrillation of a shockable rhythm was delayed were witnessed by a bystander (OR 0.90, 95% CI 0.85-0.95).</AbstractText>Time to defibrillation for witnessed arrests, other than paramedic witnessed arrest was associated with better overall survival rates than unwitnessed OHCA. Further factors such as the event being of cardiac aetiology, bystander cardio-pulmonary resuscitation performed, initial presenting cardiac rhythm of ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia and decreasing age were all associated with increased probability of survival.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.</CopyrightInformation>
16,896
Prognostic value of cardiovascular magnetic resonance in patients with biopsy-proven systemic sarcoidosis.
As prognosis in sarcoidosis is determined by cardiac involvement, the objective was to study the added value of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in risk stratification.</AbstractText>In 114 patients (48&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;12&#xa0;years/52% male) with biopsy-proven sarcoidosis, we studied the value of clinical and CMR-derived parameters to predict future events, using sustained ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, aborted cardiac death, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) placement with appropriate shocks, hospitalization for heart failure, and death as composite endpoint. Median follow-up after CMR was 3.1&#xa0;years (1.1-5.7&#xa0;years).</AbstractText>The ejection fraction (EF) was 58.2&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;9.1% and 54.7&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;10.8% for left ventricle (LV) and right ventricle (RV), respectively. LV late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) was present in 40 patients (35%) involving 5.1% of the LV mass (IQR, 3.0-12.0%), with concomitant RV involvement in 12 patients (11%). T2-weighting imaging and/or T2 mapping showed active disease in 14 patients. The composite endpoint was reached in 34 patients, with 7 deaths in the LGE-positive group (17.5%), versus two deaths in the LGE-negative group (2.7%) (p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.015). At univariate analysis, RVEF (p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.009), pulmonary arterial pressure (p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.002), and presence of LGE (p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) and LGE (% of LV) (p&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.001) were significant. At multivariate analysis, only presence of LGE and LGE (% of LV) was significant (both p&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.03). At Kaplan-Meier, presence of LGE and an LGE of 3% predicted event-free survival and patient survival. We found no difference in active versus inactive disease with regard to patient survival.</AbstractText>Myocardial enhancement at LGE-CMR adds independent prognostic value in risk stratification sarcoidosis patients. In contrast, clinical as well as functional cardiac parameters lack discriminative power.</AbstractText>&#x2022; Sarcoidosis often affects the heart. &#x2022; Comprehensive CMR, including T2 imaging and LGE enhancement CMR, allows to depict both active and inactive myocardial damage. &#x2022; Patient prognosis in sarcoidosis is determined by the presence and severity of myocardial involvement at LGE CMR.</AbstractText>
16,897
Future research prioritization in cardiac resynchronization therapy.
Although cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is effective for some patients with heart failure and a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (HFrEF), evidence gaps remain for key clinical and policy areas. The objective of the study was to review the data on the effects of CRT for patients with HFrEF receiving pharmacological therapy alone or pharmacological therapy and an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) and then, informed by a diverse group of stakeholders, to identify evidence gaps, prioritize them, and develop a research plan.</AbstractText>Relevant studies were identified using PubMed and EMBASE and ongoing trials using clinicaltrials.gov. Forced-ranking prioritization method was applied by stakeholders to reach a consensus on the most important questions. Twenty-six stakeholders contributed to the expanded list of evidence gaps, including key investigators from existing randomized controlled trials and others representing different perspectives, including patients, the public, device manufacturers, and policymakers.</AbstractText>Of the 18 top-tier evidence gaps, 8 were related to specific populations or subgroups of interest. Seven were related to the comparative effectiveness and safety of CRT interventions or comparators, and 3 were related to the association of CRT treatment with specific outcomes. The association of comorbidities with CRT effectiveness ranked highest, followed by questions about the effectiveness of CRT among patients with atrial fibrillation and the relationship between gender, QRS morphology and duration, and outcomes for patients either with CRT plus ICD or with ICD.</AbstractText>Evidence gaps presented in this article highlight numerous, important clinical and policy questions for which there is inconclusive evidence on the role of CRT and provide a framework for future collaborative research.</AbstractText>Copyright &#xa9; 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.</CopyrightInformation>
16,898
Atrial fibrillation burden and subsequent heart failure events in patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy devices.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) and heart failure (HF) often coexist but little is known on how AF burden associates with subsequent episodes of HF.</AbstractText>The aim of this study was to quantitatively assess the short- and long-term association of AF burden with subsequent episodes of HF events in patients with reduced ejection fraction.</AbstractText>Patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) devices with at least 90 days of device data were included in the study. Time-dependent Cox regression with a 7-day window was used to evaluate the association of short- and long-term AF burden with subsequent HF events. Each patient with HF was matched to two control patients without an HF event based on age, gender, year of implant and CRT defibrillation capability.</AbstractText>In our cohort with 2:1 matching (N&#x2009;=&#x2009;549), 183 patients developed HF events and 275 (50.1%) had AF over an average follow-up of 24&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;11 months. A 1-hour increase in short-term AF burden was associated with a 3% increased risk of HF events (HR, 1.034; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.012-1.056; P&#x2009;=&#x2009;.01; HR for 24-hour&#x2009;=&#x2009;2.23). In contrast, the association between long-term AF burden and subsequent HF events was not statistically significant (HR, 1.009; 95% CI, 0.992-1.026; P&#x2009;=&#x2009;.373).</AbstractText>A 24-hour increase in AF burden is associated with a more than two-fold increased risk of HF events over the subsequent week while the long-term AF burden is not significantly associated with HF events.</AbstractText>&#xa9; 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
16,899
Calcium Handling Defects and Cardiac Arrhythmia Syndromes.
Calcium ions (Ca<sup>2+</sup>) play a major role in the cardiac excitation-contraction coupling. Intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> concentration increases during systole and falls in diastole thereby determining cardiac contraction and relaxation. Normal cardiac function also requires perfect organization of the ion currents at the cellular level to drive action potentials and to maintain action potential propagation and electrical homogeneity at the tissue level. Any imbalance in Ca<sup>2+</sup> homeostasis of a cardiac myocyte can lead to electrical disturbances. This review aims to discuss cardiac physiology and pathophysiology from the elementary membrane processes that can cause the electrical instability of the ventricular myocytes through intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> handling maladies to inherited and acquired arrhythmias. Finally, the paper will discuss the current therapeutic approaches targeting cardiac arrhythmias.