98 research outputs found

    Reduction of blood culture contamination rate by an educational intervention

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    Background: Although mechanical dyssynchrony parameters derived by speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) may predict response to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), comparability of parameters derived with different STE vendors is unknown. Methods: In the MARC study, echocardiographic images of heart failure patients obtained before CRT implantation were prospectively analysed with vendor specific STE software (GE EchoPac and Philips QLAB) and vendor-independent software (TomTec 2DCPA). Response was defined as change in left ventricular (LV) end-systolic volume between examination before and six-months after CRT implantation. Basic longitudinal strain and mechanical dyssynchrony parameters (septal to lateral wall delay (SL-delay), septal systolic rebound stretch (SRSsept), and systolic stretch index (SSI)) were obtained from either separate septal and lateral walls, or total LV apical four chamber. Septal strain patterns were categorized in three types. The coefficient of variation and intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) were analysed. Dyssynchrony parameters were associated with CRT response using univariate regression analysis and C-statistics. Results: Two-hundred eleven patients were analysed. GE-cohort (n = 123): age 68 years (interquartile range (IQR): 61-73), 67% male, QRS-duration 177ms (IQR: 160-192), LV ejection fraction: 26 +/- 7%. Philips-cohort (n = 88): age 67 years (IQR: 59-74), 60% male, QRS-duration: 179 ms (IQR: 166-193), LV ejection fraction: 27 +/- 8. LV derived peak strain was comparable in the GE-(GE: -7.3 +/- 3.1%, TomTec: -6.4 +/- 2.8%, ICC: 0.723) and Philips-cohort (Philips: -7.7 +/- 2.7%, TomTec: -7.7 +/- 3.3%, ICC: 0.749). SL-delay showed low ICC values (GE vs. TomTec: 0.078 and Philips vs. TomTec: 0.025). ICC's of SRSsept and SSI were higher but only weak (GE vs. TomTec: SRSsept: 0.470, SSI: 0.467) (Philips vs. QLAB: SRSsept: 0.419, SSI: 0.421). Comparability of septal strain patterns was low (Cohen's kappa, GE vs. TomTec: 0.221 and Philips vs. TomTec: 0.279). Septal strain patterns, SRSsept and SSI were associated with changes in LV end-systolic volume for all vendors. SRSsept and SSI had relative varying C-statistic values (range: 0.530-0.705) and different cut-off values between vendors. Conclusions: Although global longitudinal strain analysis showed fair comparability, assessment of dyssynchrony parameters was vendor specific and not applicable outside the context of the implemented platform. While the standardization taskforce took an important step for global peak strain, further standardization of STE is still warranted

    Prognostic implications of invasive hemodynamics during cardiac resynchronization therapy: Stroke work outperforms dP/dt max.

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    Background: Invasive measurements of left ventricular (LV) hemodynamic performance can evaluate acute response to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Objective: The study sought to determine which metric, maximum rate of LV pressure rise (LV dP/dtmax) or LV stroke work (LVSW), is more strongly associated with long-term prognosis. Methods: CRT patients were prospectively included from 3 academic centers. Invasive pressure-volume loop measurements during implantation were performed, and LV dP/dtmax and LVSW were determined at baseline and during biventricular pacing (BVP) as well as their relative increase (%Δ). Hazard ratios (HRs) for the primary outcome of 8-year all-cause mortality were derived using Cox proportional hazards. The secondary endpoint was echocardiographic response, defined as 6-month LV end-systolic volume reduction ≥15%. Results: Paired data from 82 patients were analyzed (67% male; age 66 ± 9 years; QRS duration 158 ± 22 ms, median survival time 72 months). Survival was better when LVSW during BVP was ≥4400 mL∙mm Hg (HR 0.21, 95% CI 0.08–0.58, P .05), significant associations with echocardiographic response were found for stroke work during BVP (area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve 0.745, P = .001) and ΔLVSW% (area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve 0.803, P < .001). Conclusion: Stroke work, but not LV dP/dtmax, is consistently associated with long-term prognosis and response after CRT. Our results therefore favor the use of stroke work as the hemodynamic parameter to predict long-term outcome after CRT

    Efficiency is key

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