7 research outputs found
Acute vasodilator response in pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension current: Clinical practice from the TOPP registry
none34siBACKGROUND In pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), acute vasodilator response testing (AVT) is considered important to identify adult patients with favorable prognosis using calcium-channel blocker (CCB) therapy. However, in pediatric PAH, criteria used to identify acute responders and CCB use are insufficiently studied.
OBJECTIVES This study sought to describe current clinical practice of AVT and subsequent treatment decisions in pediatric PAH.
METHODS From January 2008 to May 2013, 529 consecutive children with confirmed pulmonary hypertension were enrolled in an international registry. We analyzed those children with evaluable AVT.
RESULTS Of 382 children with evaluable AVT, 212 had idiopathic/familial PAH (IPAH/FPAH) and 105 had PAH associated with congenital heart disease (PAH-CHD). In 70% of the patients, AVT was performed using inhaled nitric oxide; other agents were used in the remaining patients. In IPAH/FPAH patients, 78 (37%) patients were acute responders according to their physician, 62 (30%) according to REVEAL (Registry-to-Evaluate-Early-And-Long-term PAH disease management)-pediatric criteria, and 32 (15%) according to Sitbon criteria. For PAH-CHD patients, the numbers of AVT responders were 38 (36%), 14 (13%), and 7 (7%) respectively. Correlation between AVT responder status as judged by the treating physician and by published response criteria was poor. Moreover, of the IPAH/FPAH patients judged by the treating physician as acute responders, only 23% were treated with CCB without additional PAH-targeted therapy. The Sitbon criteria selected patients with better prognosis who had excellent outcome when treated with CCB.
CONCLUSIONS The current practice of identifying responders to AVT and subsequent treatment with CCB therapy demonstrated large discrepancies with current international guidelines. Also, in pediatric IPAH, the Sitbon criteria are the criteria of choice to identify patients with excellent survival when treated with CCB therapynoneDouwes, Johannes M.; Humpl, Tilman; Bonnet, Damien; Beghetti, Maurice; Ivy, D. Dunbar; Berger, Rolf M.F; Weintraub, R.G.; Geiger, R.; Marx, M.; Jing, Z.C.; Sondergaard, L.; Apitz, C.; Hager, A.; Szatmari, A.; Milanesi, O.; Saji, T.; Pulido, T.; Moll, J.; Michalak, K.W.; Kawalec, W.; Zuk, M.; Fasnacht Boillat, M.; Olguntürk, R.; Kula, S.; Alehan, D.; Schulze-Neick, I.; Atz, A.M.; Mallory, G.B.; Austin, E.D.; Moore, D.J.; Feinstein, J.A.; Day, R.W.; Yung, D.; Berger, J.T.Douwes, Johannes M.; Humpl, Tilman; Bonnet, Damien; Beghetti, Maurice; Ivy, D. Dunbar; Berger, Rolf M. F; Weintraub, R. G.; Geiger, R.; Marx, M.; Jing, Z. C.; Sondergaard, L.; Apitz, C.; Hager, A.; Szatmari, A.; Milanesi, Ornella; Saji, T.; Pulido, T.; Moll, J.; Michalak, K. W.; Kawalec, W.; Zuk, M.; Fasnacht Boillat, M.; Olguntürk, R.; Kula, S.; Alehan, D.; Schulze Neick, I.; Atz, A. M.; Mallory, G. B.; Austin, E. D.; Moore, D. J.; Feinstein, J. A.; Day, R. W.; Yung, D.; Berger, J. T
The effect of highly ionising particles on the CMS silicon strip tracker
Inelastic nuclear collisions of hadrons incident on silicon sensors can generate secondary highly ionising particles (HIPs) and deposit as much energy within the sensor bulk as several hundred minimum ionising particles. The large signals generated by these \u27HIP events\u27 can momentarily saturate the APV25 front-end readout chip for the silicon strip tracker (SST) sub-detector of the compact muon solenoid (CMS) experiment, resulting in deadtime in the detector readout system. This paper presents studies of this phenomenon through simulation, laboratory measurements and dedicated beam tests. A proposed change to a front-end component to reduce the APV25 sensitivity to HIP events is also examined. The results are used to infer the expected effect on the performance of the CMS SST at the future large hadron collider. The induced inefficiencies are at the percent level and will have a negligible effect on the physics performance of the SST. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
CMS physics technical design report: Addendum on high density QCD with heavy ions
This report presents the capabilities of the CMS experiment to explore the rich heavy-ion physics programme offered by the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The collisions of lead nuclei at energies ,will probe quark and gluon matter at unprecedented values of energy density. The prime goal of this research is to study the fundamental theory of the strong interaction - Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) - in extreme conditions of temperature, density and parton momentum fraction (low-x). This report covers in detail the potential of CMS to carry out a series of representative Pb-Pb measurements. These include "bulk" observables, (charged hadron multiplicity, low pT inclusive hadron identified spectra and elliptic flow) which provide information on the collective properties of the system, as well as perturbative probes such as quarkonia, heavy-quarks, jets and high pT hadrons which yield "tomographic" information of the hottest and densest phases of the reaction.0info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe