143 research outputs found

    An efficient modeling framework for wall heat flux prediction in rocket combustion chambers using non adiabatic flamelets and wall-functions

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    In this work an efficient numerical framework for the prediction of wall heat loads in Liquid Rocket Engine combustion chambers is presented. The proposed framework is based on a new version of the non-adiabatic flamelet model and on wall functions for turbulent boundary layer modeling. Different wall function models are applied to 2D and 3D wall heat flux simulations of an experimental single-element gaseous oxygen-gaseous methane combustor in an Unsteady Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes context. A systematic analysis and a comprehensive comparison of the selected wall models is carried out. The role of the constant or variable properties assumption on the near-wall turbulent quantities affecting the wall heat flux is assessed and the resulting friction velocity scaling investigated. When the skin friction velocity based on the local turbulent kinetic energy is defined by considering constant properties across the boundary layer, the equilibrium boundary layer assumption is not fulfilled and a significant overestimation of the wall heat flux is observed. Results obtained with the corrected near-wall turbulence modeling, on the other hand, showed a substantial improvement in terms of wall heat flux when compared with both experimental data and higher fidelity simulations results

    High-risk features and predictors of unexplained syncope in the young SCD-SOS cohort

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    Introduction: The Sudden Cardiac Death-Screening of Risk FactOrS survey included a 12-lead ECG plus a digital-based questionnaire and aimed to screen for warning signs of diseases that may course with sudden cardiac death in children and young adults. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of unexplained syncope (US) and characterize its high-risk features and predictors in this cohort. // Methods &Results: We determined the most probable etiology of transient loss of consciousness (TLOC) episodes based on clinical criteria. US was an exclusion diagnosis and we analyzed its potential clinical and ECG predictors. Among 11,878 individuals, with a mean age of 21±6 (range 6-40) years-old, the cumulative incidence of TLOC was 26.5%, 76.2% corresponding to females. Reflex syncope was present in 66.4%, orthostatic hypotension in 8.2% and 14.8% of the individuals had US. Unexplained syncope was independently associated with age <18years-old (OR 1.695; 95%CI 1.26-2.29,p=0.001), male gender (OR 1.642; 95%CI 1.22-2.22,p=0.001), participation in competitive sports (OR 1.644;95%CI 1.01-2.66,p=0.043), syncope during exertion and/or palpitations preceding syncope (OR 2.556; 95%CI 1.92-3.40,p<0.001), syncope after exertion (OR 2.662; 95%CI 1.73-4.10,p<0.001), fever context (OR 9.606; 95%CI 4.13-22.34,p<0.001), isolated previous syncopal episode (OR 2.780; 95%CI 0.2.06-3.75,p<0.001) and history of palpitations requiring medical care (OR 1.945; 95%CI 1.14-3.31,p=0.014). We found no ECG predictors of US in this population. // Conclusions: The cumulative incidence of TLOC in children and young adults is high and remains unexplained in an important proportion of individuals. We identified eight clinical characteristics that may be useful for the risk stratification of individuals evaluated in a non-acute setting

    A Normal Electrocardiogram Does Not Exclude Infra-Hisian Conduction Disease in Patients With Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1

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    Objectives: This study aimed to identify electrocardiographic (ECG) predictors of a prolonged His-ventricular (HV) interval in patients with type 1 myotonic dystrophy (DM1).\ud Background: Patients with DM1 have an increased risk of sudden cardiac death. The presence of His-Purkinje system disease/prolonged HV interval (≥70 ms) is associated with a higher risk of potentially life-threatening bradyarrhythmic events. Methods: Electrophysiology studies (EPSs) were performed in all DM1 patients referred to 2 tertiary centers for routine cardiac assessment. In a subgroup of patients, the EPS was repeated at varying intervals. Results: A total of 154 patients (mean age: 43.7 ± 13.3; 58.1% male) underwent 202 diagnostic EPSs. HV ≥70 ms was found on 58 EPSs (28.7%); 9 of 59 patients (15.2%) with PR <200 ms and QRS interval <110 ms on baseline ECG had an HV ≥70 ms on EPS. Among those with PR ≥200 ms and/or QRS interval ≥100 ms, only 33.9% had an HV ≥70 ms on EPS. There were 38 patients who underwent repeated EPS, in which 28.8% demonstrated a prolongation of the HV interval overall compared with baseline. QRS duration demonstrated the most powerful discriminative capacity for HV ≥70 ms (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.76; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.68 to 0.84; p < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, QRS interval ≥112 ms had the highest predictive value for HV ≥70 ms (odds ratio: 7.94; 95% CI: 3.85 to 16.37. Conclusions: ECG parameters have a poor predictive value for infra-Hisian conduction block in DM1 patients. QRS and PR intervals are normal in up to 15.2% of DM1 patients with prolonged HV, and 66.1% of those with PR ≥200 ms and/or QRS ≥100 ms do not have advanced His-Purkinje conduction system disease on EPS. Electrophysiology testing should be a mandatory part of screening for all patients to guide prophylactic pacemaker implantation

    Interrupted versus uninterrupted NOAC peri-implantation of cardiac device: A single-centre randomised prospective pilot trial

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    BACKGROUND: Many patients requiring cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED) implantation are on long-term oral anticoagulant therapy. While continuation of warfarin has been shown to be safe and reduce bleeding complications compared to interruption of warfarin therapy and heparin bridging, it is not known which novel oral anticoagulants (NOAC) regimen (interrupted vs. uninterrupted) is better in this setting. METHODS: One-hundred and one patients were randomized to receive CIED implantation with either interrupted or uninterrupted/continuous NOAC therapy before surgery. No heparin was used in either treatment arm. The primary end-point was the presence of a clinically significant pocket haematoma after CIED implantation. The secondary end-point was a composite of other major bleeding events, device-related infection, thrombotic events and device-related admission length post device implantation. RESULTS: Both treatment groups were equally balanced for baseline variables and concomitant medications. One clinically significant pocket haematoma occurred in the uninterrupted NOAC group and none in the interrupted group (p = 0.320). There was no difference in other bleeding complications. No thrombotic events were observed in either of the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the paucity of bleeding events, data from this pilot study suggest that uninterrupted NOAC therapy for CIED implantation appears to be as safe as NOAC interruption and does not increase bleeding complications

    Same-day discharge following catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: A safe and cost-effective approach

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    Introduction: The frequency of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) has increased dramatically, stretching resources. Discharge on the same day as treatment may increase the efficiency and throughput. There are limited data regarding the safety of this strategy. / Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients undergoing AF ablation in a tertiary center and in a district general hospital, and identified those discharged on the same day of treatment. The safety endpoint was any complication and/or presentation to hospital in the 48‐h and at 30 days postdischarge. We performed an economic analysis to calculate potential cost saving. / Results: Among a total population of 2628 patients, we identified 727 subjects (61.1 ± 12.5 years, 69.6% male) undergoing day‐case AF ablation. Cryoballoon technique was used in 79.2% of the day‐cases, and 91.6% of the procedures were performed under conscious sedation. 1.8% (13) of the participants met the safety composite endpoint at 48‐h, however only 0.7% (5) required at least 1 day of hospitalization. Bleeding or hematoma at the femoral access site (0.5%) and pericarditic chest pain (0.5%) were the main reasons for readmission. None experienced cardiac tamponade or other life‐threatening complications in the 48‐h postdischarge. Overall rate of complication and/or presentation to hospital at 30 days was 3.7%. Our day‐case policy resulted in an annual cost‐saving of approximately of £83 927 for our hospital. / Conclusion: In this large multicentre cohort, same‐day discharge in selected patients following AF ablation appears to be safe and cost‐effective, with a very low rate of early readmission or post‐discharge complication

    Initial experience of the High-Density Grid catheter in patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation

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    Purpose: A significant proportion of patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) experience arrhythmia recurrence. This is mostly due to pulmonary vein reconnection (PVR). Whether mapping using High-Density Wave (HDW) technology is superior to standard bipolar (SB) configuration at detecting PVR is unknown. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of HDW technology compared to SB mapping in identifying PVR. / Methods: High-Density (HD) multipolar Grid catheters were used to create left atrial geometries and voltage maps in 36 patients undergoing catheter ablation for AF (either due to recurrence of an atrial arrhythmia from previous AF ablation or de novo AF ablation). Nineteen SB maps were also created and compared. Ablation was performed until pulmonary vein isolation was achieved. / Results: Median time of mapping with HDW was 22.3 [IQR: 8.2] min. The number of points collected with HDW (13299.6±1362.8 vs 6952.8±841.9, p<0.001) and used (2337.3±158.0 vs 1727.5±163.8, p<0.001) was significantly higher compared to SB. Moreover, HDW was able to identify more sleeves (16 for right and 8 for left veins), where these were confirmed electrically silent by SB, with significantly increased PVR sleeve size as identified by HDW (p<0.001 for both right and left veins). Importantly, with the use of HDW, the ablation strategy changed in 23 patients (64% of targeted veins) with a significantly increased number of lesions required as compared to SB for right (p=0.005) and left veins (p=0.003). / Conclusion: HDW technology is superior to SB in detecting pulmonary vein reconnections. This could potentially result into a significant change in ablation strategy and possibly to increased success rate following pulmonary vein isolation

    Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: a European observational multicentre study

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    AIMS: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is common in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Data on the efficacy of catheter ablation of AF in HCM patients are sparse. METHODS AND RESULTS: Observational multicentre study in 137 HCM patients (mean age 55.0 ± 13.4, 29.1% female; 225 ablation procedures). We investigated (i) the efficacy of catheter ablation for AF beyond the initial 12 months; (ii) the available risk scores, stratification schemes and genotype as potential predictors of arrhythmia relapse, and (iii) the impact of cryoballoon vs. radiofrequency in procedural outcomes. Mean follow-up was 43.8 ± 37.0 months. Recurrences after the initial 12-month period post-ablation were frequent, and 24 months after the index procedure, nearly all patients with persistent AF had relapsed, and only 40% of those with paroxysmal AF remained free from arrhythmia recurrence. The APPLE score demonstrated a modest discriminative capacity for AF relapse post-ablation (c-statistic 0.63, 95% CI 0.52-0.75; P = 0.022), while the risk stratification schemes for sudden death did not. On multivariable analysis, left atrium diameter and LV apical aneurysm were independent predictors of recurrence. Fifty-eight patients were genotyped; arrhythmia-free survival was similar among subjects with different gene mutations. Rate of procedural complications was high (9.3%), although reducing over time. Outcome for cryoballoon and radiofrequency ablation was comparable. CONCLUSION: Very late AF relapses post-ablation is common in HCM patients, especially in those with persistent AF. Left atrium size, LV apical aneurysm, and the APPLE score might contribute to identify subjects at higher risk of arrhythmia recurrence. First-time cryoballoon is comparable with radiofrequency ablation

    Physical activity in elderly kidney transplant patients with multiple renal arteries

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    Introduction: Kidney transplantation (KT) is the gold standard for treatment of patients with end- stage-renal disease. To expand the donor reserve, it is necessary to use marginal/suboptimal kidneys. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated the short/long-term outcome of 34 KT elderly patients who received allografts with vascular abnormalities (MRA group), in comparison with 34 KT patients who received a kidney with a single renal artery (SRA group) pair-matched by age, length of time on dialysis, comorbidity and donor age. Results: All participants completed the International Physical Activity Questionnaire at KT, and then 4, 8, and 12 weeks after transplantation. Our data indicate that kidney with vascular anatomical variants may be successfully transplanted, since the overall rate of surgical complications was 20.6% in the SRA group and 17.6% in the MRA group and that the 5-year survival rate after KT was 100% in both groups. Conclusions: The data also underline that individualized physical activity programs induced similar excellent results in both groups, improving physical capacities, arterial pressure, lipid metabolism, insulin sensitivity, quality of life and physical and mental status

    Transseptal puncture for left atrial ablation: Risk factors for cardiac tamponade and a proposed causative classification system

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    AIMS: Cardiac tamponade is a high morbidity complication of transseptal puncture (TSP). We examined the associations of TSP‐related cardiac tamponade (TRCT) for all patients undergoing left atrial ablation at our center from 2016 to 2020. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patient and procedural variables were extracted retrospectively. Cases of cardiac tamponade were scrutinized to adjudicate TSP culpability. Adjusted multivariate analysis examined predictors of TRCT. A total of 3239 consecutive TSPs were performed; cardiac tamponade occurred in 51 patients (incidence: 1.6%) and was adjudicated as TSP‐related in 35 (incidence: 1.1%; 68.6% of all tamponades). Patients of above‐median age [odds ratio (OR): 2.4 (1.19–4.2), p = .006] and those undergoing re‐do procedures [OR: 1.95 (1.29–3.43, p = .042] were at higher risk of TRCT. Of the operator‐dependent variables, choice of transseptal needle (Endrys vs. Brockenbrough, p > .1) or puncture sheath (Swartz vs. Mullins vs. Agilis vs. Vizigo vs. Cryosheath, all p > .1) did not predict TRCT. Adjusting for operator, equipment and demographics, failure to cross the septum first pass increased TRCT risk [OR: 4.42 (2.45–8.2), p = .001], whilst top quartile operator experience [OR: 0.4 (0.17–0.85), p = .002], transoesophageal echocardiogram [TOE prevalence: 26%, OR: 0.51 (0.11–0.94), p = .023], and use of the SafeSept transseptal guidewire [OR: 0.22 (0.08–0.62), p = .001] reduced TRCT risk. An increase in transseptal guidewire use over time (2016: 15.6%, 2020: 60.2%) correlated with an annual reduction in TRCT (R (2) = 0.72, p < .001) and was associated with a relative risk reduction of 70%. CONCLUSIONS: During left atrial ablation, the risk of TRCT was reduced by operator experience, TOE‐guidance, and use of a transseptal guidewire, and was increased by patient age, re‐do procedures, and failure to cross the septum first pass
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