25 research outputs found

    Arrhythmias in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension; A Narrative Review of the Current Literature

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    Incidence and prognostic relevance of supraventricular arrhythmias were evaluated in nine studies. These studies investigated patients with different forms of pulmonary hypertension. Supraventricular arrhythmias were more often found in patients with group two pulmonary hypertension. Common findings in these patients were elevated right atrial pressure and diameters and reduced tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE). Elevations in other parameters like systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, mean pulmonary arterial pressure, and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) were inconsistent. Most of the patients with arrhythmias suffered symptoms and improved after sinus rhythm (SR) was restored. The prognostic relevance of non-sustained ventricular tachycardia was evaluated in only one study. Non-sustained ventricular tachycardia does not seem to be prognostically relevant. Extending Holter electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring over 24 hours up to 72 hours raises the detection rate of arrhythmias. Ablation of arrhythmias, especially atrial flutter and atrioventricular node reentry tachycardia, is feasible and safe in these patients

    Capsule Endoscopy in Patients with Cardiac Pacemakers, Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators, and Left Heart Devices: A Review of the Current Literature

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    Background and Study Aims. Capsule endoscopy is an established tool for investigation of the small intestine. Because of limited clinical experience in patients with cardiac devices, the Food and Drug Administration and the manufacturer recommended not to use capsule endoscopy in these patients. The vast majority of investigations did not reveal any interference between capsule endoscopy and cardiac devices. Methods. Studies investigating interference between CE and cardiac devices were analysed. For the review we considered studies published in English or German and indexed in Medline, as well as highly relevant abstracts. Results. In vitro and in vivo studies mainly revealed no interference between capsule endoscopy and cardiac devices. Technical data of capsule endoscopy (Given Imaging) reveal that interference with cardiac pacemakers and implantable cardioverter defibrillator is impossible. Telemetry can interfere with CE video. Conclusion. The clinical use of capsule endoscopy (Given Imaging) is unproblematic in patients with cardiac pacemakers

    Capsule Endoscopy in Patients with Cardiac Pacemakers and Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators: (Re)evaluation of the Current State in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2010

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    Background and Aims. The study was a repeated evaluation of the experience of capsule endoscopy (CE) in patients with cardiac pacemaker or implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). Patients and Methods. A standardized questionnaire was sent by the manufactors Given Imaging and Olympus to all centers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland providing capsule endoscopy service. The questionnaire covers the number of examined patients, monitoring during CE, check of the electric implants before and after CE, occurrence of arrhythmia, quality of CE video, complications, indication of CE, and type of institution. Results. Overall 580 questionnaires were sent to the users. 26/5% (Germany/Austria + Switzerland) of the questionnaires were sent back anonymously to the authors. 114 centers (82 hospitals, 11 surgeries, 21 without specification) replied. In 58 centers (51%), patients with cardiac pacemaker (n = 300) and ICDs (n = 80) underwent uneventful capsule endoscopy. The predominant indication (patients with CP 97%, patients with ICD 100%) was mid gastrointestinal bleeding. Conclusion. The results of our inquiry show that in spite of formal contraindication CE is increasingly applied in bleeding patients with cardiac pacemakers/ICDs and seems to be safe even in a large cohort

    Heart rate variability is related to disease severity in children and young adults with pulmonary hypertension

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    Background: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is frequently associated with an increase in sympathetic tone. This may adversely affect cardiac autonomic control. Knowledge about the clinical impact of autonomic dysfunction in patients with PH is limited. We aimed to assess whether parameters of heart rate variability (HRV) are related to disease severity in children with PH. Methods: Parameters of HRV [SDNN, standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals and SDANN, standard deviation of mean values for normal-to-normal intervals over 5 min] were determined from Holter electrocardiograms of 17 patients with PH without active intracardial shunt (10 female, mean age 12.8 Ā± 8.7 years). Patients were allocated to two groups according to their disease severity: patients with moderate PH [ratio of pulmonary to systemic arterial pressure (PAP/SAP ratio) 0.75) (n = 6). An additional group of five adolescents with Eisenmenger syndrome (PAP/SAP ratio 1.13 Ā± 0.36) was included. Results: Children with severe PH had significantly lower values of HRV [SDNN (73.8 Ā± 21.1 vs. 164.9 Ā± 38.1 ms), SDANN (62.2 Ā± 19.0 vs. 139.5 Ā± 33.3 ms)] compared to patients with moderate PH (p = 0.0001 for all). SDNN inversely correlated with ratio of PAP/SAP of PH patients without shunt (r = -0.82; p = 0.0002). Eisenmenger patients showed no significant difference of HRV [SDNN 157.6 Ā± 43.2 ms, SDANN 141.2 Ā± 45.3 ms] compared to patients with moderate PH without shunt (p > 0.05 for all). Conclusion: According to our results, children with severe PH may have alterations in HRV. Since HRV appears to be related to disease severity, it may therefore serve as an additional diagnostic marker of PH. Remarkably, although Eisenmenger patients have systemic pulmonary arterial pressures, they seem to have preserved HRV, which might reflect a more favorable autonomic adaptation

    Incidence and prognostic significance of malignant arrhythmias during (repetitive) Holter electrocardiograms in patients with pulmonary hypertension

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    BackgroundIn patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH), increased pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) may lead to increased right ventricular afterload and cardiac remodelling, potentially providing the substrate for ventricular arrhythmias. Studies dealing with long term monitoring of patients with PH are rare. The present study evaluated the incidence and the types of arrhythmias retrospectively recorded by Holter ECG in patients with newly detected PH during a long-term Holter ECG follow-up. Moreover, their impact on patient survival was evaluated.Patients and methodsMedical records were screened for demographic data, aetiology of PH, incidence of coronary heart disease, level of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), results from Holter ECG monitoring, 6-minute walk test distance, echocardiographic data and hemodynamic data derived from right heart catheterization. Two subgroups were analyzed: 1. patients (nā€‰=ā€‰65) with PH (group 1ā€‰+ā€‰4) and derivation of at least 1 Holter ECG within 12 months from initial detection of PH and 2. patients (all PH etiologies, nā€‰=ā€‰59) with 3 follow-up Holter ECGs. The frequency and complexity of premature ventricular contractions (PVC) was classified into ā€œlowerā€ and ā€œhigherā€ (=non sustained ventricular tachycardia, nsVT) burden.ResultsHolter ECG revealed sinus rhythm (SR) in most of the patients (nā€‰=ā€‰60). Incidence of atrial fibrillation (AFib) was low (nā€‰=ā€‰4). Patients with premature atrial contractions (PAC) tend to have a shorter period of survival (pā€‰=ā€‰0.098), PVC were not correlated with significant survival differences. During follow-up PAC and PVC were common in all PH groups. Holter ECG revealed non sustained ventricular tachycardia in 19/59 patients [(32.2%); nā€‰=ā€‰6 during first Holter-ECG, nā€‰=ā€‰13 during second/third Holter-ECG]. In all patients suffering from nsVT during follow-up previous Holter ECG revealed multiform/repetitive PVC. PVC burden was not linked to differences in systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, right atrial pressure, brain natriuretic peptide and results of six-minute walk test.ConclusionPatients with PAC tend to have a shortened survival. None of the evaluated parameters (BNP, TAPSE, sPAP) was correlated with the development of arrhythmias. Patients with multiform/repetitive PVC seem to be at risk for ventricular arrhythmias

    Evaluation of the prognostic value of electrocardiography parameters and heart rhythm in patients with pulmonary hypertension

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    Background: Several studies have analyzed arrhythmias in patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH) and increased P-wave duration was identified as a risk factor for development of atrial fibrillation (AF). Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the incidence of arrhythmias in patients with an initial diagnosis of PH during long-term follow-up and assessed the prognostic value of electrocardiography (ECG) data. Data from 167 patients were analyzed (Dana Point Classification: Group 1: 59 patients, Group 2: 28 patients, Group 3: 39 patients, Group 4: 41 patients). Clinical, 6-minĀ­ute walk distance test, echocardiography and right heart catheterization data were collected, and baseline/follow-up ECGs were analyzed. Results: Baseline ECGs revealed sinus rhythm in 137 patients. Thirteen patients had newly onset AF during follow-up. In 30 patients, baseline ECG showed AF. Patients with baseline AF showed higher atrial diameters and higher right atrial pressure. Patients with P-wave duĀ­ration > 0.11 s had shorter survival. Other ECG parameters (PQ-interval, QRS-width, QT-/ /QTc-interval) were not associated with survival. Mean survival times were 79.4 Ā± 5.4 months (sinus rhythm), 64.4 Ā± 12.9 months (baseline AF) and 58.8 Ā± 8.9 months (newly onset AF during follow-up) (p = 0.565). Conclusions: Atrial fibrillation predict adverse prognosis in patients with PH and a longer P-wave (> 0.11 s) is associated with shorter survival time

    The Impact of Recirculation on Extracorporeal Gas Exchange and Patient Oxygenation during Veno-Venous Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenationā€”Results of an Observational Clinical Trial

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    Background: Recirculation during veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation reduces extracorporeal oxygen exchange and patient oxygenation. To minimize recirculation and maximize oxygen delivery (DO2) the interaction of cannulation, ECMO flow and cardiac output requires careful consideration. We investigated this interaction in an observational trial. Methods: In 19 patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome and ECMO, we measured recirculation with the ultrasound dilution technique and calculated extracorporeal oxygen transfer (VO2), extracorporeal oxygen delivery (DO2) and patient oxygenation. To assess the impact of cardiac output (CO), we included CO measurement through pulse contour analysis. Results: In all patients, there was a median recirculation rate of approximately 14ā€“16%, with a maximum rate of 58%. Recirculation rates >35% occurred in 13ā€“14% of all cases. In contrast to decreasing extracorporeal gas exchange with increasing ECMO flow and recirculation, patient oxygenation increased with greater ECMO flows. High CO diminished recirculation by between 5ā€“20%. Conclusions: Extracorporeal gas exchange masks the importance of DO2 and its effects on patients. We assume that increasing DO2 is more important than reduced VO2. A negative correlation of recirculation to CO adds to the complexity of this phenomenon. Patient oxygenation may be optimized with the direct measurement of recirculation
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