225 research outputs found

    Complicated Postoperative Course after Pulmonary Artery Sling Repair and Slide Tracheoplasty.

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    Pulmonary artery sling (PAS) is a rare congenital condition in which the left pulmonary artery (LPA) arises from the right pulmonary artery, and then passes between the trachea and the esophagus to reach the left lung, thereby forming a sling around the airway. It is often associated with intrinsic tracheal stenosis due to complete cartilaginous rings. Therapeutic management nowadays consists of one-stage reimplantation of the LPA and tracheoplasty with cardiopulmonary bypass support. Here, we present a 7-week-old boy with PAS and long-segment tracheal stenosis (LSTS) who underwent surgical intervention consisting of reimplantation of the LPA and slide tracheoplasty. Multiple respiratory and cardiovascular complications marked the postoperative course. They consisted of recurrent failed attempts in weaning off mechanical ventilation due to bronchomalacia, left vocal cord paralysis, development of granulation tissue at the anastomosis and restenosis of the trachea, and the main stem bronchi requiring balloon dilatation. The patient also developed bilateral pulmonary artery thrombosis and stenosis of the LPA. After a prolonged hospitalization, the patient is doing well without any respiratory symptoms and has a good result on follow-up bronchoscopy 1 year after the initial surgery. The stenosis of the LPA responded well to percutaneous balloon dilatation 12 months after the primary surgery. The case illustrates that even though surgical techniques are improving and are in general associated with a low morbidity and mortality, management of PAS and tracheal stenosis can still be challenging. However, good long-term outcome can be achieved if the initial postoperative phase is overcome

    In vivo electrophysiological characterization of TASK-1 deficient mice

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    Background/Aims: TASK-1 is a potassium channel predominantly expressed in heart and brain. We have previously shown that anesthetized TASK-1(-/-) mice have prolonged QT intervals in surface electrocardiograms (ECGs). In addition, heart rate variability quantified by time and frequency domain parameters was significantly altered in TASK-1(-/-) mice with a sympathetic preponderance. Aims of the present study were the analysis of QT intervals by telemetric ECGs, to determine potential influences of anesthesia and beta-adrenergic stimulation on repolarization in surface ECGs, to investigate in vivo electrophysiological parameters by intracardiac electrical stimulation and to quantify heart rate turbulence after ischemia/reperfusion or ventricular pacing in TASK-1(+/+) and TASK-1(-/-) mice. Methods: Rate corrected QT intervals (QTc) were recorded in conscious mice by telemetry and in surface ECGs following administration of various anesthetics (tribromoethanol (Avertin (R)), pentobarbital and isoflurane). TASK-1(+/+) and TASK-1(-/-) mice were characterized by programmed electrical stimulation using an intracardiac octapolar catheter. The baroreceptor reflex was analyzed by heart rate turbulence (turbulence onset and slope) after ischemia/reperfusion and by stimulated premature ventricular contractions

    Autonomic cardiac regulation during spontaneous nocturnal hypoglycemia in children with type 1 diabetes

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    Hypoglycemia is the most common complication in insulin treated diabetes. Though mostly mild, it can be fatal in rare cases: It is hypothesized that hypoglycemia related QTc prolongation contributes to cardiac arrhythmia.; To evaluate influence of nocturnal hypoglycemia on QTc and heart rate variability (HRV) in children with T1D.; Children and adolescents with T1D for at least 6 months participated in an observational study using continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and Holter electrocardiogram for five consecutive nights. Mean QTc was calculated for episodes of nocturnal hypoglycemia (<3.7 mmol/L) and compared to periods of the same duration preceding hypoglycemia. HRV (RMSSD, low and high frequency power LF and HF) was analyzed for different 15 min intervals: before hypoglycemia, onset of hypoglycemia, before/after nadir, end of hypoglycemia and after hypoglycemia.; Mean QTc during hypoglycemia was significantly longer compared to euglycemia (412 ± 15 vs. 405 ± 18 ms, p = 0.005). HRV changed significantly: RMSSD (from 88 ± 57 to 73 ± 43 ms) and HF (from 54 ± 17 to 47 ± 17nu) decreased from before hypoglycemia to after nadir, while heart rate (from 69 ± 9 to 72 ± 12 bpm) and LF (from 44 ± 17 to 52 ± 21 nu) increased (p = 0.04).; A QTc lengthening effect of nocturnal hypoglycemia in children with T1D was documented. HRV changes occurred even before detection of nocturnal hypoglycemia by CGM, which may be useful for hypoglycemia prediction

    Tamoxifen may contribute to preserve cardiac function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

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    UNLABELLED Duchenne muscular dystrophy is life-limiting. Cardiomyopathy, which mostly ensues in the second decade of life, is the main cause of death. Treatment options are still limited. The TAMDMD (NCT03354039) trial assessed motor function, muscle strength and structure, laboratory biomarkers, and safety in 79 ambulant boys with genetically confirmed Duchenne muscular dystrophy, 6.5-12 years of age, receiving either daily tamoxifen 20 mg or placebo for 48 weeks. In this post-hoc analysis, available echocardiographic data of ambulant patients recruited at one study centre were retrieved and compared before and after treatment. Data from 14 patients, median 11 (interquartile range, IQR, 11-12) years of age was available. Baseline demographic characteristics were similar in participants assigned to placebo (n = 7) or tamoxifen (n = 7). Left ventricular end-diastolic diameter in the placebo group (median and IQR) was 39 (38-41) mm at baseline and 43 (38-44) mm at study end, while it was 44 (41-46) mm at baseline and 41 (37-46) mm after treatment in the tamoxifen group. Left ventricular fractional shortening in the placebo group was 35% (32-38%) before and 33% (32-36%) after treatment, while in the tamoxifen group it was 34% (33-34%) at baseline and 35% (33-35%) at study end. No safety signals were detected. CONCLUSION This hypothesis-generating post-hoc analysis suggests that tamoxifen over 48 weeks is well tolerated and may help preserving cardiac structure and function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Further studies are justified. CLINICALTRIALS gov Identifier: EudraCT 2017-004554-42, NCT03354039 What is known: • Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is life-limiting. Cardiomyopathy ensues in the second decade of life and is the main cause of death. Treatment options are still limited. • Tamoxifen reduced cardiac fibrosis in mice and improved cardiomyocyte function in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes. WHAT IS NEW • In this post-hoc analysis of the TAMDMD trial among 14 boys, median 11 years of age, treated with either tamoxifen or placebo for 48 weeks, treatment was well-tolerated. • A visual trend of improved left-ventricular dimensions and better systolic function preservation generates the hypothesis of a potential beneficial effect of tamoxifen in DMD cardiomyopathy

    Tamoxifen may contribute to preserve cardiac function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

    Get PDF
    Duchenne muscular dystrophy is life-limiting. Cardiomyopathy, which mostly ensues in the second decade of life, is the main cause of death. Treatment options are still limited. The TAMDMD (NCT03354039) trial assessed motor function, muscle strength and structure, laboratory biomarkers, and safety in 79 ambulant boys with genetically confirmed Duchenne muscular dystrophy, 6.5-12 years of age, receiving either daily tamoxifen 20 mg or placebo for 48 weeks. In this post-hoc analysis, available echocardiographic data of ambulant patients recruited at one study centre were retrieved and compared before and after treatment. Data from 14 patients, median 11 (interquartile range, IQR, 11-12) years of age was available. Baseline demographic characteristics were similar in participants assigned to placebo (n = 7) or tamoxifen (n = 7). Left ventricular end-diastolic diameter in the placebo group (median and IQR) was 39 (38-41) mm at baseline and 43 (38-44) mm at study end, while it was 44 (41-46) mm at baseline and 41 (37-46) mm after treatment in the tamoxifen group. Left ventricular fractional shortening in the placebo group was 35% (32-38%) before and 33% (32-36%) after treatment, while in the tamoxifen group it was 34% (33-34%) at baseline and 35% (33-35%) at study end. No safety signals were detected. CONCLUSION This hypothesis-generating post-hoc analysis suggests that tamoxifen over 48 weeks is well tolerated and may help preserving cardiac structure and function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Further studies are justified. CLINICALTRIALS gov Identifier: EudraCT 2017-004554-42, NCT03354039 What is known: • Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is life-limiting. Cardiomyopathy ensues in the second decade of life and is the main cause of death. Treatment options are still limited. • Tamoxifen reduced cardiac fibrosis in mice and improved cardiomyocyte function in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes. WHAT IS NEW • In this post-hoc analysis of the TAMDMD trial among 14 boys, median 11 years of age, treated with either tamoxifen or placebo for 48 weeks, treatment was well-tolerated. • A visual trend of improved left-ventricular dimensions and better systolic function preservation generates the hypothesis of a potential beneficial effect of tamoxifen in DMD cardiomyopathy

    Impact of MEK Inhibition on Childhood RASopathy-Associated Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

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    There is an unmet medical need to treat patients with severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy leading to heart failure and death in children carrying pathogenic activating variants in the RAS/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. A retrospective analysis of 61 patients provides evidence for decreased mortality and morbidity with improved cardiac status in patients with RASopathy with severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy receiving mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inhibition (n = 30) vs those with standard-of-care treatment (n = 31). Side effects were not life threatening and were manageable. The data presented suggest that personalized therapies targeting underlying signaling pathway abnormalities might be effective in critically ill patients with RASopathy warranting clinical investigation

    Clinical presentation of calmodulin mutations: the International Calmodulinopathy Registry

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    AIMS: Calmodulinopathy due to mutations in any of the three CALM genes (CALM1-3) causes life-threatening arrhythmia syndromes, especially in young individuals. The International Calmodulinopathy Registry (ICalmR) aims to define and link the increasing complexity of the clinical presentation to the underlying molecular mechanisms. METHODS AND RESULTS: The ICalmR is an international, collaborative, observational study, assembling and analysing clinical and genetic data on CALM-positive patients. The ICalmR has enrolled 140 subjects (median age 10.8 years [interquartile range 5-19]), 97 index cases and 43 family members. CALM-LQTS and CALM-CPVT are the prevalent phenotypes. Primary neurological manifestations, unrelated to post-anoxic sequelae, manifested in 20 patients. Calmodulinopathy remains associated with a high arrhythmic event rate (symptomatic patients, n = 103, 74%). However, compared with the original 2019 cohort, there was a reduced frequency and severity of all cardiac events (61% vs. 85%; P = .001) and sudden death (9% vs. 27%; P = .008). Data on therapy do not allow definitive recommendations. Cardiac structural abnormalities, either cardiomyopathy or congenital heart defects, are present in 30% of patients, mainly CALM-LQTS, and lethal cases of heart failure have occurred. The number of familial cases and of families with strikingly different phenotypes is increasing. CONCLUSION: Calmodulinopathy has pleiotropic presentations, from channelopathy to syndromic forms. Clinical severity ranges from the early onset of life-threatening arrhythmias to the absence of symptoms, and the percentage of milder and familial forms is increasing. There are no hard data to guide therapy, and current management includes pharmacological and surgical antiadrenergic interventions with sodium channel blockers often accompanied by an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator

    Large expert-curated database for benchmarking document similarity detection in biomedical literature search

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    Document recommendation systems for locating relevant literature have mostly relied on methods developed a decade ago. This is largely due to the lack of a large offline gold-standard benchmark of relevant documents that cover a variety of research fields such that newly developed literature search techniques can be compared, improved and translated into practice. To overcome this bottleneck, we have established the RElevant LIterature SearcH consortium consisting of more than 1500 scientists from 84 countries, who have collectively annotated the relevance of over 180 000 PubMed-listed articles with regard to their respective seed (input) article/s. The majority of annotations were contributed by highly experienced, original authors of the seed articles. The collected data cover 76% of all unique PubMed Medical Subject Headings descriptors. No systematic biases were observed across different experience levels, research fields or time spent on annotations. More importantly, annotations of the same document pairs contributed by different scientists were highly concordant. We further show that the three representative baseline methods used to generate recommended articles for evaluation (Okapi Best Matching 25, Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency and PubMed Related Articles) had similar overall performances. Additionally, we found that these methods each tend to produce distinct collections of recommended articles, suggesting that a hybrid method may be required to completely capture all relevant articles. The established database server located at https://relishdb.ict.griffith.edu.au is freely available for the downloading of annotation data and the blind testing of new methods. We expect that this benchmark will be useful for stimulating the development of new powerful techniques for title and title/abstract-based search engines for relevant articles in biomedical research.Peer reviewe

    Intrauterine Growth Retardation in Pregnant Women with Long QT Syndrome Treated with Beta-Receptor Blockers

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    Pregnant women with inherited long QT syndrome (iLQTS) are at an increased risk for preterm delivery and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) due to their underlying disease. Additionally, they are at a risk of arrhythmogenic events, particularly during the postpartum period because of physiological changes and increased emotional/physical stress. β-receptor blockers can effectively prevent life-threatening Torsades de Pointes ventricular tachycardia and they are the treatment of choice in iLQTS. Use of β-receptor blockers in pregnancy is recommended, although IUGR is commonly reported for prenatally exposed infants. IUGR, particularly in preterm infants, can result in adverse neonatal outcomes. This review was performed to support clinicians in their selection of β-receptor blocker treatment for their pregnant iLQTS women by (i) summarizing the available literature addressing the impact of different β-receptor blockers on IUGR and (ii) reporting additional aspects which might influence the β-receptor blocker selection. In general, experts recommend to use nonselective β-receptor blockers, such as nadolol and propranolol, for iLQTS management as these drugs seem to be superior in effectiveness. However, β-1-selective receptor blockers, such as bisoprolol or metoprolol, seem to affect less likely uterine contraction, peripheral vasodilation, and are associated with lower IUGR rates and fetal hypoglycemia. They are therefore recommended, except atenolol, as first-line therapy for pregnant women. Additionally, maternal factors such as iLQTS genotype, other underlying comorbidities (e.g., diabetes mellitus type 1, asthma bronchiale), and uteroplacental dysfunction or fetal factors have to be taken into account. Therefore, each woman with iLQTS who wants to become pregnant should be well-advised for a personalized β-receptor blocker therapy according to the individual risk-benefit evaluation by a multidisciplinary team of cardiologists, gynecologists, pediatric cardiologists, neonatologists, and clinical pharmacologists. During pregnancy, a close monitoring of IUGR and, after birth, monitoring of bradycardia, hypoglycemia, and respiratory depression in the neonate is mandatory. This review summarizes available data on β-receptor blocker-related risk for IUGR in prenatally exposed infants and illustrates which factors might influence β-receptor blocker selection with the aim to support clinicians in their pharmacological management of their pregnant iLQTS patients. </jats:p
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