170 research outputs found

    707 Transvenous radiofrequency ablation of epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways in children with WPW syndrome: can technology and imaging innovations improve the outcome?

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    Abstract Aims The aim of the study was to analyse our recent single-centre experience about epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways transcatheter ablation in children and young patients using radiofrequency through the coronary sinus, in order to understand which mapping and ablation strategy is associated with higher success rate and safety. Methods and results We reviewed all the cases of ablation of overt accessory pathways (in Wolff–Parkinson–White syndrome) with epicardial posterior-septal localization performed in children or young patients at our institution in the last 5 years. Twenty-two paediatric patients (mean age: 13 ± 3 years) with epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways (15 in coronary sinus and 7 in the Middle Cardiac Vein) underwent radiofrequency transcatheter ablation with CARTO 3TM. Acute success rate was 77%. No patient was lost to follow-up (mean time 14.4 ± 9 months). The recurrence rate was 18%. Two patients underwent a successful redo-procedure; the overall long-term success rate was 68%. NAVISTAR® catheter presented the highest acute success rate in the coronary sinus. NAVISTAR SMARTTOUCH® was the only catheter that did not present recurrences after the acute success and it was successfully used in two patients previously unsuccessfully treated with a NAVISTAR THERMOCOOL®. Integration with angio-CT of coronary sinus branches obtained with CARTOMERGE was associated with higher success rate in patients with a previous failed ablation attempt. Conclusions Epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways can be successfully treated with transvenous radiofrequency ablation in more than half of the cases in children/young patients. Acute success rate does not seem to depend on catheters used but contact-force catheter seems to be useful in cases with recurrences. Image integration with cardiac-CT reconstruction of coronary sinus branches anatomy can be useful to better guide ablation in case of previously failed attempts

    3D transvenous radiofrequency ablation of manifest epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways in children: Can technology innovations improve the outcome?

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    AbstractIntroduction:The aim of the study was to revise our more recent experience about epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways radiofrequency transcatheter ablation in children and young patients using a transvenous approach through the coronary sinus, to understand if new mapping and ablation technologies can increase success rate and safety.Methods and results:Twenty children (mean age 13 ± 3 years) with epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways (14 in coronary sinus and 6 in the middle cardiac vein) underwent radiofrequency transcatheter ablation with CARTO-3® system with help of the CARTO-Univu® module. Acute success rate was 73%. No patient was lost to follow-up (mean time 11.4 ± 9 months). The recurrence rate was 19%. Two patients underwent a successful redo-procedure; the overall long-term success rate was 65%. Navistar® catheter presented the highest acute success rate in the coronary sinus. Navistar SmartTouch® was the only catheter that did not present recurrences after the acute success, and it was successfully used in two patients previously unsuccessfully treated with a Navistar ThermoCool®. Acute success rate was 79% without image integration with angio-CT, while it was 63% after the introduction of CARTO-Merge®.Conclusion:Epicardial posterior-septal accessory pathways can be definitively eliminated by transvenous radiofrequency transcatheter ablation in more than half of the cases in children. Acute success rate does not seem to depend on catheters used, but contact-force catheter seems to be useful in cases with recurrences. Image integration with cardiac-CT does not increase success rate, but it is useful to detect coronary sinus alterations to better guide ablation strategy

    TTV and other anelloviruses: The astonishingly wide spread of a viral infection

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    The broad family of viruses known as anelloviruses (AV) infects both humans and numerous animal species. They have a tiny, covalently closed single-stranded DNA genome and the astonishing capacity to infect a very high percentage of healthy and ill people with chronic infections that could last a lifetime. AV, and particularly the prototype Torquetenovirus, have established a successful interaction with the host's immune system and the rate at which they replicate is a gauge to measure overall immune function, even though many aspects of their life cycle and pathogenesis are still poorly understood

    A CLUSTER OF SARS-COV-2 DELTA VARIANT OF CONCERN ADDITIONALLY HARBORING F490S, NORTHERN LOMBARDY, ITALY

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    The Delta variant of concern (VOC) of SARS-CoV-2 has become dominant worldwide. We report here a cluster caused by B.1.617.2 harboring the additional mutation of concern (MOC) F490S. Infection occurred in 5 fully vaccinated subjects between the ages of 47 and 84. The immune escape mutation F490S, first identified in the Lambda VOI, appears to impair vaccine efficacy and is rapidly increasing in prevalence worldwide

    Soluble Isoform of Suppression of Tumorigenicity 2 (ST2) Biomarker in a Large Cohort of Healthy Pediatric Population:Determination of Reference Intervals

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    Introduction: Only little data exists on ST2 reference intervals in healthy pediatric populations despite the high importance of this biomarker in adults with heart failure. The aim of the study was to assess the reference intervals of ST2 in a wide healthy pediatric cohort. Methods: We evaluated the serum concentrations of ST2 biomarker in 415 healthy pediatric subjects referred to our analysis laboratory. Subjects were categorized according to age (i.e., 0–6 (n = 79), 7–11 (n = 142) and 12–18 years (n = 191)) and sex. They were not suffering from any cardiac disorders, metabolic disorders, lung diseases, autoimmune disorders or malignancies. A written consent was obtained for each individual. No duplicate patients were included in the analysis and the presence of outliers was investigated. Reference intervals (Mean and central 95% confidence intervals) were determined. Results: Three outliers have been identified and removed from the analysis (60.0, 64.0 and 150.2 ng/mL). A total of 412 subjects were therefore included. The mean value for the whole population was 15.8 ng/mL (2.4–36.4 ng/mL). Males present a significantly higher mean concentration compared to females (17.2 versus 14.4 ng/mL, p = 0.001). A significant trend toward higher ST2 values with age was also observed, but for males only (r = 0.43, p < 0.0001). If considering age partitions, only males of 12–18 years (mean = 21.7 ng/mL) had significantly higher ST2 values compared to the other groups (ranging from 11.9 for males 0–6 years to 15.2 for females 12–18 years; p < 0.0001). Conclusions: We described age and sex-specific reference intervals for ST2 in a large healthy pediatric population. We found that ST2 values differ between sexes if considering all participants. A significant increase in ST2 with age was also observed, but only for males of 12–18 years
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