59 research outputs found

    The coupling of high-pressure oceanic and continental units in Alpine Corsica: Evidence for syn-exhumation tectonic erosion at the roof of the plate interface

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    The subduction of continental crust is now a matter of fact but which are the mechanisms and the factors control- ling the exhumation of continental units and their coupling with oceanic units are still a matter of debate. We herein present the tectono-metamorphic study of selected continental units belonging to the Alpine Corsica (Corte area, Central Corsica, France). The tectonic pile in the study area features thin slices of oceanic units (i.e. Schistes Lustrés Complex) tectonically stacked between the continental units (i.e. the Lower Units), which record a pressure–temperature-deformation (P-T-d) evolution related to their burial, down to P-T-peak conditions in the blueschist facies and subsequent exhumation during the Late Cretaceous – Early Oligocene time span. The metamorphic conditions were calculated crossing the results of three different thermobarometers based on the HP-LT metapelites. The continental units only recorded the P-peak conditions of 1.2 GPa-250 °C, up to the T-peak conditions of 0.8 GPa-400 °C, and the retrograde path up to LP-LT conditions. The metamorphic record of the oceanic units includes part of the prograde path occurring before the peak conditions reached at 1.0 GPa-250 °C followed by the last metamorphic event related to LP-LT conditions. The results indicate that each unit experienced a multistage independent pressure–temperature-deformation (P-T-d) evolution and sug- gest that the oceanic and continental units were coupled during the rising of the last ones at about 10 km of depth, where the oceanic units were stored at the base of the wedge. Subsequently they were deformed together by the last ductile deformation event during exhumation. We propose a mechanism of tectonic erosion at the base of the wedge, by which slices of Schistes Lustrés Complex were removed at the roof of the plate interface during the exhumation of the Lower Units

    Identification of responders to CRT by stress echo: no contractile reserve, no party

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    Background: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is increasingly used, but the identification of "responders" remains challenging. Aim: to assess the value of inotropic reserve during pharmacological echo stress to identify responders. Materials and methods: We enrolled 32 patients (age 69?9 years; 9 females) referred to CRT, all with LV ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤35n %, NYHA ≥IIb and QRS duration ≥130 milliseconds. Twenty-two patients showed echocardiographic criteria for dyssynchrony (at least one of M-mode, Tissue Doppler, or live 3D echo criteria). All patients underwent pharmacological stress echo (dobutamine, up to 40 mcg/Kg/min in 29, dipyridamole 0.84 mg/kg 10 min, in 3). Patients were considered with contractile response if variation of WMSI (from 1=normal, to 4=dyskinetic, 17 segment model of left ventricle) stress-rest (delta WMSI) was ≥0.20. "Responders" to CRT were defined at 6 months follow-up as survivors with NYHA class improvement ≥1 grade and without new hospital admission for acute heart failure. Results: In the follow-up (median=20 months), 16 patients were responders to CRT (Group I) and 16 non-responders (Group II). Responders showed a wider QRS (I=162?25 vs. II=142 ?27 msec; p .044) and a greater delta WMSI (I=0.34?0.25 vs. II= 0.15?0.18; p=.021). At individual patient analysis, inotropic reserve was more often associated with a favourable clinical outcome (see figure) whereas dyssynchrony criteria by echocardiography were equally present in the two groups (I=12/16 vs. II=10/16, p=ns). In the follow-up there were 5 deaths, all in group II. Conclusion: Patients with contractile reserve during stress echo show a favourable clinical response to CRT. This parameter shifts the focus from electrical (dyssynchrony) to the myocardial substrate of functional response: no muscle, no party

    Ultrasound Lung Comets versus cardiac natriuretic peptides in patients with acute dyspnoea

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    Background: Acute shortness of breath as a presenting symptom is a frequent challenge for physicians. The main differential diagnosis is between cardiac and non-cardiac origin of dyspnoea. Natriuretic peptides levels have been used to successfully aid in the diagnosis of congestive heart failure (CHF) in patients presenting with dyspnoea. Ultrasound lung comets (ULCs) are a useful chest sonography sign of increased extravascular lung water. Aim: To assess the concordance rate between ULCs and cardiac natriuretic peptides. Methods: 275 patients (87 females; age 70?14 yrs) admitted with dyspnoea (NYHA class II, III or IV) to a Cardiology-Pneumology or Emergency Department were evaluated. Cardiac peptides assessment and chest sonography, scanning along the intercostal spaces, were performed in all (within 3 hours) and independently analyzed. NT-proBNP values &#8805;157 ng/l, BNP &#8805;100 ng/l and ULCs &#8805;5 were considered abnormal, according to pre-determined cut-offs. Results: Abnormal values of natriuretic peptides were found in 251 patients, while ULCs were present in 220 patients. The total number of discordant cases was 36 (13%), with a concordance rate of 87%. The dominant source of discordance was due to abnormal natriuretic peptides and absence of ULCs (34 patients, see figure): in these patients the mean hospitalization time was significantly lower than in patients with abnormal cardiac peptides and presence of ULCs (7.8?3.7 vs 10.9?6 days, p<.001). Conclusions: ULCs findings are in broad concordance with natriuretic peptides values. Being natriuretic peptides analysis not always available, especially in peripheral Emergency Departments, ULCs assessment could be a plausible alternative to identify CHF in patients with acute dyspnoea

    The prognostic value of ultrasound lung comets in patients with pulmonary hypertension

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    Background: Ultrasound Lung Comets (ULCs) consist of multiple comet tails originating from thickened interlobular septa, due to water or connective tissue accumulation. Therefore they are detectable in patients with several lung diseases. Aim: To assess the prognostic value of ULCs in patients with pulmonary hypertension. Materials and methods: 33 in-hospital patients (age 67?13 years, 16 females) admitted to the Pneumology Division of Clinical Physiology in Pisa with diagnosis of idiopathic or secondary pulmonary hypertension were evaluated upon admission with a comprehensive 2D and Doppler echocardiography, and chest sonography with ULCs assessment. A patient ULC score was obtained by summing the number of comets from each of the scanning spaces in the anterior right and left hemithorax, from second to fifth intercostal spaces. By echocardiography, we measured Tricuspid Annular Plane Systolic Excursion (TAPSE) as an index of right ventricular function, and Pulmonary Artery Systolic Pressure (PASP) from tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity. Results: During the follow-up, 16 events occurred: 4 deaths, 12 new admission for the worsening of symptoms or respiratory function. A ROC analysis identified 14 ULCs as the best diagnostic cut-off to predict events with 94 % sensitivity and 71 % specificity. The 9-months event-free survival was higher in patients with no ULCs and lower in patients with ULCs (see Figure). There was a weak significant correlation between ULCs and PAPs (r=.541, p<.001) and no correlation between ULCs and TAPSE (r=.088, p=ns). Conclusion: ULCs are a simple, user-friendly, radiation-free bedside sign of thickened lung interlobular septa, adding a useful information for straightforward prognostic stratification of patients with pulmonary hypertension

    Ultrasound lung comets for serial assessment of pulmonary congestion in heart failure

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    Background: Serial chest radiographs are too insensitive and therefore NOT recommended for monitoring pulmonary congestion in heart failure patients (AHA/ACC guidelines 2006). Ultrasound lung comets (ULCs) are a simple, quantitative chest sonography sign of pulmonary congestion, originating from water-thickened interlobular septa, and might represent a convenient alternative to chest x-ray in this clinical setting. Aim: To assess whether dynamic changes in ULCs could mirror variations in clinical status and natriuretic peptides. Methods: 104 patients (28 females; age 70?11 years) admitted with dyspnoea (NYHA class &#8805;II) to a Cardiology or Emergency Department were evaluated. NT-proBNP assessment and ULC were independently performed at admission and again before discharge. A patient ULC score was obtained by summing the number of comets from each of the scanning spaces from second to fifth intercostal spaces on anterior chest. Patients were considered "responders" to therapy when NYHA class decreased &#8805;1 grade at discharge. Results: Responders (group I, n=90) and non-responders (group II, n=14) had similar NT-proBNP (I=5560?6643 vs II=5470?4047 ng/l, p=.313), and ULCs number (I=27?34 vs II=34?24, p=.133) at admission. At discharge, responders had lower NT-proBNP (I=3633?5194 vs II=4654?3366 ng/l, p<.05) and ULCs (I=11?12 vs II=28?32, p<.01, see figure) when compared to non-responders. Variation in NT-proBNP somewhat mirrored variations in ULCs (r=.322, p<0.0001). Conclusions: ULC variations mirror changes in clinical functional class and natriuretic peptides in patients hospitalized with acute dyspnoea. ULCs represent an objective parameter of clinical improvement, useful for serial assessment of extra-vascular lung water in patients admitted with acute dyspnoea

    Pulmonary arterial hypertension and interstitial lung fibrosis in systemic sclerosis: One-stop shop assessment with cardiac and chest ultrasound

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    Background: Interstitial lung disease (ILD) and pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) are common complications of systemic sclerosis (SSc). Echocardiography evaluates PAH, and chest sonography detects even mild ILC as ultrasound lung comets (ULC), i.e. multiple comet-tails fanning out from the lung surface and originating from subpleural interlobular septa thickened by fibrosis. Aim: to assess ILD and PAH by integrated cardiac and chest ultrasound in SSc. Materials and methods: We enrolled 30 consecutive SSc patients (age=54?13 years, 23 females) in the Rheumatology Clinic of Pisa University. In all, we assessed Systolic Pulmonary Arterial Pressure (SPAP), from maximal velocity of tricuspid regurgitation flow, and ULC score with chest sonography (summing the number of ULC from each scanning space of anterior and posterior right and left chest, from second to fifth intercostal space). All patients underwent plasma assay for anti-topoisomerase antibodies (anti-Scl70), associated with development of pulmonary fibrosis. Twenty-eight patients also underwent High Resolution Computed Tomography, HRCT (from 0=no fibrosis to 3=honey combing). Results: ULC number - but not SPAP - was correlated to HRCT fibrosis and presence SSc-70 antibodies (see figure). ULC number was similar in localized or diffuse forms (16?20 vs. 21?19, p=ns) and was unrelated to SPAP (r=0.216, p=ns). Conclusions: Cardiac and chest sonography assessment of SPAP and ULC allow a complete, simple, radiation-free characterization of vascular and interstitial lung involvement in SSc - all in one setting and with the same instrument, same transducer and the same sonographer. In particular, ULC number, but not SPAP, is associated with HRCT evidence of lung fibrosis and presence of Scl-70 antibodies

    Pericardial rather than epicardial fat is a cardiometabolic risk marker: an MRI vs echo study

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    Several studies using echocardiography identified epicardial adipose tissue (EPI) as an important cardiometabolic risk marker. However, validation compared with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomography has not been performed. Moreover, pericardial adipose tissue (PERI) has recently been shown to have some correlation with cardiovascular disease risk factors. The aims of this study were to validate echocardiographic analyses compared with MRI and to evaluate which cardiac fat depot (EPI or PERI) is the most appropriate cardiovascular risk marker. METHODS: Forty-nine healthy subjects were studied (age range, 25-68 years; body mass index, 21-40 kg/m(2)), and PERI and EPI fat depots were measured using echocardiography and MRI. Findings were correlated with MRI visceral fat and subcutaneous fat, blood pressure, insulin sensitivity, triglycerides, cholesterol, insulin, glucose, and 10-year coronary heart disease risk. RESULTS: Most cardiac fat was constituted by PERI (about 77%). PERI thickness by echocardiography was well correlated with MRI area (r = 0.36, P = .009), and independently of the technique used for quantification, PERI was correlated with body mass index, waist circumference, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, blood pressure, insulin sensitivity, triglycerides, cholesterol, glucose, and coronary heart disease risk. On the contrary, EPI thicknesses correlated only with age did not correlate significantly with MRI EPI areas, which were found to correlate with age, body mass index, subcutaneous fat, and hip and waist circumferences. CONCLUSIONS: Increased cardiac fat in the pericardial area is strongly associated with features of the metabolic syndrome, whereas no correlation was found with EPI, indicating that in clinical practice, PERI is a better cardiometabolic risk marker than EPI

    Ultrasound lung comets in systemic sclerosis: a chest sonography hallmark of pulmonary interstitial fibrosis

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    Objective. To assess the correlation between ultrasound lung comets (ULCs, a recently described echographic sign of interstitial lung fibrosis) and the current undisputed gold-standard high-resolution CT (HRCT) to detect pulmonary fibrosis in patients with SSc. Methods. We enrolled 33 consecutive SSc patients (mean age 5413 years, 30 females) in the Rheumatology Clinic of the University of Pisa. We assessed ULCs and chest HRCT within 1 week independently in all the patients. ULC score was obtained by summing the number of lung comets on the anterior and posterior chest. Pulmonary fibrosis was quantified by HRCT with a previously described 30-point Warrick score. Results. Presence of ULCs (defined as a total number more than 10) was observed in 17 (51%) SSc patients. Mean ULC score was 3750, higher in the diffuse than in the limited form (7366 vs 2135; P<0.05). A significant positive linear correlation was found between ULCs and Warrick scores (r?0.72; P<0.001). Conclusions. ULCs are often found in SSc, are more frequent in the diffuse than the limited form and are reasonably well correlated with HRCT-derived assessment of lung fibrosis. They represent a simple, bedside, radiation-free hallmark of pulmonary fibrosis of potential diagnostic and prognostic value

    Development and Implementation of the AIDA International Registry for Patients with Non-Infectious Uveitis

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    Introduction: The aim of this paper is to point out the design, development and deployment of the AutoInflammatory Disease Alliance (AIDA) International Registry for paediatric and adult patients with non-infectious uveitis (NIU). Methods: This is a physician-driven, population- and electronic-based registry implemented for both retrospective and prospective collection of real-world demographics, clinical, laboratory, instrumental and socioeconomic data of patients with uveitis and other non-infectious inflammatory ocular diseases recruited through the AIDA Network. Data recruitment, based on the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) tool, is thought to collect standardised information for real-life research and has been developed to change over time according to future scientific acquisitions and potentially communicate with other similar instruments. Security, data quality and data governance are cornerstones of this platform. Results: Ninety-five centres have been involved from 19 countries and four continents from 24&nbsp;March to 16&nbsp;November 2021. Forty-eight out of 95 have already obtained the approval from their local ethics committees. At present, the platform counts 259 users (95 principal investigators, 160 site investigators, 2 lead investigators, and 2 data managers). The AIDA Registry collects baseline and follow-up data using 3943 fields organised into 13 instruments, including patient's demographics, history, symptoms, trigger/risk factors, therapies and healthcare utilization for patients with NIU. Conclusions: The development of the AIDA Registry for patients with NIU will facilitate the collection of standardised data leading to real-world evidence and enabling international multicentre collaborative research through inclusion of patients and their families worldwide
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