248 research outputs found

    Arrhythmia mechanism dependent pulmonary vein ablation in paroxysmal atrial fibrillation

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    Atrial fibrillation (AF) often requires invasive treatment by ablation to decrease symptom burden. The pulmonary veins (PV) are thought to trigger paroxysms of AF, and ablative PV isolation (PVI) is a cornerstone in AF treatment. However, incomplete PVI, where electrical conduction between the PV and left atrium (LA) is maintained, is curative of AF in a subset of patients. This implies that an antiarrhythmic effect other than electrical isolation between the PV and LA plays a role in AF prevention in these patients. We reason that the PV myocardium constitutes an arrhythmogenic substrate conducive to reentry in the patients with curative incomplete PVI. This PV substrate is amenable to ablation, even when conduction between the LA and PV persists. We propose that PV ablation strategies are differentiated to fit the arrhythmogenic mechanisms in the individual patient. PV substrate modification in patients with PV reentry may constitute a new therapeutic approach that is potentially simpler and more effective, in this subgroup of patients

    RNA, DNA, and Cell Surface Characteristics of Lesional and Nonlesional Psoriatic Skin

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    We have measured the RNA and DNA content and examined cell surface characteristics of human epidermal cells derived from normal skin, and lesional and nonlesional areas of psoriatic skin prior to and following treatment on a modified Goeckerman protocol. Our results show that cells from active psoriatic lesions contain greater numbers of basal keratinocytes when compared with either nonlesional skin from the same patients or skin from healthy volunteers and individuals with other inflammatory skin lesions. Follow-up measurements 2-3 weeks after the initiation of therapy showed that the numbers of basal keratinocytes in resolving psoriatic lesions had decreased and approached normal levels. Multiparameter RNA/DNA flow cytometric analysis on parallel samples from the same psoriasis patients revealed an increased growth fraction and proportion of cycling cells in both the nonlesional and lesional skin compared with controls. Furthermore, the cellular RNA content was elevated in lesional psoriatic skin when compared with either nonlesional or normal skin. Flow cytometric examination of nonlesional and lesional epidermal cells obtained 2-3 weeks after the commencement of therapy revealed that the growth fraction and mean RNA content of the keratinocytes from resolving psoriatic plaques decreased in response to therapy. In contrast, the proportion of keratinocytes within the S + G2 + M phases of the cell cycle remained elevated. These data indicate that “uninvolved” psoriatic skin exhibits characteristics more closely resembling lesional psoriatic skin than normal skin. The results further suggest that quantitation of cellular RNA content and basal cell number might be sensitive indicators of early treatment response in psoriasis

    Abrupt closure: The CAVEAT I experience

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    Objectives.This study sought to assess the incidence and consequences of abrupt closure in a series of patients undergoing directional coronary atherectomy versus percutaneous coronary angioplasty.Background.Abrupt closure with coronary angioplasty has been associated with adverse outcome. The results from the Coronary Angioplasty Versus Excisional Atherectomy Trial (CAVEAT) I, a randomized trial of coronary angioplasty versus directional coronary atherectomy, were analyzed.Method.This multicenter trial enrolled 1,012 patients from 1991 to 1992. All records from patients with abrupt closure, which was coded as a discrete complication, were reviewed.Results.Abrupt closure occurred in 60 patients (5.9%) and was associated with a significantly longer hospital stay (median 8 vs. 3 days). Severe proximal target vessel tortuosity was more common in patients with abrupt closure (20.3% vs. 11.6%, p = 0.046), as was preexistent coronary artery thrombus (30.5% vs. 18.3%, p = 0.02). Abrupt closure was associated with a marked increase in subsequent complications (myocardial infarction 46.7% vs. 2.1%, emergency bypass surgery 383% vs. 0.32%, death 33% vs. 0%) and occurred more frequently in the directional coronary atherectomy group (8.0% vs. 3.8%, p = 0.005). In the coronary angioplasty group, the occlusion usually occurred at the target lesion (91%), presumably related to the effects of barotrauma. In the directional coronary atherectomy group, the site of the occlusion was the target lesion in only 58% (p = 0.045). The remaining occlusions related to problems with the technique (guide catheter or nose cone trauma), reflecting the fact that directional coronary atherectomy is a more complex procedure.Conclusions.Abrupt closure remains the principal determinant of adverse outcome after percutaneous procedures for the treatment of coronary artery disease. Although abrupt closure is more common with directional atherectomy than angioplasty, the sequelae are similar

    Lack of Evidence for Changing Virulence of HIV-1 in North America

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    Background: Several long-term cohort studies and in-vitro fitness assays have resulted in inconsistent reports on changes in HIV-1 virulence, including reports of decreasing, stable, and increasing virulence over the course of the AIDS pandemic. We tested the hypothesis of changing HIV-1 virulence by examining trends in prognostic clinical markers of disease progression from 1984 to 2005 among nearly 400 antiretroviral-naı¨ve participants in the United States Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS), a longitudinal study of HIV infection in men who have sex with men (MSM). \ud \ud Methodology/Principal Findings:\ud Because clinical AIDS endpoints could not be used (due to antiretroviral therapies and prophylaxis), three prognostic markers of disease progression were used as proxies for HIV-1 virulence: plasma viral RNA load and CD4+ T cell count at ‘‘set point’’ (between ~9 and ~15 months after seroconversion), and rate of CD4 cell decline within three years after seroconversion. We performed multivariate analyses of the association between these markers and seroconversion year, with covariates including MACS site, race/ethnic group, seroconversion age, and CCR5D32 status. No statistically significant association was found between year of seroconversion and ‘‘set point’’ plasma viral load (at ~9 months after seroconversion: slope =20.004 log10\ud copies/mL/year, p = 0.76; at ~15 months: slope =20.005 log10 copies/mL/year, p = 0.71), CD4 cell count after seroconversion (at ~9 months: slope =20.112 cells/mL/year, p = 0.22; at ~15 months: slope =20.047 cells/mL/year, p = 0.64), or rate of CD4 cell decline over the first three years after seroconversion (slope =20.010 cells/ul/yr2, p = 0.88). \ud \ud Conclusions/Significance: The lack of significant trends from 1984 to 2005 in these prognostic markers of HIV disease progression suggests no major change in HIV-1 virulence over the AIDS pandemic in MSM in the US

    The 65th Symposium of the Society for General Physiologists: Energizing research in mitochondrial physiology and medicine

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    The annual Society of General Physiologists (SGP) symposium has a six-decade legacy as the premier and innovative international meeting for physiologists, cell biologists, and biophysicists. During September 7–11th, 2011, more than 130 scientists participated in the 65th SGP symposium entitled “Mitochondrial Physiology and Medicine” at Woods Hole, MA. In a survey distributed at the end of the conference, participants ranked the overall science and quality of discussions very highly (average of 9.5 out of 10), with multiple respondents noting the highly collegial atmosphere, emphasis on unpublished research, and opportunity for younger scientists to interact with leaders in the field. Recent groundbreaking discoveries demonstrating the pivotal role of mitochondria in human physiology and disease have repositioned mitochondria to the center stage of biomedical research. Mitochondria serve as gatekeepers between cell survival and death, as well as regulate proper cell signaling, energy metabolism, redox balance, and ion homeostasis. Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with numerous acute and chronic human diseases, including heart failure, ischemia-reperfusion injury, atherosclerosis, cardiomyopathy, stroke, neurodegeneration, diabetes, obesity, cancer, rare diseases, and aging. Clearly, the SGP’s selection of this year’s topic on mitochondrial physiology and disease was timely and fitting

    Adherence to cancer screening guidelines in Australian survivors of allogeneic blood and marrow transplantation (BMT)

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    Allogeneic Blood and Marrow Transplant (BMT) survivors are at high risk of secondary cancers. Although current guidelines endorse survivors following Country-specific general population screening recommendations to mitigate this risk, little is known about cancer screening adherence in Australian BMT survivors. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of 441 BMT survivors who were >1 year post transplant, to explore rates of screening for secondary cancers and to identify barriers to cancer screening recommendations. Survey instruments included the Sydney Post-BMT Survey, FACT-BMT, DASS 21, The Chronic Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD) Activity Assessment–Patient Self-Report (Form B), the Lee Chronic GVHD Symptom Scale, Fear of Cancer Recurrence Scale, and The Post Traumatic Growth Inventory. Fifty-seven percent of respondents were male, median age 54 years, and 40% were >6 years post-BMT. Rates of cancer screening adherence were as follows: cervical 63.4%, breast 53.3%, skin 52.4%, and bowel 32.3%. Older BMT survivors and those >2 years post transplant were more likely to undergo cancer screening. Improved quality of life was associated with screening for skin, breast, and cervical cancer. Fear of cancer recurrence negatively impacted on cervical screening. For those who had not undergone screening, the majority reported not being advised to do so by their treatment team. This study is the largest and most comprehensive to date exploring cancer screening adherence in BMT survivors in Australia. These data provide the basis for health service reform to better meet the needs of BMT survivors and provide evidence to support counseling and education of both patients and professionals. Keywords: Australia, blood and marrow transplant (BMT), cancer screening, late effects, secondary cancers, survivorsfunded by the New South Wales Agency for Clinical Innovation, Blood and Marrow Transplant Network and supported by the Northern Blood Research Centr
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