8 research outputs found

    Mitral annuloplasty in patients with ischemic versus dilated cardiomyopathy

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    Objective: Mitral regurgitation is a frequent finding in patients with end-stage cardiomyopathy predicting poor survival. Conventional treatment consists medical treatment or cardiac transplantation. However, despite severely decreased left ventricular function, mitral annuloplasty may improve survival and reduce the need for allografts. Methods: From January 1996 to July 2002, 121 patients with severe end-stage dilated (DCM) or ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM), mitral regurgitation ≥2, and left ventricular ejection fraction ≤30% underwent mitral valve annuloplasty using a flexible posterior ring. DCM was diagnosed in 30 patients (25%), whereas ICM was found in 91 patients (75%). Concomitant tricuspid valve repair was performed in 14 (46.6%) patients in the DCM, and in 11 (12%) in the ICM group (P=0.0001), coronary artery bypass grafting in three (10%) in the DCM, and in 78 patients (86%) in the ICM group (P<0.00001). The mean follow-up time was 567±74 days in the DCM and 793±63 days in the ICM group (ns). Results: Early mortality was 6.6% (8/121), and was equal for both groups. Improvement in NYHA class (DCM 3.3+0.1-1.8±0.16; ICM from 3.2+0.04 to 1.7±0.07) were equal between groups after 1 year. Seventeen (15%) late deaths occurred during the follow-up period. There was no difference in the 2-year actuarial survival between groups (DCM/ICM 0.93/0.85). Risk factors for mitral reconstruction failure, defined as regurgitation ≥2 after 1 year, were preoperative NYHA IV in the DCM group (P=0.03), a preoperative posterior infarction (P=0.025), decreased left ventricular function (P=0.043), larger ring size (P=0.026) and preoperative renal failure (P=0.05) in the ICM group. Risk factors for death were larger ring size (P=0.02) and an increased LVEDD (P=0.027) in the DCM group and the postoperative use of IABP (P=0.002), renal failure (P=0.001), and a larger preoperative LVESD (P=0.035) in the ICM group. Conclusion: Mitral reconstruction with a posterior annuloplasty using a flexible ring is effective in patients with severely depressed left ventricle function and has an acceptable operative mortality. Mid-term results are superior to medical treatment alone and comparable to cardiac transplantatio

    Deposition of nonsarcomeric alpha-actinin in cardiomyocytes from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy or chronic pressure overload

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    Nonsarcomeric alpha-actinin (ACTN-1)-positive clusters have been detected in human myocardium structurally jeopardized by dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertrophy due to aortic stenosis, or chronic hibernation, but have never been detected in normal tissue. To systematically investigate these clusters, immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, Northern blot and Western blot were performed in human myocardium, isolated rat cardiomyocytes and rabbit smooth muscle cells. ACTN-1-positive clusters were localized in the perinuclear area of cardiomyocytes surrounded by rough endoplasmic reticulum. Quantification of structures containing ACTN-1 showed that it was present in up to 10% of all myocytes in 60% of aortic stenosis patients with severely reduced ejection fraction and in 70% of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, exclusively in myocytes from hearts with structural degeneration and reduced function. Ultrastructurally, clusters of medium electron density corresponding to the confocal microscopic accumulations were observed in the same tissue samples. The messenger RNA of ACTN-1 was unchanged compared with controls, but a Western blot revealed that the protein was significantly elevated in failing hearts. Because membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum surround the clusters, it was concluded that in the presence of undisturbed transcription, a post-translational malfunction of ACTN-1 glycosylation might lead to storage of this protein. Autophagic and ischemic cell death were observed, but a possible toxic effect of this storage product was excluded because markers of cell death rarely colocalized with ACTN-1. The occurrence of ACTN-1-positive clusters, however, appears to be a useful marker for structural degeneration in failing myocardium

    Mitral annuloplasty in patients with ischemic versus dilated cardiomyopathy

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    Objective: Mitral regurgitation is a frequent finding in patients with end-stage cardiomyopathy predicting poor survival. Conventional treatment consists medical treatment or cardiac transplantation. However, despite severely decreased left ventricular function, mitral annuloplasty may improve survival and reduce the need for allografts. Methods: From January 1996 to July 2002, 121 patients with severe end-stage dilated (DCM) or ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM), mitral regurgitation ≥2, and left ventricular ejection fraction ≤30% underwent mitral valve annuloplasty using a flexible posterior ring. DCM was diagnosed in 30 patients (25%), whereas ICM was found in 91 patients (75%). Concomitant tricuspid valve repair was performed in 14 (46.6%) patients in the DCM, and in 11 (12%) in the ICM group (P=0.0001), coronary artery bypass grafting in three (10%) in the DCM, and in 78 patients (86%) in the ICM group (P<0.00001). The mean follow-up time was 567±74 days in the DCM and 793±63 days in the ICM group (ns). Results: Early mortality was 6.6% (8/121), and was equal for both groups. Improvement in NYHA class (DCM 3.3+0.1-1.8±0.16; ICM from 3.2+0.04 to 1.7±0.07) were equal between groups after 1 year. Seventeen (15%) late deaths occurred during the follow-up period. There was no difference in the 2-year actuarial survival between groups (DCM/ICM 0.93/0.85). Risk factors for mitral reconstruction failure, defined as regurgitation ≥2 after 1 year, were preoperative NYHA IV in the DCM group (P=0.03), a preoperative posterior infarction (P=0.025), decreased left ventricular function (P=0.043), larger ring size (P=0.026) and preoperative renal failure (P=0.05) in the ICM group. Risk factors for death were larger ring size (P=0.02) and an increased LVEDD (P=0.027) in the DCM group and the postoperative use of IABP (P=0.002), renal failure (P=0.001), and a larger preoperative LVESD (P=0.035) in the ICM group. Conclusion: Mitral reconstruction with a posterior annuloplasty using a flexible ring is effective in patients with severely depressed left ventricle function and has an acceptable operative mortality. Mid-term results are superior to medical treatment alone and comparable to cardiac transplantatio

    Epitheliome

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