40 research outputs found

    Right ventricular dysfunction in right coronary artery infarction: A primary PCI registry analysis

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    Right ventricular involvement in inferior myocardial infarction (MI) was historically associated with a poor prognosis. However, few studies addressed the impact of right ventricular (RV) dysfunction in the primary percutaneous intervention (pPCI) era. Our aim was to assess the prognostic significance of RV dysfunction in right coronary artery (RCA) related MI treated with pPCI. Methods: A total of 298 patients with a RCA related MI undergone pPCI between January 2011 and June 2015 were included. RV dysfunction was defined by a RV-FAC <35% at echocardiographic examination and further divided into mild (RV-FAC between 35 and 25%) and moderate-severe (RV-FAC <25%). RV function before discharge was reassessed in 95% of the study cohort. The primary endpoint was overall mortality. Median follow-up was 29 months. Results: In RCA related MI, moderate-severe (HR 5.882, p = 0.002, 95% CI 1.882-18.385) but not mild RV dysfunction independently predicted lower survival at follow-up along with age (HR 1.104, p <0.001, CI 1.045-1.167). Importantly, patients recovering RV function at discharge showed a lower mortality (p = 0.001) vs patients with persistent moderate-severe RV dysfunction) that approached the risk of patients without RV dysfunction at presentation. Conclusion: In RCA related MI treated with pPCI, RV dysfunction was one of the strongest independent predictor of lower overall survival. However, patients with only transient RV dysfunction showed a better prognosis compared to patients who had persistent RV dysfunction. The focus on intensive support management of the RV in the first hours after pPCI may be important to overcome the acute phase and to promote RV recovery

    How do cardiologists select patients for dual antiplatelet therapy continuation beyond 1 year after a myocardial infarction? Insights from the EYESHOT Post-MI Study

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    Background: Current guidelines suggest to consider dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) continuation for longer than 12 months in selected patients with myocardial infarction (MI). Hypothesis: We sought to assess the criteria used by cardiologists in daily practice to select patients with a history of MI eligible for DAPT continuation beyond 1 year. Methods: We analyzed data from the EYESHOT Post-MI, a prospective, observational, nationwide study aimed to evaluate the management of patients presenting to cardiologists 1 to 3 years from the last MI event. Results: Out of the 1633 post-MI patients enrolled in the study between March and December 2017, 557 (34.1%) were on DAPT at the time of enrolment, and 450 (27.6%) were prescribed DAPT after cardiologist assessment. At multivariate analyses, a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with multiple stents and the presence of peripheral artery disease (PAD) resulted as independent predictors of DAPT continuation, while atrial fibrillation was the only independent predictor of DAPT interruption for patients both at the second and the third year from MI at enrolment and the time of discharge/end of the visit. Conclusions: Risk scores recommended by current guidelines for guiding decisions on DAPT duration are underused and misused in clinical practice. A PCI with multiple stents and a history of PAD resulted as the clinical variables more frequently associated with DAPT continuation beyond 1 year from the index MI

    Pattern of abnormal tangential forces in the diabetic neuropathic foot

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    Objectives. The role of tangential stress in neuropathic foot ulceration is yet unknown. The aim of this study was to investigate the tangential forces developed during gait by the whole foot and by selected subareas of it, namely the heel, the metatarsals and the hallux. Methods. 61 diabetic patients have been evaluated: 27 without neuropathy, 19 with neuropathy and 15 with previous neuropathic ulcer. The patients were compared with 21 healthy volunteers. A piezo-dynamometric platform was used to measure the three components of the ground reaction force under the total foot and the selected subareas. Results. A significant reduction was observed for the forward peak and the backward peak of the anteroposterior ground reaction force component measured under the whole foot. Patients with previous neuropathic ulcer showed a significant increase of the mediolateral stress under the metatarsals. Conclusions. Tangential stress is altered in diabetic neuropathic patients; the increased mediolateral component suggests that tangential stress could have a role in the high risk of recurrence observed in patients with previous ulceration

    Low frequency of detection by nested polymerase chain reaction of enterovirus ribonucleic acid in endomyocardial tissue of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.

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    The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of enteroviral infection in the myocardium of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy by using a highly sensitive and specific detection technique.Recent molecular studies have suggested that enteroviral persistence (in particular, coxsackieviruses type B) may underlie idiopathic myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy.The method used to detect enterovirus-specific ribonucleic acids (RNAs) is based on reverse transcription and nested polymerase chain reaction amplification with four pairs of primers from the conserved 5' noncoding region of the enteroviral genome. Several members of the Enterovirus genus are detectable by this assay (coxsackieviruses B1 to B6; polioviruses 1 to 3; echoviruses 9, 19 and 31), with a sensitivity threshold close to the detection of a single molecule of viral RNA in 1 mg of tissue sample. Endomyocardial tissue samples from 84 subjects were analyzed (77 samples obtained from left endomyocardial biopsies, 7 from explanted hearts). The subjects comprised 63 study patients (53 with dilated cardiomyopathy, 3 with idiopathic myocarditis, 1 with right ventricular dysplasia, 1 with restrictive cardiomyopathy, 1 with eosinophilic myocarditis, 1 with primary ventricular fibrillation and 3 with myocarditis of known etiology) and 21 control subjects with other diseases.Positive signals were obtained only in samples from six study patients (four with dilated cardiomyopathy, one with right ventricular dysplasia and one with myocarditis). Samples from control subjects, uninfected rat myocardium and cultured cell lines yielded systematically negative results. Moreover, the nucleotide sequence analysis of the amplification products from patients with positive samples raised doubts about the true positivity of these samples.This study suggests that the persistence of enteroviral RNA in dilated cardiomyopathy is not a major cause of the disease and that a careful analysis of polymerase chain reaction amplification products is essential in any study in which this technique is pushed to high sensitivity thresholds
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