73 research outputs found

    Selected 2017 Highlights in Congenital Cardiac Anesthesia

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    This article is a review of the highlights of pertinent literature published during the 12 months of 2017, which is of interest to the congenital cardiac anesthesiologist. Following a search of the US National Library of Medicine PubMed database, several topics emerged where significant contributions were made in 2017, and that the authors of this manuscript felt were noteworthy to be summarized in this review: Training in pediatric cardiac anesthesia, the costs of congenital heart disease (CHD), catheter versus surgical intervention for CHD, cerebral oxygen saturation in CHD, and mechanical circulatory support in children

    Declining mortality following acute myocardial infarction in the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mortality from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is declining worldwide. We sought to determine if mortality in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has also been declining.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We calculated 30-day mortality rates between 2004 and 2006 using data from the VHA External Peer Review Program (EPRP), which entails detailed abstraction of records of all patients with AMI. To compare trends within VHA with other systems of care, we estimated relative mortality rates between 2000 and 2005 for all males 65 years and older with a primary diagnosis of AMI using administrative data from the VHA Patient Treatment File and the Medicare Provider Analysis and Review (MedPAR) files.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using EPRP data on 11,609 patients, we observed a statistically significant decline in adjusted 30-day mortality following AMI in VHA from 16.3% in 2004 to 13.9% in 2006, a relative decrease of 15% and a decrease in the odds of dying of 10% per year (p = .011). Similar declines were found for in-hospital and 90-day mortality.</p> <p>Based on administrative data on 27,494 VHA patients age 65 years and older and 789,400 Medicare patients, 30-day mortality following AMI declined from 16.0% during 2000-2001 to 15.7% during 2004-June 2005 in VHA and from 16.7% to 15.5% in private sector hospitals. After adjusting for patient characteristics and hospital effects, the overall relative odds of death were similar for VHA and Medicare (odds ratio 1.02, 95% C.I. 0.96-1.08).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Mortality following AMI within VHA has declined significantly since 2003 at a rate that parallels that in Medicare-funded hospitals.</p

    Elucidating the clinical spectrum and molecular basis of HYAL2 deficiency

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    This is the final version. Available on open access from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordData Availability: The variants listed in this paper have been deposited in the ClinVar database (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/) with accessions SCV001572828 - SCV001572838.PURPOSE: We previously defined biallelic HYAL2 variants causing a novel disorder in 2 families, involving orofacial clefting, facial dysmorphism, congenital heart disease, and ocular abnormalities, with Hyal2 knockout mice displaying similar phenotypes. In this study, we better define the phenotype and pathologic disease mechanism. METHODS: Clinical and genomic investigations were undertaken alongside molecular studies, including immunoblotting and immunofluorescence analyses of variant/wild-type human HYAL2 expressed in mouse fibroblasts, and in silico modeling of putative pathogenic variants. RESULTS: Ten newly identified individuals with this condition were investigated, and they were associated with 9 novel pathogenic variants. Clinical studies defined genotype-phenotype correlations and confirmed a recognizable craniofacial phenotype in addition to myopia, cleft lip/palate, and congenital cardiac anomalies as the most consistent manifestations of the condition. In silico modeling of missense variants identified likely deleterious effects on protein folding. Consistent with this, functional studies indicated that these variants cause protein instability and a concomitant cell surface absence of HYAL2 protein. CONCLUSION: These studies confirm an association between HYAL2 alterations and syndromic cleft lip/palate, provide experimental evidence for the pathogenicity of missense alleles, enable further insights into the pathomolecular basis of the disease, and delineate the core and variable clinical outcomes of the condition

    A time-frequency approach for cerebral embolic load monitoring

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    Objective: To enable reliable cerebral embolic load monitoring from high-intensity transient signals (HITS) recorded with single-channel transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasound. Methods: We propose a HITS detection and characterization method using a weighted-frequency Fourier linear combiner that estimates baseline Doppler signal power. An adaptive threshold is determined by examining the Doppler signal power variance about the baseline estimate, and HITS are extracted if their Doppler power exceeds this threshold. As signatures from multiple emboli may be superimposed, we analyze the detected HITS in the time-frequency (TF) domain to segment the signals into individual emboli. A logistic regression classification approach is employed to classify HITS into emboli or artifacts. Data were collected using a commercial TCD device with emboli-detection capabilities from twelve children undergoing mechanical circulatory support or cardiac catheterization. A subset of 696 HITS were reviewed, annotated, and split into training and testing sets for developing and evaluating the HITS classification algorithm. Results: The classifier yielded 98% and 96% sensitivity for 100% specificity on training and testing data, respectively. The TF approach decomposed 38% of candidate embolic signals into two or more embolic events that ultimately account for 69% of the overall embolic counts. Our processing pipeline resulted in highly accurate emboli identification and produced emboli counts that were lower (by a median of 64%) compared to the commercial ultrasound system's estimates. Significance: Using only single-channel, single-frequency Doppler ultrasound, the proposed method enables sensitive detection and segmentation of embolic signatures. Our approach paves the way towards accurate real-time cerebral emboli monitoring

    Effects of Atomic Ordering on the Curie Temperature of Fe 3

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    Capturing Pain in the Cortex during General Anesthesia: Near Infrared Spectroscopy Measures in Patients Undergoing Catheter Ablation of Arrhythmias

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    The predictability of pain makes surgery an ideal model for the study of pain and the development of strategies for analgesia and reduction of perioperative pain. As functional near-infrared spectroscopy reproduces the known functional magnetic resonance imaging activations in response to a painful stimulus, we evaluated the feasibility of functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure cortical responses to noxious stimulation during general anesthesia. A multichannel continuous wave near-infrared imager was used to measure somatosensory and frontal cortical activation in patients undergoing catheter ablation of arrhythmias under general anesthesia. Anesthetic technique was standardized and intraoperative NIRS signals recorded continuously with markers placed in the data set for the timing and duration of each cardiac ablation event. Frontal cortical signals only were suitable for analysis in five of eight patients studied (mean age 14 ± 1 years, weight 66.7 ± 17.6 kg, 2 males). Thirty ablative lesions were recorded for the five patients. Radiofrequency or cryoablation was temporally associated with a hemodynamic response function in the frontal cortex characterized by a significant decrease in oxyhemoglobin concentration (paired t-test, p<0.05) with the nadir occurring in the period 4 to 6 seconds after application of the ablative lesion. Cortical signals produced by catheter ablation of arrhythmias in patients under general anesthesia mirrored those seen with noxious stimulation in awake, healthy volunteers, during sedation for colonoscopy, and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging activations in response to pain. This study demonstrates the feasibility and potential utility of functional near-infrared spectroscopy as an objective measure of cortical activation under general anesthesia
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