122 research outputs found

    Coronary artery disease and depression

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    Coronary artery disease (CAD) as well as depression are both highly prevalent diseases. Both cause a significant decrease in quality of life for the patient and impose a significant economic burden on society. There are several factors that seem to link depression with the development of CAD and with a worse outcome in patients with established CAD: worse adherence to prescribed medication and life style modifications in depressive patients, as well as higher rates in abnormal platelet function, endothelial dysfunction and lowered heart rate variability. The evidence is growing that depression per se is an independent risk factor for cardiac events in a patient population without known CAD and also in patients with established diagnosis of CAD, particularly after myocardial infarction. Treatment of depression has been shown to improve patients' quality of life. However, it did not improve cardiovascular prognosis in depressed patients even though there is open discussion about the trend to better outcome in treated patients. Large scale clinical trials are needed to answer this question. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors seem to be preferable to tricyclic antidepressants for treatment of depressive patients with comorbid CAD because of their good tolerability and absence of significant cardiovascular side effects. Hypericum perforatum (St. John's wort), an increasingly used herbal antidepressant drug should be used with caution due to severe and possibly dangerous interaction with cardioactive drug

    Sexual Dysfunction before and after Cardiac Rehabilitation

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    Background. The aim of this study was to assess sexual function before and after cardiac rehabilitation in relation to medical variables. Methods. Analysis of patients participating in a 12-week exercise-based outpatient cardiac rehabilitation program (OCR) between April 1999 and December 2007. Exercise capacity (ExC) and quality of life including sexual function were assessed before and after OCR. Results. Complete data were available in 896 male patients. No sexual activity at all was indicated by 23.1% at baseline and 21.8% after OCR, no problems with sexual activity by 40.8% at baseline and 38.6% after OCR. Patients showed an increase in specific problems (erectile dysfunction and lack of orgasm) from 18% to 23% (P < .0001) during OCR. We found the following independent positive and negative predictors of sexual problems after OCR: hyperlipidemia, age, CABG, baseline ExC and improvement of ExC, subjective physical and mental capacity, and sense of affiliation. Conclusions. Sexual dysfunction is present in over half of the patients undergoing OCR with no overall improvement during OCR. Age, CABG, low exercise capacity are independent predictors of sexual dysfunction after OCR

    Staphylococcus aureus Endocarditis as a Complication of Toxocariasis-Associated Endomyocarditis With Fibrosis: A Case Report

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    Complications associated with Toxocara canis infection are rare. We present a case of a patient with Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis as a complication of an endomyocardial fibrosis caused by T canis. The epidemiological, pathological, and clinical features of this rare complication are described here

    Non-invasive nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging improves the diagnostic yield of invasive coronary angiography

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    Aims Several studies reported on the moderate diagnostic yield of elective invasive coronary angiography (ICA) regarding the presence of coronary artery disease (CAD), but limited data are available on how prior testing for ischaemia may contribute to improve the diagnostic yield in an every-day clinical setting. This study aimed to assess the value and use of cardiac myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (MPS) in patient selection prior to elective ICA. Methods and results The rate of MPS within 90 days prior to elective ICA was assessed and the non-invasive test results were correlated with the presence of obstructive CAD on ICA (defined as stenosis of ≥50% of a major epicardial coronary vessel). Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify predictors of obstructive CAD. A total of 7530 consecutive patients were included. At catheterization, 3819 (50.7%) were diagnosed as having obstructive CAD. Patients with a positive result on MPS (performed in 23.5% of patients) were significantly more likely to have obstructive CAD as assessed by ICA than those who did not undergo non-invasive testing (74.4 vs. 45.6%, P < 0.001). Furthermore, a pathological MPS result was a strong, independent predictor for CAD findings among traditional risk factors and symptoms. Conclusion In an every-day clinical setting, the use of MPS substantially increases the diagnostic yield of elective ICA and provides incremental value over clinical risk factors and symptoms in predicting obstructive CAD, thus emphasizing its importance in the decision-making process leading to the use of diagnostic catheterizatio

    Sleeping hearts: 12 years after a follow up study on cardiac findings due to sleeping sickness

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    Both American Trypanosomiasis (Chagas disease) and Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) are diseases caused by single-celled flagellate protozoan parasites. While cardiac complications such as conduction problems and heart failure are very common in Chagas disease there is little known about the long-term effects of Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) on cardiac sequelae in Sub-Saharan Africa, where heart failure has become an increasing problem and growing burden. In the context of clinical trials conducted between 2004 and 2005 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the prevalence of HAT related signs and symptoms and an ECG were evaluated prior to the initiation of treatment. The object of this follow-up study in 2017 was to assess the prevalence of cardiac sequelae in the same 51 first stage and 18 second stage HAT patients 12-13 years after their treatment by conducting a clinical examination and an ECG. A control group matched by age (± 5 years), sex and whenever possible form the same village was enrolled. There were no significant differences in the prevalence of cardiac symptoms and in ECG findings between patients and their controls at the time of the follow-up evaluation. Repolarization changes disappeared or improved in 24.7% of HAT patients and were even less frequent than in the control group. Peripheral low voltage was the only parameter that increased over time in HAT patients and in three patients, new conduction problems in the ECG (ventricular bigeminy, RBBB, and bifascicular block) could be found, although none of these findings was clinically significant. However, the appearance of these conduction problems might represent an early indication of a HAT related cardiomyopathy or ongoing subclinical infection. This hypothesis would be supported by the findings of an older study in which antibodies (IFAT) against trypanosomiasis in 27% of Cameroonian patients with dilated cardiomyopathy compared to 2% in normal controls had been observed

    Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging for diagnosis and clinical management of suspected cardiac masses and tumours

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    Aims To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging from a risk-stratification and therapeutic-management perspective in patients with suspected cardiac tumours. Methods and results Cardiovascular magnetic resonance exams of 41 consecutive patients (aged 61 ± 14 years, 21 men) referred for evaluation of a suspected cardiac mass were reviewed for tumour morphology and signal characteristics in various unenhanced and contrast-enhanced sequences. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance-derived diagnosis and treatment were compared with clinical outcome and histology in patients undergoing surgery or autopsy (n = 20). In 18 of 41 patients, CMR excluded masses or reclassified them as normal variants; all were treated conservatively. In 23 of 41 patients, CMR diagnosed a neoplasm (14 ‘benign', 8 ‘malignant', and 1 'equivocal'); 18 of these patients were operated on, 2 managed conservatively, and 3 by palliation. During follow-up of 705 (inter-quartile range 303-1472) days, 13 patients died. No tumour-related deaths occurred in conservatively managed patients. Patients with a CMR-based diagnosis and treatment of benign tumour had a similar survival as patients without detectable tumour. Compared with histology, CMR correctly classified masses as ‘benign or malignant' in 95% of the cases. Tumour perfusion, invasiveness, localization, and pericardial fluid were valuable to distinguish between malignant and benign tumours. Soft tissue contrast and signal intensity patterns in various sequences were valuable for excluding neoplastic lesions and helped to obtain tissue characterization at the histological level in selected tumour cases, respectively. Conclusion Comprehensive CMR provides a confident risk-stratification and clinical-management tool in patients with suspected tumours. Patients where CMR excludes tumours can be managed conservativel

    Low-dose coronary artery calcium scoring compared to the standard protocol.

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    BACKGROUND We aimed to compare coronary artery calcium scoring (CACS) with computed tomography (CT) with 80 and 120 kVp in a large patient population and to establish whether there is a difference in risk classification between the two scores. METHODS Patients with suspected CAD undergoing MPS were included. All underwent standard CACS assessment with 120-kVp tube voltage and with 80 kVp. Two datasets (low-dose and standard) were generated and compared. Risk classes (0 to 25, 25 to 50, 50 to 75, 75 to 90, and > 90%) were recorded. RESULTS 1511 patients were included (793 males, age 69 ± 9.1 years). There was a very good correlation between scores calculated with 120 and 80 kVp (R = 0.94, R2 = 0.88, P < .001), with Bland-Altman limits of agreement of - 563.5 to 871.9 and a bias of - 154.2. The proportion of patients assigned to the < 25% percentile class (P = .03) and with CACS = 0 differed between the two protocols (n = 264 vs 437, P < .001). CONCLUSION In a large patient population, despite a good correlation between CACS calculated with standard and low-dose CT, there is a systematic underestimation of CACS with the low-dose protocol. This may have an impact especially on the prognostic value of the calcium score, and the established "power of zero" may no longer be warranted if CACS is assessed with low-dose CT
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