83 research outputs found
Detection and Grading of Coronary Allograft Vasculopathy in Post Transplanted Heart Recipients Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Almanac 2012: congenital heart disease. The national society journals present selected research that has driven recent advances in clinical cardiology.
Almanah 2012. donosi spoznaje iz posljednjih radova o priroÄenim srÄanim bolestima, objavljenih u najvaĆŸnijim kardioloĆĄkim Äasopisim. U njemu je citirano viĆĄe od 100 radova. Formirane su zasebne cjeline koje su oznaÄene podnaslovima, kako bi se Äitatelji mogli usredotoÄiti na ĆŸeljeno podruÄje interesa, ali svrha rada nije sveobuhvatni pregled svih priroÄenih srÄanih bolesti.This Almanac highlights recent papers on congenital heart disease in the major cardiac journals. Over 100 articles are cited. Subheadings are used to group relevant papers and allow readers to focus on their areas of interest, but are not meant to be comprehensive for all aspects of congenital cardiac disease
Almanac 2012: congenital heart disease. The national society journals present selected research that has driven recent advances in clinical cardiology.
Almanah 2012. donosi spoznaje iz posljednjih radova o priroÄenim srÄanim bolestima, objavljenih u najvaĆŸnijim kardioloĆĄkim Äasopisim. U njemu je citirano viĆĄe od 100 radova. Formirane su zasebne cjeline koje su oznaÄene podnaslovima, kako bi se Äitatelji mogli usredotoÄiti na ĆŸeljeno podruÄje interesa, ali svrha rada nije sveobuhvatni pregled svih priroÄenih srÄanih bolesti.This Almanac highlights recent papers on congenital heart disease in the major cardiac journals. Over 100 articles are cited. Subheadings are used to group relevant papers and allow readers to focus on their areas of interest, but are not meant to be comprehensive for all aspects of congenital cardiac disease
Living bioethics, theories and childrenâs consent to heart surgery
Background:
This analysis is about practical living bioethics and how law, ethics and sociology understand and respect childrenâs consent to, or refusal of, elective heart surgery. Analysis of underlying theories and influences will contrast legalistic bioethics with living bioethics. In-depth philosophical analysis compares social science traditions of positivism, interpretivism, critical theory and functionalism and applies them to bioethics and childhood, to examine how living bioethics may be encouraged or discouraged. Illustrative examples are drawn from research interviews and observations in two London paediatric cardiac units. This paper is one of a series on how the multidisciplinary cardiac team members all contribute to the complex mosaic of care when preparing and supporting familiesâ informed consent to surgery.
Results:
The living bioethics of justice, care and respect for children and their consent depends on theories and practices, contexts and relationships. These can all be undermined by unseen influences: the history of adult-centric ethics; developmental psychology theories; legal and financial pressures that require consent to be defined as an adult contract; management systems and daily routines in healthcare that can intimidate families and staff; social inequalities. Mainstream theories in the clinical ethics literature markedly differ from the living bioethics in clinical practices.
Conclusion:
We aim to contribute to raising standards of respectful paediatric bioethics and to showing the relevance of virtue and feminist ethics, childhood studies and childrenâs rights
Right ventricular dysfunction in children supported with pulsatile ventricular assist devices
ObjectivesTo describe the incidence and severity of right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) in pediatric ventricular assist device (VAD) recipients and to identify the preoperative characteristics associated with RVD and their effect on outcomes.MethodsChildren bridged to transplantation from 2004 to 2011 were included. RVD was defined as the use of a left VAD (LVAD) with an elevated central venous pressure of >16 mm Hg with inotropic therapy and/or inhaled nitric oxide for >96 hours or biventricular assist (BiVAD).ResultsA total of 57 children (median age, 2.97 years; range 35 days to 15.8 years) were supported. Of the 57, 43 (75%) had an LVAD, and of those, 10 developed RVD. The remaining 14 (25%) required BiVAD. Thus, RVD occurred in 24 of 57 patients (42%). Preoperative variables such as younger age (PÂ =Â .01), use of extracorporeal mechanical support (PÂ =Â .006), and elevated urea (PÂ =Â .03), creatinine (PÂ =Â .02), and bilirubin (PÂ =Â .001) were associated with RVD. Multiple logistic regression analysis indicated that elevated urea and extracorporeal mechanical support (odds ratio, 26.4; 95% confidence interval, 2.3-307.3; and odds ratio, 27.8; 95% confidence interval, 2.5-312.3, respectively) were risk factors for BiVAD. The patients who developed RVD on LVAD had a complicated postoperative course but excellent survival (100%), comparable to those with preserved right ventricular function (91%). The survival for those requiring BiVAD was reduced (71%).ConclusionsRVD occurred in approximately 40% of pediatric VAD recipients and affects their peri-implantation morbidity and bridging outcomes. Preoperative extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and elevated urea were risk factors for BiVAD. Additional studies of the management of RVD in children after VAD implantation are warranted
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Childrenâs understanding and consent to heart surgery: Multidisciplinary teamwork and moral experiences
Mainstream law and ethics literature on consent to childrenâs surgery contrasts with moral experiences of children and adults observed in two heart surgery centres. Research interviews were conducted with 45 practitioners and related experts, and with 16 families of children aged 6 to 15, admitted for non-urgent surgery, as well as an online survey. Thematic data analysis was informed by critical realism and childhood studies. Impersonal adult-centric mainstream literature assumes young children cannot consent. It is based on dichotomies: adult/child, competent/incompetent, respect or protect children, inform or distract them, use time swiftly or flexibly, verbal/non-verbal communication, respect or control children and reason/emotion. Through their moral experiences, adults and children resolve these seeming dichotomies. Through understanding young childrenâs reasoning and emotions about complex distressing decisions related to heart surgery, adults share knowledge, control, trust and respect with them. They see childrenâs consent or refusal before non-urgent surgery as a shared personal moral experience within the childâs life course, beyond mere legal compliance. Adults help children to understand and âwantâ the surgery that offers things they value: better health or to âbe more like their friendsâ. If children are not convinced, sometimes surgery is postponed or occasionally cancelled.</br
Age-related changes in intraventricular kinetic energy:a physiological or pathological adaptation?
International audienceAging has important deleterious effects on the cardiovascular system. We sought to compare intraventricular kinetic energy (KE) in healthy subjects of varying ages with subjects with ventricular dysfunction to understand if changes in energetic momentum may predispose individuals to heart failure. Four-dimensional flow MRI was acquired in 35 healthy subjects (age: 1â 67 yr) and 10 patients with left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (age: 28 â79 yr). Healthy subjects were divided into age quartiles (1st quartile: 16 yr, 2nd quartile: 17â32 yr, 3rd quartile: 33â 48 yr, and 4th quartile: 49 â 64 yr). KE was measured in the LV throughout the cardiac cycle and indexed to ventricular volume. In healthy subjects, two large peaks corresponding to systole and early diastole occurred during the cardiac cycle. A third smaller peak was seen during late diastole in eight adults. Systolic KE (P 0.182) and ejection fraction (P 0.921) were preserved through all age groups. Older adults showed a lower early peak diastolic KE compared with children (P 0.0001) and young adults (P 0.025). Subjects with LV dysfunction had reduced ejection fraction (P 0.001) and compared with older healthy adults exhibited a similar early peak diastolic KE (P 0.142) but with the addition of an elevated KE in diastasis (P 0.029). In healthy individuals, peak diastolic KE progressively decreases with age, whereas systolic peaks remain constant. Peak diastolic KE in the oldest subjects is comparable to those with LV dysfunction. Unique age-related changes in ventric-ular diastolic energetics might be physiological or herald subclin-ical pathology
Improved coronary magnetic resonance angiography using gadobenate dimeglumine in pediatric congenital heart disease
Background: CMRA in pediatrics remains challenging due to the smaller vessel size, high heart rates (HR), potential image degradation caused by limited patient cooperation and long acquisition times. High-relaxivity contrast agents have been shown to improve coronary imaging in adults, but limited data is available in children. We sought to investigate whether gadobenate dimeglumine (Gd-BOPTA) together with self-navigated inversion-prepared coronary magnetic resonance angiography (CMRA) sequence design improves coronary image quality in pediatric patients. Methods: Forty consecutive patients (mean age 6 ± 2.8 years; 73% males) were prospectively recruited for a 1.5-T MRI study under general anesthesia. Two electrocardiographic-triggered free breathing steady-state free precession (SSFP) angiography sequences (A and B) with isotropic spatial resolution (1.3 mm3) were acquired using a recently developed image-based self-navigation technique. Sequence A was acquired prior to contrast administration using T2 magnetization preparation (T2prep). Sequence B was acquired 5â8 min after a bolus of Gd-BOPTA with the T2prep replaced by an inversion recovery (IR) pulse to null the signal from the myocardium. Scan time, signal-to noise and contrast-to-noise ratios (SNR and CNR), vessel wall sharpness (VWS) and qualitative visual score for each sequence were compared. Results: Scan time was similar for both sequences (5.3 ± 1.8 vs 5.2 ± 1.5 min, p = .532) and average heart rate (78 ± 14.7 vs 78 ± 14.5 bpm, p = .443) remained constant throughout both acquisitions. Sequence B resulted in higher SNR (12.6 ± 4.4 vs 31.1 ± 7.4, p < .001) and CNR (9.0 ± 1.8 vs 13.5 ± 3.7, p < .001) and provided improved coronary visualization in all coronary territories (VWS A = 0.53 ± 0.07 vs B = 0.56 ± 0.07, p = .001; and visual scoring A = 3.8 ± 0.59 vs B = 4.1 ± 0.53, p < .001). The number of non-diagnostic coronary segments was lower for sequence B [A = 42 (13.1%) segments vs B = 33 (10.3%) segments; p = .002], and contrary to the pre-contrast sequence, never involved a proximal segment. These results were independent of the patients' age, body surface area and HR. Conclusions: The use of Gd-BOPTA with a 3D IR SSFP CMRA sequence results in improved coronary visualization in small infants and young children with high HR within a clinically acceptable scan time
Coronary MR angiography at 3T: fat suppression versus water-fat separation
Objectives: To compare Dixon water-fat suppression with spectral pre-saturation with inversion recovery (SPIR) at 3T for coronary magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and to demonstrate the feasibility of fat suppressed coronary MRA at 3T without administration of a contrast agent. Materials and methods: Coronary MRA with Dixon water-fat separation or with SPIR fat suppression was compared on a 3T scanner equipped with a 32-channel cardiac receiver coil. Eight healthy volunteers were examined. Contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), right coronary artery (RCA), and left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery sharpness and length were measured and statistically compared. Two experienced cardiologists graded the visual image quality of reformatted Dixon and SPIR images (1: poor quality to 5: excellent quality). Results: Coronary MRA images in healthy volunteers showed improved contrast with the Dixon technique compared to SPIR (CNR blood-fat: Dixon = 14.9 ± 2.9 and SPIR = 13.9 ± 2.1; p = 0.08, CNR blood-myocardium: Dixon = 10.2 ± 2.7 and SPIR = 9.11 ± 2.6; p = 0.1). The Dixon method led to similar fat suppression (fat SNR with Dixon: 2.1 ± 0.5 vs. SPIR: 2.4 ± 1.2, p = 0.3), but resulted in significantly increased SNR of blood (blood SNR with Dixon: 19.9 ± 4.5 vs. SPIR: 15.5 ± 3.1, p < 0.05). This means the residual fat signal is slightly lower with the Dixon compared to the SIPR technique (although not significant), while the SNR of blood is significantly higher with the Dixon technique. Vessel sharpness of the RCA was similar for Dixon and SPIR (57 ± 7 % vs. 56 ± 9 %, p = 0.2), while the RCA visualized vessel length was increased compared to SPIR fat suppression (107 ± 21 vs. 101 ± 21 mm, p < 0.001). For the LAD, vessel sharpness (50 ± 13 % vs. 50 ± 7 %, p = 0.4) and vessel length (92 ± 46 vs. 90 ± 47 mm, p = 0.4) were similar with both techniques. Consequently, the Dixon technique resulted in an improved visual score of the coronary arteries in the water fat separated images of healthy subjects (RCA: 4.6 ± 0.5 vs. 4.1 ± 0.7, p = 0.01, LAD: 4.1 ± 0.7 vs. 3.5 ± 0.8, p = 0.007). Conclusions: Dixon water-fat separation can significantly improve coronary artery image quality without the use of a contrast agent at 3T
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