17 research outputs found

    What is this image? 2018: Image 1 result

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    Non-invasive cardiovascular imaging for myocardial necrosis, viability, stunning and hibernation: evidence from an umbrella review encompassing 12 systematic reviews, 286 studies, and 201,680 patients

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    The concomitant presence of myocardial necrosis with myocardial ischemia, stunning and hibernation may complicate appraisal of left ventricular (LV) function and patient management. Several imaging modalities have been proposed for the accurate assessment of myocardial necrosis, viability, stunning and hibernation, with mixed results. We aimed to review the evidence base on myocardial necrosis, stunning and hibernation by conducting an umbrella review (i.e. overview of systematic reviews)

    Oral antiplatelet therapy in the elderly undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention: an umbrella review

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    Percutaneous coronary intervention has become a mainstay in the management of coronary artery disease. While initially advanced age was considered a relative contraindication to invasive management of coronary artery disease, current cardiovascular practice stands solidly on an early invasive approach for elderly patients, typically based on radial access and drug-eluting stent implantation. Since the advent of coronary stents, oral antiplatelet therapy has proved crucial to maximize the benefits and minimize the risks of stenting, and this holds even truer in older patients rather than in younger ones. Indeed, the elderly is typically at higher risk of thrombotic events as well as bleeding complications, and thus careful decision making must be exercised to prescribe the most appropriate antiplatelet regimen. We thus conducted an umbrella review with scoping purposes on oral antiplatelet therapy in elderly patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention, retrieving 8 pertinent systematic reviews. We found that, while several drugs are available, ranging from aspirin to cilostazol, clopidogrel, dipyridamole, prasugrel, ticagrelor, and ticlopidine, most commonly a dual antiplatelet therapy comprising aspirin and a P2Y12 inhibitor is recommended, with subtle adjustments for pretreatment, loading, dose, duration, escalation or de-escalation, with the potential adjunct in selected patients of novel oral anticoagulants. Indeed, a flexible and individualized approach to oral antiplatelet therapy in elderly patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention is paramount, factoring patient features (exploiting thrombotic, bleeding and frailty scores), triage (including when appropriate non-invasive assessment of anatomic and functional significance of coronary artery disease), angiographic and other invasive imaging features, interventional technique, stent choice, rehabilitation, and secondary prevention

    Myocardial perfusion imaging in patients with unprotected left main disease

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    The management of patients with unprotected left main (LM) coronary artery disease remains challenging, with recent data casting a shadow of doubt on the safety of percutaneous coronary intervention. We aimed at describing the features of patients undergoing myocardial perfusion imaging subsequently found to have LM disease

    Impact of coronary revascularization on the clinical and scintigraphic outlook of patients with myocardial ischemia

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    Aims The impact of coronary revascularization on outcomes and ischemic burden among patients with objective proof of ischemia is not yet established. We appraised the impact of revascularization on outcomes and residual ischemia in patients with objective evidence of ischemia at myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (MPS).Methods We queried our database for stable patients with myocardial ischemia at MPS, excluding those with prior myocardial infarction, systolic dysfunction, or cardiomyopathy. The impact of revascularization (defined as revascularization as first follow-up event) on outcomes and changes in myocardial ischemia at repeat MPS was appraised with propensity-matched analyses.Results From 6195 patients, propensity matching yielded 1262 pairs of patients undergoing revascularization versus not undergoing revascularization. After 35.2 +/- 23.9 months, revascularization was associated with lower risks of cardiac death [2 (0.2%) versus 10 (0.8%) in those not revascularized, P = 0.038] and of the composite of cardiac death or myocardial infarction [17 (1.3%) versus 37 (2.9%), P = 0.007]. In addition, revascularization was associated with a higher rate of improvement in ischemia degree after 28.1 +/- 20.7 months of follow-up (P<0.001), with 257 (69.3%) patients with moderate or severe ischemia at baseline MPS improving after revascularization versus 136 (42.0%) in the nonrevascularization group. Conversely, revascularization did not prove impactful on follow-up MPS in patients with only minimal or mild ischemia at baseline MPS (P<0.001).Conclusion In a large series of patients with objective evidence of myocardial ischemia at MPS, especially when moderate or severe, revascularization was associated with a better clinical prognosis and a lower ischemic burden at repeat MPS

    Prognostic accuracy of myocardial perfusion imaging in octogenarians

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    BACKGROUND: Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) has an established role in the work-up of coronary artery disease (CAD), but its comparative accuracy is debated in elderly patients. We examined a large administrative database to appraise the performance of MPI in octogenarians. METHODS: Our institutional database was queried for patients undergoing MPI without recent coronary revascularization or myocardial infarction (MI). We compared baseline, procedural, diagnostic, and prognostic features in patients aged < 80 vs ≥ 80 years with bivariate and propensity-adjusted analyses. RESULTS: From 13,254 patients, 12,737 (96.1%) were < 80 years old and 517 (3.9%) ≥ 80 years. Octogenarians were less likely to undergo exercise testing, had more severe and extensive myocardial ischemia (all P < 0.001), whereas CAD was more prevalent and diffuse in them (P = 0.012), and major adverse cardiac events more common during follow-up (P = 0.009). Diagnostic accuracy of MPI was similar or higher in octogenarians than in younger patients (e.g., sensitivity for three-vessel disease 92% in octogenarians vs 91% in younger patients), as was prognostic accuracy. Using propensity-matched analyses, MPI again yielded satisfactory prognostic accuracy in octogenarians. CONCLUSIONS: Use of MPI in octogenarians is associated with similar or better prognostic accuracy than in younger subjects

    Temporal trends in the prevalence, severity, and localization of myocardial ischemia and necrosis at myocardial perfusion imaging after myocardial infarction

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    The definition, presentation, and management of myocardial infarction (MI) have changed substantially in the last decade. Whether these changes have impacted on the presence, severity, and localization of necrosis at myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) has not been appraised to date. Subjects undergoing MPI and reporting a history of clinical MI were shortlisted. We focused on the presence, severity, and localization of necrosis at MPI with a retrospective single-center analysis. A total of 10,476 patients were included, distinguishing 5 groups according to the period in which myocardial perfusion scintigraphy had been performed (2004 to 2005, 2006 to 2007, 2008 to 2009, 2010 to 2011, 2012 to 2013). Trend analysis showed over time a significant worsening in baseline features (e.g., age, diabetes mellitus, and Q waves at electrocardiogram), whereas medical therapy and revascularization were offered with increasing frequency. Over the years, there was also a lower prevalence of normal MPI (from 16.8% to 13.6%) and ischemic MPI (from 35.6% to 32.8%), and a higher prevalence of ischemic and necrotic MPI (from 12.0% to 12.7%) or solely necrotic MPI (from 35.7% to 40.9%, p <0.001). Yet the prevalence of severe ischemia decreased over time from 11.4% to 2.0%, with a similar trend for moderate ischemia (from 15.9% to 11.8%, p <0.001). Similarly sobering results were wound for the prevalence of severe necrosis (from 19.8% to 8.2%) and moderate necrosis (from 8.5% to 7.8%, p = 0.028). These trends were largely confirmed at regional level and after propensity score matching. In conclusion, the outlook of stable patients with previous MI has substantially improved in the last decade, with a decrease in the severity of residual myocardial ischemia and necrosis, despite an apparent worsening in baseline features
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