944 research outputs found

    Predictive role of BNP/NT-proBNP in non-heart failure patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation: An updated systematic review

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    Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a growing public health issue, associated with significant morbidity and mortality. In addition to pharmacological therapy, catheter ablation is an effective strategy in restoring and maintaining sinus rhythm. However, ablation is not without risk, and AF recurs in a significant proportion of patients. Non-invasive, easily accessible markers or indices that could stratify patients depending on the likelihood of a successful outcome following ablation would allow us to select the most appropriate patients for the procedure, reducing the AF recurrence rate and exposure to potentially life-threatening risks. There has been much attention paid to brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) as possible predictive markers of successful ablation. Several studies have demonstrated an association between higher pre-ablation levels of these peptides, and a greater likelihood of AF recurrence. Therefore, there may be a role for measuring brain natriuretic peptides levels when selecting patients for catheter ablation

    Does presence of left ventricular contractile reserve improve response to cardiac resynchronization therapy? An updated meta-analysis

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    BACKGROUND: Up to a third of patients undergoing cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) do not have a clinical or echocardiographic response. It is also unclear, whether contractile reserve (CR) could predict CRT response. This meta-analysis examines whether the presence of CR improves response to CRT and whether this is modulated by other clinical factors. METHODS: Search of PubMed/EMBASE/Cochrane databases for articles examining response to CRT stratified by the presence or not of CR. End-point classified as clinical or echocardiographic response. The analysis compared response to CRT (echocardiographic or clinical) between patients with or without CR. RESULTS: 824 patients in 12 studies were included. The presence of left ventricular CR was associated with a significant reduction in echocardiographic non-responders to CRT compared to patients without CR (OR: 0.16, 95% CI 0.08–0.33, p < 0.00001). The presence of left ventricular CR was associated with a significant reduction in clinical non-responders to CRT compared to patients without CR (OR: 0.23, 95% CI 0.14–0.37, p < 0.00001). Sensitivity analysis showed no difference in response when pooling studies using left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) or non-LVEF markers of CR. Meta-regression showed that CR was associated with lower rates of non-responders and this was more pronounced in patients with a narrower mean QRS complex. CONCLUSIONS: Identification of CR is associated with improved response to CRT. Importantly, QRS width is a potential moderator variable which can explain part of the heterogeneity in echo response. The combination of CR and QRS width may modulate the response to CR

    Catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia in patients with cardiac sarcoidosis: a systematic review

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    AIMS: Cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) is associated with a poor prognosis. Important features of CS include heart failure, conduction abnormalities, and ventricular arrhythmias. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) is often refractory to antiarrhythmic drugs (AAD) and immunosuppression. Catheter ablation has emerged as a treatment option for recurrent VT. However, data on the efficacy and outcomes of VT ablation in this context are sparse. METHODS AND RESULTS: A systematic search was performed on PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane database (from inception to September 2016) with included studies providing a minimum of information on CS patients undergoing VT ablation: age, gender, VT cycle length, CS diagnosis criteria, and baseline medications. Five studies reporting on 83 patients were identified. The mean age of patients was 50 ± 8 years, 53/30 (males/females) with a maximum of 56 patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy, mean ejection fraction was 39.1 ± 3.1% and 94% had an implantable cardioverter defibrillator in situ. The median number of VTs was 3 (2.6–4.9)/patient, mean cycle length of 360 ms (326–400 ms). Hundred percent of VTs received endocardial ablation, and 18% required epicardial ablation. The complication rates were 4.7–6.3%. Relapse occurred in 45 (54.2%) patients with an incidence of relapse 0.33 (95% confidence interval 0.108–0.551, P < 0.004). Employing a less stringent endpoint (i.e. freedom from arrhythmia or reduction of ventricular arrhythmia burden), 61 (88.4%) patients improved following ablation. CONCLUSIONS: These data support the utilization of catheter ablation in selected CS cases resistant to medical treatment. However, data are derived from observational non-controlled case series, with low-methodological quality. Therefore, future well-designed, randomized controlled trials, or large-scale registries are required

    Same-day discharge following catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: A safe and cost-effective approach

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    Introduction: The frequency of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) has increased dramatically, stretching resources. Discharge on the same day as treatment may increase the efficiency and throughput. There are limited data regarding the safety of this strategy. / Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients undergoing AF ablation in a tertiary center and in a district general hospital, and identified those discharged on the same day of treatment. The safety endpoint was any complication and/or presentation to hospital in the 48‐h and at 30 days postdischarge. We performed an economic analysis to calculate potential cost saving. / Results: Among a total population of 2628 patients, we identified 727 subjects (61.1 ± 12.5 years, 69.6% male) undergoing day‐case AF ablation. Cryoballoon technique was used in 79.2% of the day‐cases, and 91.6% of the procedures were performed under conscious sedation. 1.8% (13) of the participants met the safety composite endpoint at 48‐h, however only 0.7% (5) required at least 1 day of hospitalization. Bleeding or hematoma at the femoral access site (0.5%) and pericarditic chest pain (0.5%) were the main reasons for readmission. None experienced cardiac tamponade or other life‐threatening complications in the 48‐h postdischarge. Overall rate of complication and/or presentation to hospital at 30 days was 3.7%. Our day‐case policy resulted in an annual cost‐saving of approximately of £83 927 for our hospital. / Conclusion: In this large multicentre cohort, same‐day discharge in selected patients following AF ablation appears to be safe and cost‐effective, with a very low rate of early readmission or post‐discharge complication

    Complexity and integrability in 4D bi-rational maps with two invariants

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    In this letter we give fourth-order autonomous recurrence relations with two invariants, whose degree growth is cubic or exponential. These examples contradict the common belief that maps with sufficiently many invariants can have at most quadratic growth. Cubic growth may reflect the existence of non-elliptic fibrations of invariants, whereas we conjecture that the exponentially growing cases lack the necessary conditions for the applicability of the discrete Liouville theorem.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure

    Galilean quantum gravity with cosmological constant and the extended q-Heisenberg algebra

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    We define a theory of Galilean gravity in 2+1 dimensions with cosmological constant as a Chern-Simons gauge theory of the doubly-extended Newton-Hooke group, extending our previous study of classical and quantum gravity in 2+1 dimensions in the Galilean limit. We exhibit an r-matrix which is compatible with our Chern-Simons action (in a sense to be defined) and show that the associated bi-algebra structure of the Newton-Hooke Lie algebra is that of the classical double of the extended Heisenberg algebra. We deduce that, in the quantisation of the theory according to the combinatorial quantisation programme, much of the quantum theory is determined by the quantum double of the extended q-deformed Heisenberg algebra.Comment: 22 page

    Adenosine-guided pulmonary vein isolation versus conventional pulmonary vein isolation in patients undergoing atrial fibrillation ablation: An updated meta-analysis

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    BACKGROUND: Recurrent atrial fibrillation episodes following pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) are frequently due to reconnection of PVs. Adenosine can unmask dormant conduction, leading to additional ablation to improve AF-free survival. We performed a meta-analysis of the literature to assess the role of adenosine testing in patients undergoing atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation. METHODS: PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases were searched through until December 2015 for studies reporting on the role of adenosine guided-PVI versus conventional PVI in AF ablation. RESULTS: Eleven studies including 4099 patients undergoing AF ablation were identified to assess the impact of adenosine testing. Mean age of the population was 61 ± 3 years: 25% female, 70% with paroxysmal AF. Follow up period of 12.5 ± 5.1 months. A significant benefit was observed in the studies published before 2013 (OR = 1.75; 95%CI 1.32–2.33, p < 0.001, I2 = 11%), retrospective (OR = 2.05; 95%CI 1.47–2.86, p < 0.001, I2 = 0%) and single-centre studies (OR = 1.58; 95%CI 1.19–2.10, p = 0.002, I2 = 30%). However, analysis of studies published since 2013 (OR = 1.41; 95% CI 0.87–2.29, p = 0.17, I2 = 75%) does not support any benefit from an adenosine-guided strategy. Similar findings were observed by pooling prospective case-control (OR = 1.39; 95%CI 0.93–2.07, p = 0.11, I2 = 75%), and prospective randomized controlled studies (OR = 1.62; 95%CI 0.81–3.24, p = 0.17, I2 = 86%). Part of the observed high heterogeneity can be explained by parameters such as dormant PVs percentage, use of new technology, improvement of center/operator experience, patients' characteristics including gender, age, and AF type. CONCLUSIONS: Pooling of contemporary data from high quality prospective case–control & prospective randomized controlled studies fails to show the benefit of adenosine-guided strategy to improve AF ablation outcomes

    Initial experience of the High-Density Grid catheter in patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation

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    Purpose: A significant proportion of patients undergoing catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) experience arrhythmia recurrence. This is mostly due to pulmonary vein reconnection (PVR). Whether mapping using High-Density Wave (HDW) technology is superior to standard bipolar (SB) configuration at detecting PVR is unknown. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of HDW technology compared to SB mapping in identifying PVR. / Methods: High-Density (HD) multipolar Grid catheters were used to create left atrial geometries and voltage maps in 36 patients undergoing catheter ablation for AF (either due to recurrence of an atrial arrhythmia from previous AF ablation or de novo AF ablation). Nineteen SB maps were also created and compared. Ablation was performed until pulmonary vein isolation was achieved. / Results: Median time of mapping with HDW was 22.3 [IQR: 8.2] min. The number of points collected with HDW (13299.6±1362.8 vs 6952.8±841.9, p<0.001) and used (2337.3±158.0 vs 1727.5±163.8, p<0.001) was significantly higher compared to SB. Moreover, HDW was able to identify more sleeves (16 for right and 8 for left veins), where these were confirmed electrically silent by SB, with significantly increased PVR sleeve size as identified by HDW (p<0.001 for both right and left veins). Importantly, with the use of HDW, the ablation strategy changed in 23 patients (64% of targeted veins) with a significantly increased number of lesions required as compared to SB for right (p=0.005) and left veins (p=0.003). / Conclusion: HDW technology is superior to SB in detecting pulmonary vein reconnections. This could potentially result into a significant change in ablation strategy and possibly to increased success rate following pulmonary vein isolation

    Temporal perception deficits in schizophrenia: integration is the problem, not deployment of attentions

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    Patients with schizophrenia are known to have impairments in sensory processing. In order to understand the specific temporal perception deficits of schizophrenia, we investigated and determined to what extent impairments in temporal integration can be dissociated from attention deployment using Attentional Blink (AB). Our findings showed that there was no evident deficit in the deployment of attention in patients with schizophrenia. However, patients showed an increased temporal integration deficit within a hundred-millisecond timescale. The degree of such integration dysfunction was correlated with the clinical manifestations of schizophrenia. There was no difference between individuals with/without schizotypal personality disorder in temporal integration. Differently from previous studies using the AB, we did not find a significant impairment in deployment of attention in schizophrenia. Instead, we used both theoretical and empirical approaches to show that previous findings (using the suppression ratio to correct for the baseline difference) produced a systematic exaggeration of the attention deficits. Instead, we modulated the perceptual difficulty of the task to bring the baseline levels of target detection between the groups into closer alignment. We found that the integration dysfunction rather than deployment of attention is clinically relevant, and thus should be an additional focus of research in schizophrenia

    Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: a European observational multicentre study

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    AIMS: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is common in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Data on the efficacy of catheter ablation of AF in HCM patients are sparse. METHODS AND RESULTS: Observational multicentre study in 137 HCM patients (mean age 55.0 ± 13.4, 29.1% female; 225 ablation procedures). We investigated (i) the efficacy of catheter ablation for AF beyond the initial 12 months; (ii) the available risk scores, stratification schemes and genotype as potential predictors of arrhythmia relapse, and (iii) the impact of cryoballoon vs. radiofrequency in procedural outcomes. Mean follow-up was 43.8 ± 37.0 months. Recurrences after the initial 12-month period post-ablation were frequent, and 24 months after the index procedure, nearly all patients with persistent AF had relapsed, and only 40% of those with paroxysmal AF remained free from arrhythmia recurrence. The APPLE score demonstrated a modest discriminative capacity for AF relapse post-ablation (c-statistic 0.63, 95% CI 0.52-0.75; P = 0.022), while the risk stratification schemes for sudden death did not. On multivariable analysis, left atrium diameter and LV apical aneurysm were independent predictors of recurrence. Fifty-eight patients were genotyped; arrhythmia-free survival was similar among subjects with different gene mutations. Rate of procedural complications was high (9.3%), although reducing over time. Outcome for cryoballoon and radiofrequency ablation was comparable. CONCLUSION: Very late AF relapses post-ablation is common in HCM patients, especially in those with persistent AF. Left atrium size, LV apical aneurysm, and the APPLE score might contribute to identify subjects at higher risk of arrhythmia recurrence. First-time cryoballoon is comparable with radiofrequency ablation
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