2,515 research outputs found
Validity and usability of a smart ball–driven serious game to monitor grip strength in independent elderlies
Telemonitoring is one of the most expedient answers to the strong need for preventive care imposed by the rapidly aging society. We propose an innovative solution to the detection of early signs of frailty by presenting a serious game controlled by a smart sensorized soft plastic ball, designed to achieve continuous home-based monitoring of muscle weakness in older adults. Design, development, and testing of the smart ball and of the game interface devised to guide the monitoring procedure are presented. Reliability and concurrent validity of the system in measuring maximal grip strength against the clinical standard Jamar\uae were evaluated. Serious game usability and acceptance were investigated on 26 elderlies. Smart ball and Jamar measurements were well correlated (0.76 and 0.80 for dominant and non-dominant hands) and test\u2013retest reliability of pressure measurements was excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.94). The serious game was well accepted by the 96.1 percent of participants, who provided a strongly positive usability score (87.7/100). The smart ball\u2013driven serious game demonstrated excellent reliability and good validity in measuring grip strength. The proposed smart ball\u2013driven serious game can be used for home self-monitoring of grip strength in elderlies
Precision tests of the Standard Model with leptonic and semileptonic kaon decays
We present a global analysis of leptonic and semileptonic kaon decays data,
including all recent results by BNL-E865, KLOE, KTeV, ISTRA+, and NA48.
Experimental results are critically reviewed and combined, taking into account
theoretical (both analytical and numerical) constraints on the semileptonic
kaon form factors. This analysis leads to a very accurate determination of Vus
and allows us to perform several stringent tests of the Standard Model
Three-Dimensional Self-Navigated T2 Mapping for the Detection of Acute Cellular Rejection After Orthotopic Heart Transplantation.
T2 mapping is a magnetic resonance imaging technique measuring T2 relaxation time, which increases with the myocardial tissue water content. Myocardial edema is a component of acute cellular rejection (ACR) after heart transplantation. This pilot study compares in heart transplantation recipients a novel high resolution 3-dimensional (3D) T2-mapping technique with standard 2-dimensional (2D) T2-mapping for ACR detection.
Consecutive asymptomatic patients (n = 26) underwent both 3D T2 mapping and reference 2D T2 mapping magnetic resonance imaging on the day of endomyocardial biopsy (EMB). 3D T2 maps were obtained at an isotropic spatial resolution of 1.72 mm (voxel volume 5.1 mm(3)). 2D and 3D maps were matched anatomically, and maximum segmental T2 values were compared blinded to EMB results. In addition, all 3D T2 maps were rendered as 3D images and inspected for foci of T2 elevation.
T2 values of segments from 2D and reformatted 3D T2 maps agreed (p > 0.5). The highest 2D segmental T2 values were 49.9 ± 4.0 ms (no ACR = 0R, n = 18), 48.9 ± 0.8 ms (mild ACR = 1R, n = 3), and 65.0 ms (moderate ACR = 2R). Rendered 3D T2 maps of cases with 1R showed foci with significantly elevated T2 signal (T2 = 58.2 ± 3.6 ms); 5 cases (28%) in the 0R group showed foci with increased T2 values (>2 SD above adjacent tissue) that were not visible on the 2D T2 maps.
This pilot study in a small cohort suggests equivalency of standard segmental analysis between 3D and 2D T2-mapping. 3D T2 mapping provides a spatial resolution that permits detection of foci with elevated T2 in patients with mild ACR
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Patient-Reported Satisfaction and Study Drug Discontinuation: Post-Hoc Analysis of Findings from ROCKET AF.
IntroductionPatient-reported outcomes (PROs) and satisfaction endpoints are increasingly important in clinical trials and may be associated with treatment adherence. In this post hoc substudy from ROCKET AF, we examined whether patient-reported satisfaction was associated with study drug discontinuation.MethodsROCKET AF (n = 14,264) compared rivaroxaban with warfarin for prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation. We analyzed treatment satisfaction scores: the Anti-Clot Treatment Scale (ACTS) and Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication version II (TSQM II). We compared satisfaction with study drug between the two treatment arms, and examined the association between satisfaction and patient-driven study drug discontinuation (stopping study drug due to withdrawal of consent, noncompliance, or loss to follow-up).ResultsA total of 1577 (11%) patients participated in the Patient Satisfaction substudy; 1181 (8.3%) completed both the ACTS and TSQM II 4 weeks after starting study drug. Patients receiving rivaroxaban did not experience significant differences in satisfaction compared with those receiving warfarin. During a median follow-up of 1.6 years, 448 premature study drug discontinuations occurred (213 rivaroxaban group; 235 warfarin group), of which 116 (26%) were patient-driven (52 [24%] rivaroxaban group; 64 [27%] warfarin group). No significant differences were observed between satisfaction level and rates of patient-driven study drug discontinuation.ConclusionsStudy drug satisfaction did not predict rate of study drug discontinuation. No significant difference was observed between satisfaction with warfarin and rivaroxaban, as expected given the double-blind trial design. Although these results are negative, the importance of PRO data will only increase, and these analyses may inform future studies that explore the relationship between drug-satisfaction PROs, adherence, and clinical outcomes. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV: NCT00403767.FundingThe ROCKET AF trial was funded by Johnson & Johnson and Bayer
Do Omega-3 fatty acids prevent atrial fibrillation after open heart surgery? A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
OBJECTIVES: N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids have been proposed as a novel treatment for preventing postoperative atrial fibrillation due to their potential anti-inflammatory and anti-arrhythmic effects. However, randomized studies have yielded conflicting results. The objective of this study is to review randomized trials of N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid use for postoperative atrial fibrillation. METHODS: Using the CENTRAL, PUBMED, EMBASE, and LILACS databases, a literature search was conducted to identify all of the studies in human subjects that reported the effects of N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids on the prevention of postoperative atrial fibrillation in cardiac surgery patients. The final search was performed on January 30, 2011. There was no language restriction, and the search strategy only involved terms for N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (or fish oil), atrial fibrillation, and cardiac surgery. To be included, the studies had to be randomized (open or blinded), and the enrolled patients had to be >18 years of age. RESULTS: Four randomized studies (three double-blind, one open-label) that enrolled 538 patients were identified. The patients were predominantly male, the mean age was 62.3 years, and most of the patients exhibited a normal left atrial size and ejection fraction. N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid use was not associated with a reduction in postoperative atrial fibrillation. Similar results were observed when the open-label study was excluded. CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to suggest that treatment with N-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids reduces postoperative atrial fibrillation. Therefore, their routine use in patients undergoing cardiac surgery is not recommended
Single centre experience of the application of self navigated 3D whole heart cardiovascular magnetic resonance for the assessment of cardiac anatomy in congenital heart disease.
BACKGROUND: For free-breathing cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), the self-navigation technique recently emerged, which is expected to deliver high-quality data with a high success rate. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that self-navigated 3D-CMR enables the reliable assessment of cardiovascular anatomy in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) and to define factors that affect image quality.
METHODS: CHD patients ≥2 years-old and referred for CMR for initial assessment or for a follow-up study were included to undergo a free-breathing self-navigated 3D CMR at 1.5T. Performance criteria were: correct description of cardiac segmental anatomy, overall image quality, coronary artery visibility, and reproducibility of great vessels diameter measurements. Factors associated with insufficient image quality were identified using multivariate logistic regression.
RESULTS: Self-navigated CMR was performed in 105 patients (55% male, 23 ± 12y). Correct segmental description was achieved in 93% and 96% for observer 1 and 2, respectively. Diagnostic quality was obtained in 90% of examinations, and it increased to 94% if contrast-enhanced. Left anterior descending, circumflex, and right coronary arteries were visualized in 93%, 87% and 98%, respectively. Younger age, higher heart rate, lower ejection fraction, and lack of contrast medium were independently associated with reduced image quality. However, a similar rate of diagnostic image quality was obtained in children and adults.
CONCLUSION: In patients with CHD, self-navigated free-breathing CMR provides high-resolution 3D visualization of the heart and great vessels with excellent robustness
Antiarrhythmic Medication for Atrial Fibrillation (AIM-AF) study: A physician survey of sotalol use and patient monitoring in the EU and USA
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: Private company. Main funding source(s): Sanofi
Introduction
In the recent 2020 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines, sotalol was downgraded from a Class IA to a llbA recommendation and advised not to be prescribed in patients with specific co-morbidities. All patients given sotalol should also be closely monitored for proarrhythmic risk factors. To date, American guidelines have not changed. Our study sought to understand the use of sotalol in AF patients and monitoring compliance across the USA and in the EU, with regards to the recent ESC guideline change.
Method
An online physician survey of cardiologists, cardiac electrophysiologists (EPs) and interventional EPs (N = 569) was conducted in the USA, Germany, Italy and the UK. All respondents were actively treating ≥10 AF patients who received drug therapy and/or who had received or were referred for ablation. This survey included topics on AF types and antiarrhythmic drug (AAD) treatment practices in those with AF +/- co-morbidities (including left ventricular hypertrophy [LVH], LV heart failure, and sinus node dysfunction or renal impairment).
Results
Sotalol was prescribed across all patient sub-groups, with high use in those with hypertension (49% of physicians) and revascularised coronary artery disease (44%). Sotalol use was consistently higher among US respondents than EU clinicians across co-morbidity categories (heart failure with reduced ejection fraction: 25% vs 14% [guideline deviation]; hypertension: 53% vs 44%; valve disease: 33% vs 23%; recent myocardial infarction [MI]: 44% vs 22%; old MI: 52% vs 31%, respectively). Use was also generally higher among EPs compared with cardiologists, but remained low in patients with minimal or no structural heart disease across all groups. Many respondents prescribed sotalol in those with LVH (35%) or renal impairment (22%), despite guidelines advising against this due to proarrhythmia risk. This contrasts with expressed respondent concerns, as 43% cited ventricular proarrythmia risk as a reason for not using sotalol. Although respondents noted concern over such risks, as per the new guidelines, routine monitoring for these factors was not performed as follows: electrocardiograms (ECG) (19% [US: 23%; EU: 15%]), renal function assessment (42% [US: 36%; EU: 50%]) or electrolyte monitoring (48% [US: 49%; EU: 46%]). Respondents reported sotalol is typically initiated in hospital (45% of patients) or in outpatients with intensive ECG monitoring (37%), but is also being started in non-monitored outpatients (19%).
Conclusions
Although sotalol use among EU clinicians was lower compared with the USA, which may reflect recent ESC guideline changes, the extent of monitoring practices that would indicate avoidance in those with proarrhythmic risk factors was insufficient. The lack of routine monitoring for specific factors, such as renal impairment or electrolytes, and unmonitored outpatient initiation highlights an ongoing need for further education on maximising safety when using AADs. Abstract Figure
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