We describe the first case of acute cardiac injury directly linked to myocardial localization of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) in a 69‐year‐old patient with flu‐like ...symptoms rapidly degenerating into respiratory distress, hypotension, and cardiogenic shock. The patient was successfully treated with venous‐arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and mechanical ventilation. Cardiac function fully recovered in 5 days and ECMO was removed. Endomyocardial biopsy demonstrated low‐grade myocardial inflammation and viral particles in the myocardium suggesting either a viraemic phase or, alternatively, infected macrophage migration from the lung.
Abstract Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the most frequent cause of death in both men and women. Many studies on CVD have included mostly men, and the knowledge about coronary artery disease ...(CAD) in women has largely been extrapolated from studies primarily focused on men. The influence of various risk factors is different between men and women; untoward effects of smoking of CAD are greater in women than men. Furthermore, the effect of the menopause is important in women, with higher incidence of plaque erosion in young women versus greater incidence of plaque rupture in older women. This review focuses on differences in plaque morphology in men and women presenting with sudden coronary death and acute myocardial infarction.
Abstract
Aims
The CLIMA study, on the relationship between coronary plaque morphology of the left anterior descending artery and twelve months clinical outcome, was designed to explore the predictive ...value of multiple high-risk plaque features in the same coronary lesion minimum lumen area (MLA), fibrous cap thickness (FCT), lipid arc circumferential extension, and presence of optical coherence tomography (OCT)-defined macrophages as detected by OCT. Composite of cardiac death and target segment myocardial infarction was the primary clinical endpoint.
Methods and results
From January 2013 to December 2016, 1003 patients undergoing OCT evaluation of the untreated proximal left anterior descending coronary artery in the context of clinically indicated coronary angiogram were prospectively enrolled at 11 independent centres (clinicaltrial.gov identifier NCT02883088). At 1-year, the primary clinical endpoint was observed in 37 patients (3.7%). In a total of 1776 lipid plaques, presence of MLA <3.5 mm2 hazard ratio (HR) 2.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1–4.0, FCT <75 µm (HR 4.7, 95% CI 2.4–9.0), lipid arc circumferential extension >180° (HR 2.4, 95% CI 1.2–4.8), and OCT-defined macrophages (HR 2.7, 95% CI 1.2–6.1) were all associated with increased risk of the primary endpoint. The pre-specified combination of plaque features (simultaneous presence of the four OCT criteria in the same plaque) was observed in 18.9% of patients experiencing the primary endpoint and was an independent predictor of events (HR 7.54, 95% CI 3.1–18.6).
Conclusion
The simultaneous presence of four high-risk OCT plaque features was found to be associated with a higher risk of major coronary events.
In this paper the Working Group on Myocardial and Pericardial Disease proposes a revised definition of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in an attempt to bridge the gap between our recent understanding of ...the disease spectrum and its clinical presentation in relatives, which is key for early diagnosis and the institution of potential preventative measures. We also provide practical hints to identify subsets of the DCM syndrome where aetiology directed management has great clinical relevance.
Abstract Most cardiomyopathies are familial diseases. Cascade family screening identifies asymptomatic patients and family members with early traits of disease. The inheritance is autosomal dominant ...in a majority of cases, and recessive, X-linked, or matrilinear in the remaining. For the last 50 years, cardiomyopathy classifications have been based on the morphofunctional phenotypes, allowing cardiologists to conveniently group them in broad descriptive categories. However, the phenotype may not always conform to the genetic characteristics, may not allow risk stratification, and may not provide pre-clinical diagnoses in the family members. Because genetic testing is now increasingly becoming a part of clinical work-up, and based on the genetic heterogeneity, numerous new names are being coined for the description of cardiomyopathies associated with mutations in different genes; a comprehensive nosology is needed that could inform the clinical phenotype and involvement of organs other than the heart, as well as the genotype and the mode of inheritance. The recently proposed MOGE(S) nosology system embodies all of these characteristics, and describes the morphofunctional phenotype (M), organ(s) involvement (O), genetic inheritance pattern (G), etiological annotation (E) including genetic defect or underlying disease/substrate, and the functional status (S) of the disease using both the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association stage and New York Heart Association functional class. The proposed nomenclature is supported by a web-assisted application and assists in the description of cardiomyopathy in symptomatic or asymptomatic patients and family members in the context of genetic testing. It is expected that such a nomenclature would help group cardiomyopathies on their etiological basis, describe complex genetics, and create collaborative registries.
This study addresses a joint nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy approach to provide a platform for dynamic assessment of kidney viability and ...metabolism. On porcine kidney models, ROS production, oxidative damage kinetics, and metabolic changes occurring both during the period between organ retrieval and implantation and after kidney graft were examined. The 1H-NMR metabolic profile—valine, alanine, acetate, trimetylamine-N-oxide, glutathione, lactate, and the EPR oxidative stress—resulting from ischemia/reperfusion injury after preservation (8 h) by static cold storage (SCS) and ex vivo machine perfusion (HMP) methods were monitored. The functional recovery after transplantation (14 days) was evaluated by serum creatinine (SCr), oxidative stress (ROS), and damage (thiobarbituric-acid-reactive substances and protein carbonyl enzymatic) assessments. At 8 h of preservation storage, a significantly (p < 0.0001) higher ROS production was measured in the SCS vs. HMP group. Significantly higher concentration data (p < 0.05−0.0001) in HMP vs. SCS for all the monitored metabolites were found as well. The HMP group showed a better function recovery. The comparison of the areas under the SCr curves (AUC) returned a significantly smaller (−12.5 %) AUC in the HMP vs. SCS. EPR-ROS concentration (μmol·g−1) from bioptic kidney tissue samples were significantly lower in HMP vs. SCS. The same result was found for the NMR monitored metabolites: lactate: −59.76%, alanine: −43.17%; valine: −58.56%; and TMAO: −77.96%. No changes were observed in either group under light microscopy. In conclusion, a better and more rapid normalization of oxidative stress and functional recovery after transplantation were observed by HMP utilization.
In this viewpoint paper, the authors are tackling criticism to the limits of invasive imaging modalities for identification and treatment of vulnerable plaques. They believe in the clinical ...usefulness of invasive imaging modalities for identification of vulnerable plaques, and are suggesting an explanation for the suboptimal results of past studies, that failed to demonstrate a correlation between interventional treatment of vulnerable plaques, and reduction of hard clinical endpoints. Vulnerability studies have been based, so far, on the detection and measurement of plaques lipid content, because of its ease. However, the search for lipid “lakes” as a single common causal feature of acute coronary syndromes does not seem sufficient to identify patients at risk of adverse events. New imaging studies provided the rationale for improving clinical outcomes, adopting a more comprehensive assessment of target plaque morphology. There is little rationale in pursuing a functional assessment of coronary lesions to predict myocardial infarction. Recent studies are further confirming this hypothesis, suggesting that the clinical benefit of the fractional flow reserve-guided strategy is simply due to a significant reduction in the rate of repeated revascularizations, with no significant differences in the incidence of hard endpoints. There is a need to develop new randomized studies, requiring a feasible number of patients, to test the superiority of an approach based on vulnerable plaque sealing and treatment.
A substantial increase in the knowledge of the genetic basis of cardiomyopathy has occurred, and noninvasive phenotypic characterization has become significantly more sophisticated. ...the American ...Heart Association (AHA) (7) and the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) (8) in the last decade have proposed revisions to the classification of cardiomyopathic disorders. In the ESC 2008 classification, the cardiomyopathy was defined as familial when present in more than 1 member of the family.\n Disease MIM# Phenotype Inheritance Age of Onset Disease Gene Cardiac Phenotype Extracardiac Markers/Involvement of Other Organs Treatment Multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency Glutaric acidemia IIA 231680 AR Neonatal ETFA DCM, neonatal Nervous, skeletal, muscle, liver, kidney (often polycystic), metabolic acidosis, hypoglycemia  Glutaric acidemia IIB 231680 AR Neonatal, childhood ETFB Sudden neonatal death Nervous, skeletal, muscle, liver  Glutaric acidemia IIC 231680 AR Childhood to adult ETFDH DCM Nervous, skeletal, muscle, liver, kidney (often polycystic), lung, metabolic acidosis, hypoglycemia  Primary, systemic, carnitine transporter deficiency 212140 AR Childhood to adult SLC22A5 DCM, HCM < Total plasma carnitine, hypoketotic hypoglycemia, hepatomegaly, elevated transaminases, and hyperammonemia in infants; skeletal myopathy, > creatine kinase, in childhood; cardiomyopathy, arrhythmias, or fatigability in adulthood Carnitine supplementation Chanarin-Dorfman syndrome (NLSD-I) 275630 AR Childhood to adult ABHD5 DCM Skin (ichthyosiform erythroderma), liver, muscle, nervous (with possible MR), ocular Suggested: diet low in long-chain fatty acids; retinoids for skin in patients w/o liver dysfunction Neutral lipid storage disease with myopathy (NLSD-M) 610717 AR Childhood to adult PNPLA2low * DCM Myopathy  Table 5 Major Lipid Storage Disorders With Possible Myocardial Involvement MR = mental retardation; other abbreviations as in Table 1.
Lamin and the heart Captur, Gabriella; Arbustini, Eloisa; Bonne, Gisèle ...
Heart,
03/2018, Letnik:
104, Številka:
6
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
Lamins A and C are intermediate filament nuclear envelope proteins encoded by the
gene. Mutations in
cause autosomal dominant severe heart disease, accounting for 10% of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). ...Characterised by progressive conduction system disease, arrhythmia and systolic impairment, lamin A/C heart disease is more malignant than other common DCMs due to high event rates even when the left ventricular impairment is mild. It has several phenotypic mimics, but overall it is likely to be an under-recognised cause of DCM. In certain clinical scenarios, particularly familial DCM with early conduction disease, the pretest probability of finding an
mutation may be quite high.Recognising lamin A/C heart disease is important because implantable cardioverter defibrillators need to be implanted early. Promising oral drug therapies are within reach thanks to research into the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and affiliated pathways. Personalised heart failure therapy may soon become feasible for
, alongside personalised risk stratification, as variant-related differences in phenotype severity and clinical course are being steadily elucidated.Genotyping and family screening are clinically important both to confirm and to exclude
mutations, but it is the three-pronged integration of such genetic information with functional data from in vivo cardiomyocyte mechanics, and pathological data from microscopy of the nuclear envelope, that is properly reshaping our
knowledge base, one variant at a time. This review explains the biology of lamin A/C heart disease (genetics, structure and function of lamins), clinical presentation (diagnostic pointers, electrocardiographic and imaging features), aspects of screening and management, including current uncertainties, and future directions.
Containment measures have been applied in several countries in order to limit the diffusion of the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic. The scope of this study is to analyze the evolution of the first wave of the ...SARS-CoV-2 epidemic throughout Italy and factors associated to the different way it spread in the Italian Regions, starting from the day that the first indigenous cases were detected through day 81 (6 days after the end of the strict lockdown). Data were obtained from daily reports and are represented as number (and percentage) of cases/100,000 persons. A lockdown with movement restrictions, especially across Regions, was declared at day 20. At day 81, 219,070 cases (363/100,000 persons) were diagnosed. A regression analysis based on the Gompertz model predicts a total number 233,606 cases (386/100,000 persons) at the end of the epidemic. The 21 areas, divided into Italian Regions and autonomous Provinces, showed a wide range in the frequency of cases at day 81 (58-921, median 258/100,000 persons) and total predicted cases (58-946, median 267/100,000 persons). Similarly, the predicted time for the end of the wave of the epidemic (considering as surrogate marker the time at which 99% of the total cases are predicted to occur) was highly variable, ranging from 64 to 136 (median 99) days. We analyzed the impact of local and interventional variables on the epidemic curve in each Region. The number of cases correlated inversely with the distance from the area in which first cases were detected and directly also with the gross domestic product pro capite (as a marker of industrial activity) of the Region. Moreover, an earlier start of the lockdown (i.e. in the presence of a lower number of cases) and wider testing were associated with a lower final number of total cases. In conclusion, this analysis shows that population-wide testing and early lockdown enforcement appear effective in limiting the spreading of the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic.