Abstract Background Adrenal vein sampling (AVS) is essential for diagnostics of primary aldosteronism, distinguishing unilateral from bilateral disease and determining treatment options. We reviewed ...the performance of AVS for primary aldosteronism at our center during first 15 years, comparing the initial period to the period after the introduction of a dedicated radiologist. Additionally, AVS outcomes were checked against CT findings and the proportion of operated patients with proven unilateral disease was estimated. Patients and methods A retrospective cross-sectional study conducted at the national endocrine referral center included all patients with primary aldosteronism who underwent AVS after its introduction in 2004 until the end of 2018. AVS was performed sequentially during Synacthen infusion. When the ratio of cortisol concentrations from adrenal vein and inferior vena cava was at least 5, AVS was considered successful. Results Data from 235 patients were examined (168 men; age 32–73, median 56 years; BMI 18–48, median 30.4 kg/ m 2 ). Average number of annual AVS procedures increased from 7 in the 2004–2011 period to 29 in the 2012–2018 period ( p < 0.001). AVS had to be repeated in 10% of procedures; it was successful in 77% of procedures and 86% of patients. The proportion of patients with successful AVS (92% in 2012–2018 vs . 66% in 2004–2011, p < 0.001) and of successful AVS procedures (82% vs . 61%, p < 0.001) was statistically significantly higher in the recent period. Conclusions Number of AVS procedures and success rate at our center increased over time. Introduction of a dedicated radiologist and technical advance expanded and improved the AVS practice.
Now 15-year-old girl with glycogen storage disease (GSD) type IIIa (OMIM 232400) developed severe left ventricular obstructive hypertrophy and hepatomegaly while treated with frequent cornstarch ...meals. Subsequently, she was introduced the ketogenic diet; continuous ketosis has been maintained for over the last 4 years. After the introduction of ketogenic diet, a normalization of the cardiomyopathy and improvement of hepatopathy was achieved, with enhanced overall quality of life.
Datasets highlighting effects of ketogenic diet (KD) in a glycogen storage disease type IIIa patient is presented with the longest patient follow up report to date. Now a 15-year old girl with GSD ...type IIIa, diagnosed at 1 year of age, had initially introduced treatment with diet high carbohydrates, according to the recommendations. Progressively she developed left ventricular obstructive hypertrophy, hepatomegaly and skeletal myopathy. At the age of 11 years, she was introduced KD and continuous ketosis has been maintained for over 4 years providing longest reported follow up to date. KD introduction lead to a normalization of left ventricular parameters and ventricular mass and to an improvement in hepatic injury markers and decrease in liver size.
We provided a table with biochemical parameters, a table providing detailed diet composition, tables with cardiac and hepatic measures and figures depicting cardiac NMR images; all the tables/figures are provided referring to the KD introduction (values prior/after). Interpretation of this data can be found in a case report article titled “Normalization of obstructive cardiomyopathy and improvement of hepatopathy on ketogenic diet in patient with glycogen storage disease (GSD) type IIIa”.
The exact interaction of factors leading to myocardial dysfunction and fibrosis of the systemic right ventricle (SRV) is not completely understood. Myocardial ischemia and injury associated with a ...supply-demand mismatch of the pressure overloaded SRV are thought to play an important role, however studies confirming this are lacking.
Adult SRV patients were included in this single centre cohort study. All patients underwent a comprehensive diagnostic and imaging workup. A two-day stress-rest SPECT was performed to assess myocardial perfusion. SRV ischemia was defined as decreased segmental tracer uptake during exercise with significant improvement at rest. Contrast enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) was also performed in a subgroup of patients without contraindication, to assess focal myocardial fibrosis. Differences between patients with and without SRV ischemia were assessed.
Twenty-three SRV patients (15 with transposition of the great arteries after atrial switch procedure and 8 with congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries; 5 (22%) females; mean age 38 ± 11 years) were included. Seven (30%) patients had SRV ischemia on SPECT. Late gadolinium enhancement on CMR was more common in patients with SRV ischemia (p = 0.002). However, there was no association between SRV ischemia and different echocardiographic or CMR parameters of SRV systolic function, laboratory markers (high-sensitivity troponin I and NT-proBNP) and exercise capacity.
Our multimodality study showed that SRV ischemia in adult SRV patients was associated with more focal myocardial fibrosis, but not with functional or imaging markers of SRV function.
•The role of myocardial ischemia in dysfunction of the systemic right ventricle is unknown.•Myocardial ischemia of the systemic right ventricle was evident in 30% of adult patients with systemic right ventricle.•Patients with ischemia more commonly had focal myocardial fibrosis.•Myocardial ischemia had no impact on functional or imaging markers of systemic right ventricular function.
We report a case of aortic pseudoaneurysm associated with a fractured bare Cheatham-Platinum stent following stenting for aortic coarctation. These complications were recognised 6 years after the ...implantation procedure and were successfully managed by percutaneous stent graft implantation. Staged approach for stent dilatation might prevent development of aortic pseudoaneurysms. In addition, careful follow-up is warranted after stenting for aortic coarctation, particularly in patients with recognised aortic wall injury.
The aims of this study were to assess the development of heart failure in patients with congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries in a medium-term follow-up, to identify the impact ...of tricuspid regurgitation on the development of heart failure, and to determine the most reliable marker for its identification. The prospective 6-year follow-up study included 19 adult patients. All patients were evaluated clinically by the determination of N-terminal pro-hormone brain natriuretic peptide levels, exercise stress testing, echocardiography magnetic resonance, or CT. Among them, two patients died of heart failure. There was a decline in exercise capacity and systolic systemic ventricular function (p=0.011). Systemic ventricular ejection fraction decreased (48.3±13.7 versus 42.7±12.7%, p=0.001). Tissue Doppler imaging showed a decline in peak tricuspid systolic annular velocity (10.3±2.0 versus 8.3±2.5 cm/second, p=0.032) and peak tricuspid early diastolic annular velocity (14.6±4.3 versus 12.0±4.5 cm/second, p=0.048). The tricuspid regurgitation did not increase significantly. N-terminal pro-hormone brain natriuretic peptide levels increased (127.0 ng/L(82.3-305.8) versus 226.0 ng/L(112.5-753.0), p=0.022). Progressive exercise intolerance in congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries appears to be driven mainly by a progression in systemic right ventricular dysfunction. Tricuspid regurgitation is likely to play a role, especially in patients with structural abnormalities of the tricuspid valve - Ebstein anomaly. The N-terminal pro-hormone brain natriuretic peptide levels and tissue Doppler parameters appear sensitive in detecting changes over time and may guide management.