39 results on '"Zilla, P."'
Search Results
2. Cardioprotection with Intralipid During Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Surgery on Cardiopulmonary Bypass: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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Hadebe, Nkanyiso, Cour, Martin, Imamdin, Aqeela, Petersen, Tarra, Pennel, Timothy, Scherman, Jacques, Snowball, Jane, Ntsekhe, Mpiko, Zilla, Peter, Swanevelder, Justiaan, and Lecour, Sandrine
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- 2024
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3. Die Gewalt „der Anderen“. Feministische Außenpolitik nach der Zeitenwende
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Zilla, Claudia
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- 2024
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4. Two decades of recipient and donor referrals for heart transplantation to Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa: A retrospective study
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R Kanyongo, G Calligaro, B Cupido, J Scherman, A Brooks, C Ofoegbu, N Da Silva, A Ryan, M Mofamadi, K Seele, P Human, J Brink, P Zilla, and T Pennel
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heart failure ,heart transplant ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background. Heart transplantation in South Africa faces numerous challenges related to organ scarcity and unequal access to advanced heart therapy. There is an urgent need to analyse the current transplant referral pathway to optimise equitable access to transplantation. Objectives. To provide an audit of heart transplant referrals to Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, over a 23-year period, focusing on patient demographics, indications for referral, waiting-list dynamics, and transplant referral outcomes. Methods. The study utilised a retrospective patient folder review for the period 1 January 1997 - 31 December 2019 and audited the trends in heart transplant referrals and associated outcomes of the referral at a tertiary academic hospital. Results. A total of 625 recipients were referred for heart transplantation, with the majority being male (n=412; 65.9%), while gender was undocumented for 69 cases (11.0%). The mean age was 38.1 (14.6) years, and 153 (24.5%) were listed for transplant, while 215 (34.4%) were deemed ineligible for listing. Contraindications for listing included social (n=106; 49.3%), medical (n=83; 38.6%) and psychological (n=26; 12.0%) factors, while 134 patients (21.4%) were considered too well. Poor social circumstances (n=38; 39.6%), poor insight (n=28; 29.2%) and poor compliance (n=21; 21.9%) were the most common non-medical reasons for not listing recipients, while obesity (n=30; 31.3%) and smoking (n=23; 24.0%) were notable medical contraindications. Forty-nine patients (7.8%) died during work-up, while 130 (85.0%) of the listed patients received a heart transplant. Of the 429 donor referrals, 139 (32.4%) were accepted for organ procurement. Reasons for declining donors included unsuitability for transplantation (30.3%), lack of capacity (1.8%), and recipient-donor mismatch (66.9%). Conclusion. Three-quarters of the referred patients were deemed unsuitable for heart transplantation for medical and/or social reasons. The ratio of referral to listing has decreased over time. However, once listed, the likelihood of receiving a transplant was high.
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- 2024
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5. Mechanical valve replacement for patients with rheumatic heart disease: the reality of INR control in Africa and beyond
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Peter Zilla, Paul Human, and Tim Pennel
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rheumatic heart disease ,international normalised ratio (INR) ,mechanical heart valve (MHV) ,low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) ,anticoagulation (AC) ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
The majority of patients requiring heart valve replacement in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) need it for rheumatic heart disease (RHD). While the young age of such patients largely prescribes replacement with mechanical prostheses, reliable anticoagulation management is often unattainable under the prevailing socioeconomic circumstances. Cases of patients with clotted valves presenting for emergency surgery as a consequence of poor adherence to anticoagulation control are frequent. The operative mortality rates of reoperations for thrombosed mechanical valves are several times higher than those for tissue valves, and long-term results are also disappointing. Under-anticoagulation prevails in these regions that has clearly been linked to poor international normalised ratio (INR) monitoring. In industrialised countries, safe anticoagulation is defined as >60%–70% of the time in the therapeutic range (TTR). In LMICs, the TTR has been found to be in the range of twenty to forty percent. In this study, we analysed >20,000 INR test results of 552 consecutive patients receiving a mechanical valve for RHD. Only 27% of these test results were in the therapeutic range, with the vast majority (61%) being sub-therapeutic. Interestingly, the post-operative frequency of INR tests of one every 3–4 weeks in year 1 had dropped to less than 1 per year by year 7. LMICs need to use clinical judgement and assess the probability of insufficient INR monitoring prior to uncritically applying Western guidelines predominantly based on chronological age. The process of identification of high-risk subgroups in terms of non-adherence to anticoagulation control should take into account both the adherence history of >50% of patients with RHD who were in chronic atrial fibrillation prior to surgery as well as geographic and socioeconomic circumstances.
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- 2024
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6. Location of Emergency Treatment Sites after Earthquake using Hybrid Simulation
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Simona Cohen Kadosh, Zilla Sinuany-Stern, and Yuval Bitan
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earthquake ,emergency ,temporary emergency facility ,hybrid simulation ,humanitarian logistics ,Technology - Abstract
A mass-casualty natural disaster such as an earthquake is a rare, surprising event that is usually characterized by chaos and a lack of information, resulting in an overload of casualties in hospitals. Thus, it is very important to refer minor and moderately-injured casualties, that are the majority of casualties and whose injuries are usually not life threatening, to ad hoc care facilities such as Emergency Treatment Sites (ETSs). These facilities support the efficient use of health resources and reduce the burden on permanent healthcare facilities. In our study, a hybrid simulation model, based on a combination of discrete events and an agent-based simulation, provides a solution to the uncertainty of positioning temporary treatment sites. The simulation methodology used compares between "rigid" and "flexible" operating concepts of ETSs (main vs. main+minor ETSs) and found the "flexible" concept to be more efficient in terms of the average walking distance and number of casualties treated in the disaster area.
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- 2023
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7. Correlations between the alpha-Gal antigen, antibody response and calcification of cardiac valve bioprostheses: experimental evidence obtained using an alpha-Gal knockout mouse animal model
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Filippo Naso, Andrea Colli, Peter Zilla, Antonio Maria Calafiore, Chaim Lotan, Massimo A. Padalino, Giulio Sturaro, Alessandro Gandaglia, and Michele Spina
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αGal antigen ,knockout mouse model ,bioprosthetic heart valves ,polyphenols ,calcification ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
IntroductionPreformed antibodies against αGal in the human and the presence of αGal antigens on the tissue constituting the commercial bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs, mainly bovine or porcine pericardium), lead to opsonization of the implanted BHV, leading to deterioration and calcification. Murine subcutaneous implantation of BHVs leaflets has been widely used for testing the efficacy of anti-calcification treatments. Unfortunately, commercial BHVs leaflets implanted into a murine model will not be able to elicit an αGal immune response because such antigen is expressed in the recipient and therefore immunologically tolerated.MethodsThis study evaluates the calcium deposition on commercial BHV using a new humanized murine αGal knockout (KO) animal model. Furtherly, the anti-calcification efficacy of a polyphenol-based treatment was deeply investigated. By using CRISPR/Cas9 approach an αGal KO mouse was created and adopted for the evaluation of the calcific propensity of original and polyphenols treated BHV by subcutaneous implantation. The calcium quantification was carried out by plasma analysis; the immune response evaluation was performed by histology and immunological assays. Anti-αGal antibodies level in KO mice increases at least double after 2 months of implantation of original commercial BHV compared to WT mice, conversely, the polyphenols-based treatment seems to effectively mask the antigen to the KO mice’s immune system.ResultsCommercial leaflets explanted after 1 month from KO mice showed a four-time increased calcium deposition than what was observed on that explanted from WT. Polyphenol treatment prevents calcium deposition by over 99% in both KO and WT animals. The implantation of commercial BHV leaflets significantly stimulates the KO mouse immune system resulting in massive production of anti-Gal antibodies and the exacerbation of the αGal-related calcific effect if compared with the WT mouse. DiscussionThe polyphenol-based treatment applied in this investigation showed an unexpected ability to inhibit the recognition of BHV xenoantigens by circulating antibodies almost completely preventing calcific depositions compared to the untreated counterpart.
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- 2023
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8. Making a Difference: 5 Years of Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA)
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Bolman, R.M., primary, Zilla, P., additional, Beyersdorf, F., additional, Boateng, P., additional, Bavaria, J., additional, Dearani, J., additional, Pomar, J., additional, Kumar, S., additional, Chotivatanapong, T., additional, Sliwa, K., additional, Eisele, J.L., additional, Enumah, Z., additional, Podesser, B., additional, Farkas, E.A., additional, Kofidis, T., additional, Zühlke, L.J., additional, and Higgins, R., additional
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- 2024
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9. Making a difference: 5 years of Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA)
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Bolman, R M, primary, Zilla, P, additional, Beyersdorf, F, additional, Boateng, P, additional, Bavaria, J, additional, Dearani, J, additional, Pomar, J, additional, Kumar, S, additional, Chotivatanapong, T, additional, Sliwa, K, additional, Eisele, J L, additional, Enumah, Z, additional, Podesser, B, additional, Farkas, E A, additional, Kofidis, T, additional, Zühlke, L J, additional, and Higgins, R, additional
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- 2024
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10. Farewell to a pioneer of Austrian cardiovascular surgery: Univ. Prof. Dr. Manfred Deutsch (1939–2023)
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Zilla, Peter, Grimm, Michael, Bonaros, Nikolaos, and Fischlein, Theodor
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- 2023
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11. Prevalence and Impact of HIV Infections in Patients with Rheumatic Heart Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Evelyn N. Lumngwena, Dipolelo Mokaila, Olukayode Aremu, Patrick DMC Katoto, Jonathan Blackburn, Peter Zilla, Charles Shey Wiysonge, and Ntobeko Ntusi
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rheumatic heart disease ,acquired hiv infections ,vertical hiv transmission ,prevalence ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Socioeconomic factors such as poor health and poor nutrition in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) may favour inflammatory reactions, thus contributing to the recurrence of rheumatic fever (RF) and thereby modifying trends in rheumatic heart disease (RHD). Apart from epidemiological studies, studies of HIV infections in RHD patients are limited. This systematic review synthesises data on the prevalence and impact of HIV infections or AIDS on RHD from PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science databases up to April 2021. The outcomes were managed using PRISMA guidelines. Of a total of 15 studies found, 10 were eligible for meta-analyses. Meta-analysis found that 17% (95 % CI 8–33, I2 = 91%) of adults in cardiovascular disease (CVD) cohorts in Southern Africa are HIV positive. The proportion of RHD diagnosed among people living with HIV was 4% (95% CI 2–8, I2 = 79%) for adults but lower [2% (95% CI 1–4, I2 = 87%)] among perinatally infected children. Despite limited reporting, HIV-infected patients with RHD are prone to other infections that may enhance cardiac complications due to poor immunological control. PROSPERO registration number: CRD42021237046.
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- 2023
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12. Two decades of recipient and donor referrals for heart transplantation to Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa: A retrospective study
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Kanyongo, R, primary, Calligaro, G, additional, Cupido, B, additional, Scherman, J, additional, Brooks, A, additional, Ofoegbu, C, additional, Da Silva, N, additional, Ryan, A, additional, Mofamadi, M, additional, Seele, K, additional, Human, P, additional, Brink, J, additional, Zilla, P, additional, and Pennel, T, additional
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- 2024
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13. THE END TIMES.
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Jones, Zilla
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MOTHERHOOD - Published
- 2024
14. Making a difference: 5 years of Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA).
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Bolman, R.M., Zilla, P., Beyersdorf, F., Boateng, P., Bavaria, J., Dearani, J., Pomar, J., Kumar, S., Chotivatanapong, T., Sliwa, K., Eisele, J.l., Enumah, Z., Podesser, B., Farkas, E.A., Kofidis, T., Zühlke, L.J., and Higgins, R.
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Informed by the almost unimaginable unmet need for cardiac surgery in the developing regions of the world, leading surgeons, cardiologists, editors in chief of the major cardiothoracic journals as well as representatives of medical industry and government convened in December 2017 to address this unacceptable disparity in access to care. The ensuing "Cape Town Declaration" constituted a clarion call to cardiac surgical societies to jointly advocate the strengthening of sustainable, local cardiac surgical capacity in the developing world. The Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA) was thus created, comprising The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS), the American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS), the Asian Society for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery (ASCVTS), the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS) and the World Heart Federation (WHF). The guiding principle was advocacy for sustainable cardiac surgical capacity in low-income countries. Summary: Informed by the almost unimaginable unmet need for cardiac surgery in the developing regions of the world, leading surgeons, cardiologists, editors in chief of the major cardiothoracic journals as well as representatives of medical industry and government convened in December 2017 to address this unacceptable disparity in access to care. The ensuing "Cape Town Declaration" constituted a clarion call to cardiac surgical societies to jointly advocate the strengthening of sustainable, local cardiac surgical capacity in the developing world. The Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA) was thus created, comprising The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS), the American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS), the Asian Society for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery (ASCVTS), the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS) and the World Heart Federation (WHF). The guiding principle was advocacy for sustainable cardiac surgical capacity in low-income countries. As a first step, a global needs assessment confirmed rheumatic heart disease as the overwhelming pathology requiring cardiac surgery in these regions. Subsequently, CSIA published a request for proposals to support fledgling programmes that could demonstrate the backing by their governments and health care institution. Out of 11 applicants, and following an evaluation of the sites, including site visits to the 3 finalists, Mozambique and Rwanda were selected as the first Pilot Sites. Subsequently, a mentorship and training agreement was completed between Mozambique and the University of Cape Town, a middle-income country with a comparable burden of rheumatic heart disease. The agreement entails regular video calls between the heart teams, targeted training across all aspects of cardiac surgery, as well as on-site presence of mentoring teams for complex cases with the strict observance of 'assisting only'. In Rwanda, Team Heart, a US and Rwanda-based non-governmental organization (NGO) that has been performing cardiac surgery in Rwanda and helping to train the cardiac surgery workforce since 2008, has agreed to continue providing mentorship for the local team and to assist in the establishment of independent cardiac surgery with all that entails. This involves intermittent virtual conferences between Rwandan and US cardiologists for surgical case selection. Five years after CSIA was founded, it's 'Seal of Approval' for the sustainability of endorsed programmes in Mozambique and Rwanda has resulted in higher case numbers, a stronger government commitment, significant upgrades of infrastructure, the nurturing of generous consumable donations by industry and the commencement of negotiations with global donors for major grants. Extending the CSIA Seal to additional deserving programmes could further align the international cardiac surgical community with the principle of local cardiac surgery capacity-building in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Preventing extrinsic mechanisms of bioprosthetic degeneration using polyphenols
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Melder, R, Naso, F, Nicotra, F, Russo, L, Vesely, I, Tuladhar, S, Calafiore, A, Zilla, P, Gandaglia, A, Korossis, S, Melder R. J., Naso F., Nicotra F., Russo L., Vesely I., Tuladhar S. R., Calafiore A. M., Zilla P., Gandaglia A., Korossis S., Melder, R, Naso, F, Nicotra, F, Russo, L, Vesely, I, Tuladhar, S, Calafiore, A, Zilla, P, Gandaglia, A, Korossis, S, Melder R. J., Naso F., Nicotra F., Russo L., Vesely I., Tuladhar S. R., Calafiore A. M., Zilla P., Gandaglia A., and Korossis S.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a polyphenols-based treatment on the extrinsic mechanisms responsible for early bioprosthetic heart valve (BHV) degeneration. Structural degeneration can be driven by both extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms. While intrinsic mechanisms have been associated with inherent biocompatibility characteristics of the BHV, the extrinsic ones have been reported to involve external causes, such as chemical, mechanical and hydrodynamic, responsible to facilitate graft damage. METHODS: The chemical interaction and the stability degree between polyphenols and pericardial tissue were carefully evaluated. The detoxification of glutaraldehyde in commercial BHVs models and the protective effect from in vivo calcification were taken into relevant consideration. Finally, the hydrodynamic and biomechanical features of the polyphenols-treated pericardial tissue were deeply investigated by pulse duplicator and stress-strain analysis. RESULTS: The study demonstrated the durability of the polyphenols-based treatment on pericardial tissue and the stability of the bound polyphenols. The treatment improves glutaraldehyde stabilization’s current degree, demonstrating a surprising in vivo anti-calcific effect. It is able to make the pericardial tissue more pliable while maintaining the correct hydrodynamic characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: The polyphenols treatment has proved to be a promising approach capable of acting simultaneously on several factors related to the premature degeneration of cardiac valve substitutes by extrinsic mechanisms.
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- 2023
16. Two Years of My Life.
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JONES, ZILLA
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PEANUT hulls ,AUTUMN ,GUILTY pleas ,BASEBALL fields ,MYOPIA - Published
- 2022
17. A values-driven approach to vaccine hesitancy conversations.
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North, Zilla M., Smit, Arnold T., and Jenkins, Louis S.
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IMMUNIZATION ,CONVERSATION ,COVID-19 vaccines ,SOCIAL media ,ETHICAL decision making ,COMPASSION ,VACCINE hesitancy ,VALUES (Ethics) ,RESPECT ,TRUST ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
South Africa recently experienced the third wave of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Social media is flooded with polarised conversations, with opinions for and against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccines. Many people are hesitant, and some are strongly opposed to vaccination. Vaccine hesitancy must be understood in historical, political and socio-cultural contexts. The aim of this study was to offer a valuesdriven approach to vaccine hesitancy conversations. It focusses on ethical dilemmas forthcoming from values violations, interrogating the personal and institutional scripts and rationalisations that prevent resolution, and offering ways of re-scripting these. Values-driven conversations provide safe spaces for vaccine-hesitant individuals to voice their reservations. The manner in which conversations are conducted is as important as the contents being discussed. Healthcare professionals are trusted by the public and should use ways of conversing that do not erode this trust. Creating respectful, compassionate platforms of engagement and incentivising vaccination are important measures for change in vaccine perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. On Waking Up.
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Jones, Zilla
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- ON Waking Up (Short story), JONES, Zilla
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- 2022
19. Sustained zero-order release of dexamethasone after incorporation into crosslinked PEG-dendrons using click reactions
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Ahrenstedt, Lage, Hed, Yvonne, Hult, Anders, Zilla, Peter, Bezuidenhout, Deon, and Malkoch, Michael
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Hydrogel-based localised drug delivery minimises systemic side effects and a linear release profile ensuring a sustained drug release over time, crucial for long-term therapy. The current paper describes the use of the Copper(I)-catalyzed Azide-Alkyne Cycloaddition (CuAAc) to append azidified Dexamethasone (Dex) onto dendrons of first- and second-generation PEGs. Crosslinking with thiolated PEGs using either thiol-acrylate or nucleophilic addition reactions yielded gels containing β-thio-ether ester groups that imparted enhanced hydrolytic susceptibility. In vitro gel degradation was followed gravimetrically and expressed as swelling ratios. Thiol-acrylate crosslinked hydrogels exhibited zero-order Dex release kinetics over 11, 27, and 16 days (G1, G1-star, and G2). Crosslinking the G1-gels by nucleophilic addition also resulted in linear release and the end point was reached in 5 days. Hydrolysis was accounted as the main release mechanism for covalently bound Dex, while physically incorporated Dex showed undefined rapid burst or first-order release, with most of the drug released in the initial 1–3 days. Eluates from covalently bound Dex maintained high activity, whereas Trap-Dex gels lost activity over time, as detected by the upregulation of luciferase expression from a transformed cell line. This novel chemistry combination offers precise drug release control applicable beyond Dex to drugs with suitable nucleophilic groups.
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- 2024
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20. Assessment of Efficacy and Accuracy of Cervical Cytology Screening with Artificial Intelligence Assistive System
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Bai, Xinru, Wei, Jingjing, Starr, David, Zhang, Xin, Wu, Xiangchen, Guo, Yongzhen, Liu, Yixuan, Ma, Xiaotian, Wei, Yuan, Li, Changzhong, Zilla, Megan L., Zhang, Wei, Zeng, Xianxu, and Zhao, Chengquan
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The role of Artificial intelligence (AI) in pathology is one that offers many exciting new possibilities for improving patient care. This study contributes to this development by identifying the viability of AICyte Assistive System for cervical screening, and to investigate the utility of the system in assisting with workflow and diagnostic capability. In this study, a novel scanner was developed using a Ruiqian WSI-2400, trademarked AICyte Assistive system, to create AI-generated gallery of the most diagnostically relevant images, objects of interest (OOI), and provide categorical assessment, according to Bethesda category, for cervical ThinPrep Pap slides. For validation purposes, two pathologists reviewed OOIs from 32,451 cases of ThinPrep Paps independently, and their interpretations were correlated with the original ThinPrep interpretations (OTPI). The analysis was focused on the comparison of reporting rates, correlation between cytological results and histological follow-up findings, and the assessment of independent AICyte screening utility. Pathologists using the AICyte system had a mean reading time of 55.14 seconds for the first 3,000 cases trending down to 12.90 seconds in the last 6,000 cases. Overall average reading time was 22.23 seconds per case as compared to a manual reading time approximation of 180 seconds. Usage of AICyte compared to OTPI had similar sensitivity (97.89% vs 97.89%) and a statistically significant increase in specificity (16.19% vs 6.77%). When AICyte was run alone at a 50% negative cut-off value, it was able to read slides with a sensitivity of 99.30% and specificity of 9.87%. When AICyte was run independently at this cut-off value, no sole case of HSIL/SCC squamous lesion was missed. AICyte can provide a potential tool to help pathologists in both diagnostic capability and efficiency, which remained reliable as compared to baseline standard. Also unique for AICyte is the development of a negative cutoff value for which AICyte can categorize cases as “not needed for review” to triage cases and lower pathologist workload. This is the largest case number study that pathologists reviewed OOI with AI assistive system. The study demonstrates that AI assistive system can be broadly applied for cervical cancer screening.
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- 2024
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21. 168 Effectivity of mTOR inhibition in cutaneous sarcoidosis
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Redl, A., Doberer, K., Unterluggauer, L., Krall, C., Mayerhofer, C., Kleissl, L., Reininger, B., Stary, V., Zilla, N., Weninger, W., Weichhart, T., Bock, C., Krausgruber, T., and Stary, G.
- Published
- 2023
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22. Precocious Pseudo-puberty in a Two-year-old Girl, Presenting with Bilateral Ovarian Enlargement and Progressing to Unilateral Juvenile Granulosa Cell Tumour
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Hager barakizou, Gannouni Souha, Thouraya Kamoun, Muhammed Mehdi, Fernanda Amary, Zilla Huma, Anne-laure Todeschini, Reiner Veitia, and Malcolm Donaldson
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feminizing precocious pseudo-puberty ,ovary ,juvenile granulosa cell tumour ,mccune-albright syndrome ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Ovarian causes of precocious pseudo-puberty (PPP) include McCune-Albright syndrome (MAS) and juvenile granulosa cell tumour (JGCT). We describe a case of PPP in which bilateral ovarian enlargement with multiple cysts progressed to unilateral JGCT. A girl aged 2.17 years presented with three months of breast development, and rapid growth. Examination showed tall stature, height +2.6 standard deviations, Tanner stage B3P2A1. A single café au lait patch was noted. Bone age was advanced at 5 years. Pelvic ultrasound showed bilaterally enlarged ovaries (estimated volumes 76 mL on the left, 139 mL on the right), each containing multiple cysts. Luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) values before/after gonadotrophin administration were 0.43/0.18 and
- Published
- 2022
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23. The Technological Basis of a Balloon-Expandable TAVR System: Non-occlusive Deployment, Anchorage in the Absence of Calcification and Polymer Leaflets
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Harish Appa, Kenneth Park, Deon Bezuidenhout, Braden van Breda, Bruce de Jongh, Jandré de Villiers, Reno Chacko, Jacques Scherman, Chima Ofoegbu, Justiaan Swanevelder, Michael Cousins, Paul Human, Robin Smith, Ferdinand Vogt, Bruno K. Podesser, Christoph Schmitz, Lenard Conradi, Hendrik Treede, Holger Schröfel, Theodor Fischlein, Martin Grabenwöger, Xinjin Luo, Heather Coombes, Simon Matskeplishvili, David F. Williams, and Peter Zilla
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balloon-expandable ,plastic deformation ,aortic regurgitations ,polymer leaflets ,rheumatic heart disease ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Leaflet durability and costs restrict contemporary trans-catheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) largely to elderly patients in affluent countries. TAVR that are easily deployable, avoid secondary procedures and are also suitable for younger patients and non-calcific aortic regurgitation (AR) would significantly expand their global reach. Recognizing the reduced need for post-implantation pacemakers in balloon-expandable (BE) TAVR and the recent advances with potentially superior leaflet materials, a trans-catheter BE-system was developed that allows tactile, non-occlusive deployment without rapid pacing, direct attachment of both bioprosthetic and polymer leaflets onto a shape-stabilized scallop and anchorage achieved by plastic deformation even in the absence of calcification. Three sizes were developed from nickel-cobalt-chromium MP35N alloy tubes: Small/23 mm, Medium/26 mm and Large/29 mm. Crimp-diameters of valves with both bioprosthetic (sandwich-crosslinked decellularized pericardium) and polymer leaflets (triblock polyurethane combining siloxane and carbonate segments) match those of modern clinically used BE TAVR. Balloon expansion favors the wing-structures of the stent thereby creating supra-annular anchors whose diameter exceeds the outer diameter at the waist level by a quarter. In the pulse duplicator, polymer and bioprosthetic TAVR showed equivalent fluid dynamics with excellent EOA, pressure gradients and regurgitation volumes. Post-deployment fatigue resistance surpassed ISO requirements. The radial force of the helical deployment balloon at different filling pressures resulted in a fully developed anchorage profile of the valves from two thirds of their maximum deployment diameter onwards. By combining a unique balloon-expandable TAVR system that also caters for non-calcific AR with polymer leaflets, a powerful, potentially disruptive technology for heart valve disease has been incorporated into a TAVR that addresses global needs. While fulfilling key prerequisites for expanding the scope of TAVR to the vast number of patients of low- to middle income countries living with rheumatic heart disease the system may eventually also bring hope to patients of high-income countries presently excluded from TAVR for being too young.
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- 2022
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24. Residual Bioprosthetic Valve Immunogenicity: Forgotten, Not Lost
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Paul Human, Deon Bezuidenhout, Elena Aikawa, and Peter Zilla
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bioprosthetic ,valve ,extracellular matrix ,decellularization ,immunogenicity ,pathology ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Despite early realization of the need to control inherent immunogenicity of bioprosthetic replacement heart valves and thereby mitigate the ensuing host response and its associated pathology, including dystrophic calcification, the problem remains unresolved to this day. Concerns over mechanical stiffness associated with prerequisite high cross-link density to effect abrogation of this response, together with the insinuated role of leaching glutaraldehyde monomer in subsequent dystrophic mineralization, have understandably introduced compromises. These have become so entrenched as a benchmark standard that residual immunogenicity of the extracellular matrix has seemingly been relegated to a very subordinate role. Instead, focus has shifted toward the removal of cellular compartment antigens renowned for their implication in the failure of vascularized organ xenotransplants. While decellularization certainly offers advantages, this review aims to refocus attention on the unresolved matter of the host response to the extracellular matrix. Furthermore, by implicating remnant immune and inflammatory processes to bioprosthetic valve pathology, including pannus overgrowth and mineralization, the validity of a preeminent focus on decellularization, in the context of inefficient antigen and possible residual microbial remnant removal, is questioned.
- Published
- 2022
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25. A values-driven approach to vaccine hesitancy conversations
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Zilla M. North, Arnold T. Smit, and Louis S. Jenkins
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covid-19 ,vaccine ,hesitancy ,values ,ethics ,conversations ,Medicine - Abstract
South Africa recently experienced the third wave of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)pandemic. Social media is flooded with polarised conversations, with opinions for and against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccines. Many people are hesitant, and some are strongly opposed to vaccination. Vaccine hesitancy must be understood in historical, political and socio-cultural contexts. The aim of this study was to offer a values-driven approach to vaccine hesitancy conversations. It focusses on ethical dilemmas forthcoming from values violations, interrogating the personal and institutional scripts and rationalisations that prevent resolution, and offering ways of re-scripting these. Values-driven conversations provide safe spaces for vaccine-hesitant individuals to voice their reservations. The manner in which conversations are conducted is as important as the contents being discussed. Healthcare professionals are trusted by the public and should use ways of conversing that do not erode this trust. Creating respectful, compassionate platforms of engagement and incentivising vaccination are important measures for change in vaccine perspectives.
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- 2022
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26. Societies of Futures Past: Examining the History and Potential of International Society Collaborations in Addressing the Burden of Rheumatic Heart Disease in the Developing World
- Author
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Zachary Obinna Enumah, Percy Boateng, Ralph Morton Bolman, Friedhelm Beyersdorf, Liesl Zühlke, Maurice Musoni, Adriano Tivane, and Peter Zilla
- Subjects
cardiac surgery ,academic societies ,rheumatic heart disease ,registry ,cardiac surgery intersociety alliance ,CSIA ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
This paper explores the role and place of national, regional, and international society collaborations in addressing the major global burden of rheumatic heart disease (RHD). On the same order of HIV, RHD affects over 40 million people worldwide. In this article, we will outline the background and current therapeutic landscape for cardiac surgery in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) including the resource-constrained settings within which RHD surgery often occurs. This creates numerous challenges to delivering adequate surgical care and post-operative management for RHD patients, and thus provides some context for a growing movement for and applicability of structural heart approaches, innovative valve replacement technologies, and minimally invasive techniques in this setting. Intertwined and building from this context will be the remainder of the paper which elaborates how national, regional, and international societies have collaborated to address rheumatic heart disease in the past (e.g., Drakensberg Declaration, World Heart Federation Working Group on RHD) with a focus on primary and secondary prevention. We then provide the recent history and context of the growing movement for how surgery has become front and center in the discussion of addressing RHD through the passing of the Cape Town Declaration.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Preventing extrinsic mechanisms of bioprosthetic degeneration using polyphenols
- Author
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Robert J Melder, Filippo Naso, Francesco Nicotra, Laura Russo, Ivan Vesely, Sugat R Tuladhar, Antonio M Calafiore, Peter Zilla, Alessandro Gandaglia, Sotiris Korossis, Melder, R, Naso, F, Nicotra, F, Russo, L, Vesely, I, Tuladhar, S, Calafiore, A, Zilla, P, Gandaglia, A, and Korossis, S
- Subjects
Polyphenol ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Bioprosthetic heart valve degeneration ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Extrinsic degenerative mechanism ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Intrinsic degenerative mechanism - Abstract
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a polyphenols-based treatment on the extrinsic mechanisms responsible for early bioprosthetic heart valve (BHV) degeneration. Structural degeneration can be driven by both extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms. While intrinsic mechanisms have been associated with inherent biocompatibility characteristics of the BHV, the extrinsic ones have been reported to involve external causes, such as chemical, mechanical and hydrodynamic, responsible to facilitate graft damage. METHODS The chemical interaction and the stability degree between polyphenols and pericardial tissue were carefully evaluated. The detoxification of glutaraldehyde in commercial BHVs models and the protective effect from in vivo calcification were taken into relevant consideration. Finally, the hydrodynamic and biomechanical features of the polyphenols-treated pericardial tissue were deeply investigated by pulse duplicator and stress-strain analysis. RESULTS The study demonstrated the durability of the polyphenols-based treatment on pericardial tissue and the stability of the bound polyphenols. The treatment improves glutaraldehyde stabilization's current degree, demonstrating a surprising in vivo anti-calcific effect. It is able to make the pericardial tissue more pliable while maintaining the correct hydrodynamic characteristics. CONCLUSIONS The polyphenols treatment has proved to be a promising approach capable of acting simultaneously on several factors related to the premature degeneration of cardiac valve substitutes by extrinsic mechanisms.
- Published
- 2022
28. Making a difference: 5 years of Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA).
- Author
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Bolman RM, Zilla P, Beyersdorf F, Boateng P, Bavaria J, Dearani J, Pomar J, Kumar S, Chotivatanapong T, Sliwa K, Eisele JL, Enumah Z, Podesser B, Farkas EA, Kofidis T, Zühlke LJ, and Higgins R
- Subjects
- Humans, Developing Countries, Thoracic Surgery organization & administration, Thoracic Surgery education, International Cooperation, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Cooperative Behavior, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Societies, Medical
- Abstract
Informed by the almost unimaginable unmet need for cardiac surgery in the developing regions of the world, leading surgeons, cardiologists, editors in chief of the major cardiothoracic journals as well as representatives of medical industry and government convened in December 2017 to address this unacceptable disparity in access to care. The ensuing "Cape Town Declaration" constituted a clarion call to cardiac surgical societies to jointly advocate the strengthening of sustainable, local cardiac surgical capacity in the developing world. The Cardiac Surgery Intersociety Alliance (CSIA) was thus created, comprising The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS), the American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS), the Asian Society for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery (ASCVTS), the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS) and the World Heart Federation (WHF). The guiding principle was advocacy for sustainable cardiac surgical capacity in low-income countries. As a first step, a global needs assessment confirmed rheumatic heart disease as the overwhelming pathology requiring cardiac surgery in these regions. Subsequently, CSIA published a request for proposals to support fledgling programs that could demonstrate the backing by their governments and health care institution. Out of 11 applicants, and following an evaluation of the sites, including site visits to the 3 finalists, Mozambique and Rwanda were selected as the first Pilot Sites. Subsequently, a mentorship and training agreement was completed between Mozambique and the University of Cape Town, a middle-income country with a comparable burden of rheumatic heart disease. The agreement entails regular video calls between the heart teams, targeted training across all aspects of cardiac surgery, as well as on-site presence of mentoring teams for complex cases with the strict observance of "assisting only." In Rwanda, Team Heart, a US and Rwanda-based nongovernmental organization (NGO) that has been performing cardiac surgery in Rwanda and helping to train the cardiac surgery workforce since 2008, has agreed to continue providing mentorship for the local team and to assist in the establishment of independent cardiac surgery with all that entails. This involves intermittent virtual conferences between Rwandan and US cardiologists for surgical case selection. Five years after CSIA was founded, its "Seal of Approval" for the sustainability of endorsed programs in Mozambique and Rwanda has resulted in higher case numbers, a stronger government commitment, significant upgrades of infrastructure, the nurturing of generous consumable donations by industry and the commencement of negotiations with global donors for major grants. Extending the CSIA Seal to additional deserving programs could further align the international cardiac surgical community with the principle of local cardiac surgery capacity-building in developing countries., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Statement The authors reported no conflicts of interest. The Journal policy requires editors and reviewers to disclose conflicts of interest and to decline handling or reviewing manuscripts for which they may have a conflict of interest. The editors and reviewers of this article have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
29. Mechanical valve replacement for patients with rheumatic heart disease: the reality of INR control in Africa and beyond.
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Zilla P, Human P, and Pennel T
- Abstract
The majority of patients requiring heart valve replacement in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) need it for rheumatic heart disease (RHD). While the young age of such patients largely prescribes replacement with mechanical prostheses, reliable anticoagulation management is often unattainable under the prevailing socioeconomic circumstances. Cases of patients with clotted valves presenting for emergency surgery as a consequence of poor adherence to anticoagulation control are frequent. The operative mortality rates of reoperations for thrombosed mechanical valves are several times higher than those for tissue valves, and long-term results are also disappointing. Under-anticoagulation prevails in these regions that has clearly been linked to poor international normalised ratio (INR) monitoring. In industrialised countries, safe anticoagulation is defined as >60%-70% of the time in the therapeutic range (TTR). In LMICs, the TTR has been found to be in the range of twenty to forty percent. In this study, we analysed >20,000 INR test results of 552 consecutive patients receiving a mechanical valve for RHD. Only 27% of these test results were in the therapeutic range, with the vast majority (61%) being sub-therapeutic. Interestingly, the post-operative frequency of INR tests of one every 3-4 weeks in year 1 had dropped to less than 1 per year by year 7. LMICs need to use clinical judgement and assess the probability of insufficient INR monitoring prior to uncritically applying Western guidelines predominantly based on chronological age. The process of identification of high-risk subgroups in terms of non-adherence to anticoagulation control should take into account both the adherence history of >50% of patients with RHD who were in chronic atrial fibrillation prior to surgery as well as geographic and socioeconomic circumstances., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer TF declared a past co-authorship with the authors PH, PZ to the handling editor and confirmed the absence of any ongoing collaboration during the review., (© 2024 Zilla, Human and Pennel.)
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- 2024
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30. Prevalence and Impact of HIV Infections in Patients with Rheumatic Heart Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Lumngwena EN, Mokaila D, Aremu O, Katoto PD, Blackburn J, Zilla P, Wiysonge CS, and Ntusi N
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Humans, Prevalence, Rheumatic Heart Disease complications, Rheumatic Heart Disease epidemiology, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections epidemiology, Rheumatic Fever epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases
- Abstract
Socioeconomic factors such as poor health and poor nutrition in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) may favour inflammatory reactions, thus contributing to the recurrence of rheumatic fever (RF) and thereby modifying trends in rheumatic heart disease (RHD). Apart from epidemiological studies, studies of HIV infections in RHD patients are limited. This systematic review synthesises data on the prevalence and impact of HIV infections or AIDS on RHD from PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science databases up to April 2021. The outcomes were managed using PRISMA guidelines. Of a total of 15 studies found, 10 were eligible for meta-analyses. Meta-analysis found that 17% (95 % CI 8-33, I
2 = 91%) of adults in cardiovascular disease (CVD) cohorts in Southern Africa are HIV positive. The proportion of RHD diagnosed among people living with HIV was 4% (95% CI 2-8, I2 = 79%) for adults but lower [2% (95% CI 1-4, I2 = 87%)] among perinatally infected children. Despite limited reporting, HIV-infected patients with RHD are prone to other infections that may enhance cardiac complications due to poor immunological control. PROSPERO registration number: CRD42021237046., Competing Interests: The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Correlations between the alpha-Gal antigen, antibody response and calcification of cardiac valve bioprostheses: experimental evidence obtained using an alpha-Gal knockout mouse animal model.
- Author
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Naso F, Colli A, Zilla P, Calafiore AM, Lotan C, Padalino MA, Sturaro G, Gandaglia A, and Spina M
- Subjects
- Animals, Swine, Cattle, Humans, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Antibody Formation, Calcium, Antigens, Heart Valves, Models, Animal, Antibodies, Bioprosthesis adverse effects, Calcinosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Preformed antibodies against αGal in the human and the presence of αGal antigens on the tissue constituting the commercial bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs, mainly bovine or porcine pericardium), lead to opsonization of the implanted BHV, leading to deterioration and calcification. Murine subcutaneous implantation of BHVs leaflets has been widely used for testing the efficacy of anti-calcification treatments. Unfortunately, commercial BHVs leaflets implanted into a murine model will not be able to elicit an αGal immune response because such antigen is expressed in the recipient and therefore immunologically tolerated., Methods: This study evaluates the calcium deposition on commercial BHV using a new humanized murine αGal knockout (KO) animal model. Furtherly, the anti-calcification efficacy of a polyphenol-based treatment was deeply investigated. By using CRISPR/Cas9 approach an αGal KO mouse was created and adopted for the evaluation of the calcific propensity of original and polyphenols treated BHV by subcutaneous implantation. The calcium quantification was carried out by plasma analysis; the immune response evaluation was performed by histology and immunological assays. Anti-αGal antibodies level in KO mice increases at least double after 2 months of implantation of original commercial BHV compared to WT mice, conversely, the polyphenols-based treatment seems to effectively mask the antigen to the KO mice's immune system., Results: Commercial leaflets explanted after 1 month from KO mice showed a four-time increased calcium deposition than what was observed on that explanted from WT. Polyphenol treatment prevents calcium deposition by over 99% in both KO and WT animals. The implantation of commercial BHV leaflets significantly stimulates the KO mouse immune system resulting in massive production of anti-Gal antibodies and the exacerbation of the αGal-related calcific effect if compared with the WT mouse., Discussion: The polyphenol-based treatment applied in this investigation showed an unexpected ability to inhibit the recognition of BHV xenoantigens by circulating antibodies almost completely preventing calcific depositions compared to the untreated counterpart., Competing Interests: FN, AG, and GS were employed by Biocompatibility Innovation Srl. AMC and MS were advisors for Biocompatibility Innovation. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The authors declare that this study received funding from Biocompatibility Innovation. The funder/advisors have the following involvement in the study: conception and design, writing of the original draft, project administration, and funding acquisition., (Copyright © 2023 Naso, Colli, Zilla, Calafiore, Lotan, Padalino, Sturaro, Gandaglia and Spina.)
- Published
- 2023
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32. Evaluating Calcification in Tissue-Engineered Heart Valves: Much More Complicated Than Expected?
- Author
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Motta SE, Breuer CK, Zilla P, Hoerstrup SP, and Emmert MY
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Preventing extrinsic mechanisms of bioprosthetic degeneration using polyphenols.
- Author
-
Melder RJ, Naso F, Nicotra F, Russo L, Vesely I, Tuladhar SR, Calafiore AM, Zilla P, Gandaglia A, and Korossis S
- Subjects
- Humans, Glutaral, Heart Valves, Heart Valve Prosthesis, Bioprosthesis, Calcinosis
- Abstract
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a polyphenols-based treatment on the extrinsic mechanisms responsible for early bioprosthetic heart valve (BHV) degeneration. Structural degeneration can be driven by both extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms. While intrinsic mechanisms have been associated with inherent biocompatibility characteristics of the BHV, the extrinsic ones have been reported to involve external causes, such as chemical, mechanical and hydrodynamic, responsible to facilitate graft damage., Methods: The chemical interaction and the stability degree between polyphenols and pericardial tissue were carefully evaluated. The detoxification of glutaraldehyde in commercial BHVs models and the protective effect from in vivo calcification were taken into relevant consideration. Finally, the hydrodynamic and biomechanical features of the polyphenols-treated pericardial tissue were deeply investigated by pulse duplicator and stress-strain analysis., Results: The study demonstrated the durability of the polyphenols-based treatment on pericardial tissue and the stability of the bound polyphenols. The treatment improves glutaraldehyde stabilization's current degree, demonstrating a surprising in vivo anti-calcific effect. It is able to make the pericardial tissue more pliable while maintaining the correct hydrodynamic characteristics., Conclusions: The polyphenols treatment has proved to be a promising approach capable of acting simultaneously on several factors related to the premature degeneration of cardiac valve substitutes by extrinsic mechanisms., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Immunoreaction to xenogenic tissue in cardiac surgery: alpha-Gal and beyond.
- Author
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Calafiore AM, Haverich A, Gaudino M, Di Mauro M, Fattouch K, Prapas S, and Zilla P
- Subjects
- Humans, Transplantation, Heterologous, Bioprosthesis, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Heart Valve Prosthesis
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Technological Basis of a Balloon-Expandable TAVR System: Non-occlusive Deployment, Anchorage in the Absence of Calcification and Polymer Leaflets.
- Author
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Appa H, Park K, Bezuidenhout D, van Breda B, de Jongh B, de Villiers J, Chacko R, Scherman J, Ofoegbu C, Swanevelder J, Cousins M, Human P, Smith R, Vogt F, Podesser BK, Schmitz C, Conradi L, Treede H, Schröfel H, Fischlein T, Grabenwöger M, Luo X, Coombes H, Matskeplishvili S, Williams DF, and Zilla P
- Abstract
Leaflet durability and costs restrict contemporary trans-catheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) largely to elderly patients in affluent countries. TAVR that are easily deployable, avoid secondary procedures and are also suitable for younger patients and non-calcific aortic regurgitation (AR) would significantly expand their global reach. Recognizing the reduced need for post-implantation pacemakers in balloon-expandable (BE) TAVR and the recent advances with potentially superior leaflet materials, a trans-catheter BE-system was developed that allows tactile, non-occlusive deployment without rapid pacing, direct attachment of both bioprosthetic and polymer leaflets onto a shape-stabilized scallop and anchorage achieved by plastic deformation even in the absence of calcification. Three sizes were developed from nickel-cobalt-chromium MP35N alloy tubes: Small/23 mm, Medium/26 mm and Large/29 mm. Crimp-diameters of valves with both bioprosthetic (sandwich-crosslinked decellularized pericardium) and polymer leaflets (triblock polyurethane combining siloxane and carbonate segments) match those of modern clinically used BE TAVR. Balloon expansion favors the wing-structures of the stent thereby creating supra-annular anchors whose diameter exceeds the outer diameter at the waist level by a quarter. In the pulse duplicator, polymer and bioprosthetic TAVR showed equivalent fluid dynamics with excellent EOA, pressure gradients and regurgitation volumes. Post-deployment fatigue resistance surpassed ISO requirements. The radial force of the helical deployment balloon at different filling pressures resulted in a fully developed anchorage profile of the valves from two thirds of their maximum deployment diameter onwards. By combining a unique balloon-expandable TAVR system that also caters for non-calcific AR with polymer leaflets, a powerful, potentially disruptive technology for heart valve disease has been incorporated into a TAVR that addresses global needs. While fulfilling key prerequisites for expanding the scope of TAVR to the vast number of patients of low- to middle income countries living with rheumatic heart disease the system may eventually also bring hope to patients of high-income countries presently excluded from TAVR for being too young., Competing Interests: “Strait Access Technologies” (SAT) is a start-up company of the University of Cape Town. HA, DB, JSc, HC, DW, and PZ own shares in SAT. JV, RC, and RS are employed by SAT. KP, BB, and MC are former employees and shareholders of SAT. BJ is a former employee of SAT. CS is employed by Auto Tissue Berlin. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Appa, Park, Bezuidenhout, van Breda, de Jongh, de Villiers, Chacko, Scherman, Ofoegbu, Swanevelder, Cousins, Human, Smith, Vogt, Podesser, Schmitz, Conradi, Treede, Schröfel, Fischlein, Grabenwöger, Luo, Coombes, Matskeplishvili, Williams and Zilla.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Residual Bioprosthetic Valve Immunogenicity: Forgotten, Not Lost.
- Author
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Human P, Bezuidenhout D, Aikawa E, and Zilla P
- Abstract
Despite early realization of the need to control inherent immunogenicity of bioprosthetic replacement heart valves and thereby mitigate the ensuing host response and its associated pathology, including dystrophic calcification, the problem remains unresolved to this day. Concerns over mechanical stiffness associated with prerequisite high cross-link density to effect abrogation of this response, together with the insinuated role of leaching glutaraldehyde monomer in subsequent dystrophic mineralization, have understandably introduced compromises. These have become so entrenched as a benchmark standard that residual immunogenicity of the extracellular matrix has seemingly been relegated to a very subordinate role. Instead, focus has shifted toward the removal of cellular compartment antigens renowned for their implication in the failure of vascularized organ xenotransplants. While decellularization certainly offers advantages, this review aims to refocus attention on the unresolved matter of the host response to the extracellular matrix. Furthermore, by implicating remnant immune and inflammatory processes to bioprosthetic valve pathology, including pannus overgrowth and mineralization, the validity of a preeminent focus on decellularization, in the context of inefficient antigen and possible residual microbial remnant removal, is questioned., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Human, Bezuidenhout, Aikawa and Zilla.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Polyphenols could be Effective in Exerting a Disinfectant-Like Action on Bioprosthetic Heart Valves, Counteracting Bacterial Adhesiveness.
- Author
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Naso F, Calafiore AM, Gaudino M, Zilla P, Haverich A, Colli A, Melder RJ, and Gandaglia A
- Abstract
Background: The incidence of infective endocarditis in patients with bioprosthetic heart valves is over 100 times that of the general population with S. aureus recognized as the causative organism in approximately 1/3 of cases. In this study, (1) the microbicidal and virucidal effect of a polyphenolic solution was carefully evaluated. The same solution was then adopted for the treatment of a commercial bioprosthetic heart valve model for (2) the assessment of inhibition of S. aureus adhesiveness., Methods: (1) the viability of 9 microorganisms strains (colony-forming units) and the infectivity degree of 3 viral strains (cellular infection capacity) were evaluated after suspension in the polyphenolic solution. (2) Leaflets from a treated and untreated commercial surgical valve model were incubated with a known concentration of S. aureus . After incubation, the leaflets were homogenized and placed in specific culture media to quantify the bacterial load., Results: (1) The polyphenolic solution proved to be effective in eliminating microorganisms strains guaranteeing the killing of at least 99.9%. The effectiveness is particularly relevant against M. chelonae (99.999%). (2) The polyphenol-based treatment resulted in the inhibition of the S. aureus adhesiveness by 96% concerning untreated samples., Conclusions: The data suggest an interesting protective effect against infections and bacterial adhesiveness by a polyphenolic-based solution. Further studies will plan to extend the panel of microorganisms for the evaluation of the anti-adhesive effect; however, the use of optimized polyphenolic blends could lead to the development of new treatments capable to make transcatheter-valve substitutes more resistant to infection.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Erratum to: 'United in earnest: first pilot sites for increased surgical capacity for rheumatic heart disease announced by cardiac surgery intersociety alliance' [Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2021;59:1139-43].
- Author
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Enumah ZO, Bolman RM, Zilla P, Boateng P, Wilson B, Kumar AS, Chotivatanapong T, Beyersdorf F, Pomar J, Sliwa K, Eiselé JL, Dearani J, and Higgins R
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Societies of Futures Past: Examining the History and Potential of International Society Collaborations in Addressing the Burden of Rheumatic Heart Disease in the Developing World.
- Author
-
Enumah ZO, Boateng P, Bolman RM, Beyersdorf F, Zühlke L, Musoni M, Tivane A, and Zilla P
- Abstract
This paper explores the role and place of national, regional, and international society collaborations in addressing the major global burden of rheumatic heart disease (RHD). On the same order of HIV, RHD affects over 40 million people worldwide. In this article, we will outline the background and current therapeutic landscape for cardiac surgery in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) including the resource-constrained settings within which RHD surgery often occurs. This creates numerous challenges to delivering adequate surgical care and post-operative management for RHD patients, and thus provides some context for a growing movement for and applicability of structural heart approaches, innovative valve replacement technologies, and minimally invasive techniques in this setting. Intertwined and building from this context will be the remainder of the paper which elaborates how national, regional, and international societies have collaborated to address rheumatic heart disease in the past (e.g., Drakensberg Declaration, World Heart Federation Working Group on RHD) with a focus on primary and secondary prevention. We then provide the recent history and context of the growing movement for how surgery has become front and center in the discussion of addressing RHD through the passing of the Cape Town Declaration., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Enumah, Boateng, Bolman, Beyersdorf, Zühlke, Musoni, Tivane and Zilla.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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