4 results on '"Jagpal, B"'
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2. Alterations in Cardiac Deformation, Timing of Contraction and Relaxation, and Early Myocardial Fibrosis Accompany the Apparent Recovery of Acute Stress-Induced (Takotsubo) Cardiomyopathy: An End to the Concept of Transience.
- Author
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Schwarz K, Ahearn T, Srinivasan J, Neil CJ, Scally C, Rudd A, Jagpal B, Frenneaux MP, Pislaru C, Horowitz JD, and Dawson DK
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arabidopsis Proteins, Diastole, Echocardiography, Female, Fibrosis complications, Fibrosis diagnosis, Fibrosis physiopathology, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Male, Middle Aged, Nuclear Proteins, Prospective Studies, Stroke Volume physiology, Systole, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy complications, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Myocardium pathology, Recovery of Function physiology, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Ventricular Pressure physiology
- Abstract
Background: Takotsubo syndrome is an increasingly recognized cause of chest pain and occasionally of cardiogenic shock. Despite rapid improvement of the left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction, recent registry data raise concerns about long-term prognosis. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that restoration of normal ejection fraction after acute takotsubo syndrome is not equivalent to full functional recovery., Methods: Fifty-two patients with takotsubo syndrome (according to the Mayo Clinic criteria plus cardiac magnetic resonance imaging to exclude myocardial infarction) and 44 healthy control subjects of the same age, gender, and cardiovascular comorbidity distribution were prospectively recruited. The focus of the investigation was on patients with takotsubo syndrome presenting with ST-segment elevation-type electrocardiographic findings or malignant arrhythmias and with LV apical ballooning variant, and a 4-month recovery endpoint was assessed. Patients underwent echocardiographic assessment of LV myocardial deformation (global longitudinal, radial, and circumferential strain; LV twist, torsion, and untwist; and time to peak twist and untwist) and assessment of LV myocardial structure by pre- and post-contrast-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance by T1 mapping acutely and at 4-month follow-up. Control subjects underwent a single-time-point investigation. Data were analyzed using paired or unpaired tests, as appropriate for their distribution, and corrected for multiple comparisons., Results: The patients' mean age was 66 years (range, 28-87 years), and 92% were women. All abnormal echocardiographic indices observed acutely in patients with takotsubo syndrome improved (but did not necessarily normalize) at follow-up. Significant mechanotemporal alterations characterizing both systole (global longitudinal strain and apical circumferential strain, P < .01 for both; LV twist, twist rate, and torsion, P < .0001 for all) and diastole (untwist rate and time to peak untwisting, P < .001 for both) persisted at 4-month follow-up compared with control subjects, despite normalization of LV ejection fraction and volumes. Although native T1 (which demonstrates edema) normalized at 4-months follow-up only in segments contracting normally during the acute phase (T1 = 1,180 ± 40.6 msec [normally contracting segments, P = .20 vs control value of 1,189 ± 16 msec] and T1 = 1,208 ± 60.3 msec [dysfunctional segments, P < .05 vs control]), the extracellular volume fraction (which demonstrates diffuse fibrosis) remained significantly abnormal in all LV segments (whether normally contracting [0.328 ± 0.043, P < .001] or ballooning during acute presentation [0.320 ± 0.044, P < .001], both vs control value of 0.273 ± 0.045)., Conclusions: In patients with the most clinically severe spectrum of takotsubo cardiomyopathy, regional LV systolic and diastolic deformation abnormalities persist beyond the acute event, despite normalization of global LV ejection fraction and size. In addition, although myocardial edema partly subsides, a process of global microscopic fibrosis develops in its place, detected as early as 4 months., (Copyright © 2017 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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3. Right Ventricular Involvement and Recovery After Acute Stress-Induced (Tako-tsubo) Cardiomyopathy.
- Author
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Scally C, Ahearn T, Rudd A, Neil CJ, Srivanasan J, Jagpal B, Horowitz J, Frenneaux M, and Dawson DK
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disease Progression, Echocardiography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Stroke Volume physiology, Syndrome, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnosis, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy etiology, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Recovery of Function physiology, Stress, Psychological complications, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology, Ventricular Function, Right physiology
- Abstract
Acute stress-induced (Tako-tsubo) cardiomyopathy is an increasingly recognized but insufficiently characterized syndrome. Here, we investigate the pathophysiology of right ventricular (RV) involvement in Tako-tsubo and its recovery time course. We prospectively recruited 31 patients with Tako-tsubo with predominantly ST-elevation electrocardiogram and 18 controls of similar gender, age, and co-morbidity distribution. Patients underwent echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging on a 3T Philips scanner in the acute phase (day 0 to 3 after presentation) and at 4-months follow-up. Visually, echocardiography was able to identify only 52% of patients who showed RV wall motion abnormalities on CMR. Only CMR-derived RV ejection fraction (p = 0.01) and echocardiography-estimated pulmonary artery pressure (p = 0.01) identify RV functional involvement in the acute phase. Although RV ejection fraction normalizes in most patients by 4 months, acutely there is RV myocardial edema in both functioning and malfunctioning segments, as measured by prolonged native T1 mapping (p = 0.02 for both vs controls), and this persists at 4 months in the acutely malfunctioning segments (p = 0.002 vs controls). The extracellular volume fraction was significantly increased acutely in all RV segments and remained increased at follow-up compared with controls (p = 0.004 for all). In conclusion, in a Tako-tsubo population presenting predominantly with ST-elevation electrocardiogram, we demonstrate that although RV functional involvement is seen in only half of the patients, RV myocardial edema is present acutely throughout the RV myocardium in all patients and results in microscopic fibrosis at 4-month follow-up., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tako-Tsubo Cardiomyopathy: A Heart Stressed Out of Energy?
- Author
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Dawson DK, Neil CJ, Henning A, Cameron D, Jagpal B, Bruce M, Horowitz J, and Frenneaux MP
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Edema, Cardiac diagnosis, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Middle Aged, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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