64 results on '"Nobre Menezes M"'
Search Results
2. Development of a machine learning model using 12-lead ECG to improve acute dianosis of pulmonary embolism
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Silva, B V, primary, Marques, J, additional, Nobre Menezes, M, additional, L Oliveira, A, additional, and J Pinto, F, additional
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- 2023
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3. AF in TAVR patients: double trouble means double care
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Garcia, A, primary, Martins, M, additional, Oliveira, C, additional, Alves Da Silva, P, additional, Brito, J, additional, Silva, B, additional, Raposo, M, additional, Abrantes, A, additional, Gregorio, C, additional, Fonseca, J, additional, Nobre Menezes, M, additional, Marques, J, additional, Jorge Moreira, C, additional, Carrilho Ferreira, P, additional, and Pinto, F, additional
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- 2023
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4. Electrocardiography: an usefull tool for prediction of the diagnosis and severity of pulmonary embolism
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Couto Pereira, S, primary, Valente Silva, B, additional, Silverio Antonio, P, additional, Brito, J, additional, Alves Da Silva, P, additional, Simoes De Oliveira, C, additional, Beatriz Garcia, A, additional, Martins, M, additional, Nobre Menezes, M, additional, Garcia, L, additional, Jorge, C, additional, Cortez-Dias, N, additional, and Pinto, FJ, additional
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- 2022
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5. Modified CHA2DS2-VASc can predict mortality in COVID-19 patients admitted to the emergency department
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Silva, B V, primary, Jorge, C, additional, Mendonca, C, additional, Urbano, M L, additional, Rodrigues, T, additional, Silverio Antonio, P, additional, Brito, J, additional, Alves Da Silva, P, additional, Garcia, B, additional, Martins, C, additional, Rigueira, J, additional, Ricardo Aguiar, I, additional, Nobre Menezes, M, additional, Placido, R, additional, and J Pinto, F, additional
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- 2021
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6. Poster session Friday 13 December - PM: 13/12/2013, 14: 00–18: 00Location: Poster area
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Nobre Menezes, M, Silva Marques, J, Magalhaes, R, Carvalho, V, Costa, P, Brito, D, Almeida, AG, and Nunes-Diogo, AG
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- 2013
7. Moderated Posters sessionThe emerging role of 2-dimensional strain in clinical practice: 13/12/2013, 14: 00–18: 00Location: Moderated Poster area
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Marta, L, Placido, R, Ramalho, A, Cortez-Dias, N, Nobre Menezes, M, Santos, L, Infante Oliveira, E, Martins, S, Almeida, AG, and Nunes Diogo, A
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- 2013
8. Poster session Friday 13 December - AM: 13/12/2013, 08: 30–12: 30Location: Poster area
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Placido, R, Marta, L, Ramalho, AR, Nobre Menezes, M, Cortez-Dias, N, Martins, S, Goncalves, S, Almeida, AG, Silva-Marques, J, and Nunes-Diogo, A
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- 2013
9. One stent versus two stents for distal LM PCI: insights from the experience of a high volume center
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Santos, R, primary, Nobre-Menezes, M, additional, Carrilho-Ferreira, P, additional, Jorge, C, additional, Francisco, A.R, additional, Infante-Oliveira, E, additional, Duarte, J, additional, Cardoso, P, additional, Torres, D, additional, Aguiar-Ricardo, I, additional, Rigueira, J, additional, Rodrigues, T, additional, Nunes-Ferreira, A, additional, Pinto, F.J, additional, and Silva, P.C, additional
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- 2020
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10. 191Aortic valve calcium score in patients undergoing TAVI: would 3mensio software be an alternative to the classic Agatston score?
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Rigueira, J, primary, Aguiar-Ricardo, I, additional, Pereira Dias, R, additional, Rodrigues, T, additional, Cunha, N, additional, Santos, R, additional, Antonio, P, additional, Nobre-Menezes, M, additional, Carrilho-Ferreira, P, additional, Leitao, J, additional, Canas Da Silva, P, additional, Pinto, F J, additional, and Almeida, A G, additional
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- 2019
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11. TRANSRADIAL VERSUS TRANSFEMORAL APPROACH FOR LEFT VENTRICULAR ENDOMYOCARDIAL BIOPSY
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Choudhury, T., primary, Lurz, P., additional, Schäufele, T., additional, Miguel Nobre Menezes, M., additional, Hartung, P., additional, Lavi, S., additional, and Bagur, R., additional
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- 2018
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12. Can we rely on iFR for avoiding FFR? Conclusions of a 5-year experience
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Nobre Menezes, M., Francisco, A. R. G., Agostinho, J., Carrilho Ferreira, P., Jorge, C., Torres, D., Cardoso, P., Infante Oliveira, E., Canas Da Silva, P., Fausto J. Pinto, and Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
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Instantaneous wave-free ratio - Abstract
Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2017, Background: Recently, the instantaneous wave free ratio (iFR), has been proposed an alternative or complementary method to fractional flow reserve (FFR). This new method does not require the use of adenosine and may expedite the speed of functional assessment. The iFR “hybrid strategy” relies on values 0,93 as definitive results which would not require the use of FFR. However, this strategy is much less consensual than FFR alone. Purpose: We aimed to assess the concordance of FFR and iFR results using the principle of the “hybrid strategy”, based on the 5-year experience of a single center. We also aimed to analyse the effect of iFR in the operator's decision to proceed to FFR, and its impact on procedure duration and radiation time/dosage. Methods: Single-center registry of all patients undergoing functional coronary lesion assessment during 5 years. FFR was used as a gold standard (with a cut-off point for intervention ≤0,80) for assessing the diagnostic accuracy of iFR in every patient who underwent measurements with both techniques. For analysis purposes, an iFR value 0,93 was considered negative (i.e. defer intervention). Values in between were deemed inconclusive. For statistical analysis we used the T student and Chi-Square tests. Results: Functional testing was undertaken in 326 patients (67±11 years, 65,6% male), encompassing 402 lesions. 154 lesions underwent assessment with both techniques, 222 by FFR only and 26 cases iFR only. The average iFR was 0,9±0,1. 60 lesions had an iFR >0,93 and 21 an iFR 0,93 (71,4% vs 68%; p=0,792). In these cases, there was a statistically significant concordance of 87% between the iFR and FFR results (χ2=22,43; p
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- 2017
13. P5847Long-term evolution of longitudinal myocardial deformation in the natural history of familial amyloid polyneuropathy
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Lima Da Silva, G., primary, Cortez-Dias, N., additional, Guimaraes, T., additional, Nobre Menezes, M., additional, Santos, L., additional, Goncalves, S., additional, Conceicao, I., additional, Pinto, F., additional, and Azevedo Coutinho, M.C., additional
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- 2017
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14. P1675Diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome by algorithms of respiratory monitoring incorporated in pacemakers in populations with high pretest probability
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Rigueira, J., primary, Santos Goncalves, I., additional, Lima Da Silva, G., additional, Agostinho, J., additional, Guimaraes, T., additional, Francisco, A.R.G., additional, Nobre Menezes, M., additional, Ricardo, I., additional, Magalhaes, A., additional, Costa, H.C., additional, Santos, I., additional, Bernardes, A., additional, Pinto, F.J., additional, De Sousa, J., additional, and Marques, P., additional
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- 2017
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15. P2626Prognostic impact of invasive hemodynamic evaluation in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension
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Aguiar-Ricardo, I., primary, Placido, R., additional, Goncalves, I., additional, Agostinho, J., additional, Lima Da Silva, G., additional, Nobre-Menezes, M., additional, Francisco, A.R., additional, Santos, R., additional, Ferreira, A., additional, Guimaraes, T., additional, Robalo Martins, S., additional, and Fauto Pinto, J., additional
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- 2017
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16. P2372Can we rely on iFR for avoiding FFR? Conclusions of a 5-year experience
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Nobre Menezes, M., primary, Francisco, A.R.G., additional, Agostinho, J., additional, Carrilho Ferreira, P., additional, Jorge, C., additional, Torres, D., additional, Cardoso, P., additional, Infante De Oliveira, E., additional, Canas Da Silva, P., additional, and Pinto, F.J., additional
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- 2017
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17. A unique congenital aorto-caval fistula: multi-modality imaging role for successful treatment
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Nobre Menezes, M., primary, Almeida, A. G., additional, Nobre, A., additional, and Bras Rosario, L., additional
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- 2014
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18. 191 Aortic valve calcium score in patients undergoing TAVI: would 3mensio software be an alternative to the classic Agatston score?
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Rigueira, J, Aguiar-Ricardo, I, Dias, R Pereira, Rodrigues, T, Cunha, N, Santos, R, Antonio, P, Nobre-Menezes, M, Carrilho-Ferreira, P, Leitao, J, Silva, P Canas Da, Pinto, F J, and Almeida, A G
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AORTIC valve ,AORTIC stenosis ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,PROSTHETIC heart valves ,CALCINOSIS - Published
- 2019
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19. Career satisfaction of medical residents in Portugal | Satisfação com a especialidade entre os internos da formação específica em Portugal
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Martins, M. J., Laíns, I., Bruno Brochado, Oliveira-Santos, M., Pinto Teixeira, P., Brandão, M., Cerqueira, R. J., Castro-Ferreira, R., Bernardes, C., Nobre Menezes, M., Soares Baptista, B., Ladeiras-Lopes, R., Cruz Rei, M., Pires Da Rosa, G., Martins, J. L., Mendonça Sanches, M., Ferreira-Pinto, M. J., Rato, M., Costa E Silva, M., Policiano, C., Beato, J., Barbosa-Breda, J., Pimentel Torres, J., Leal, I., Aguiar Rosa, S., Carvalho Ribeiro, B., Rego Costa, F., Palmela, C., Cúrdia Gonçalves, T., Morais, L., and Reis Marques, T.
20. Career satisfaction of medical residents in Portugal,Satisfação com a especialidade entre os internos da formação específica em Portugal
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Martins, M. J., Laíns, I., Brochado, B., Oliveira-Santos, M., Pinto Teixeira, P., Brandão, M., Cerqueira, R. J., Castro-Ferreira, R., Bernardes, C., Nobre Menezes, M., Soares Baptista, B., Ladeiras-Lopes, R., Cruz Rei, M., Pires Da Rosa, G., Martins, J. L., Mendonça Sanches, M., Ferreira-Pinto, M. J., Rato, M., Costa E Silva, M., Policiano, C., Beato, J., Joao Barbosa-Breda, Pimentel Torres, J., Leal, I., Aguiar Rosa, S., Carvalho Ribeiro, B., Rego Costa, F., Palmela, C., Cúrdia Gonçalves, T., Morais, L., and Reis Marques, T.
21. Poster session Friday 13 December - PM: 13/12/2013, 14:00-18:00 * Location: Poster area
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Caiani, EG, Pellegrini, A, Carminati, MC, Lang, RM, Auricchio, A, Vaida, P, Obase, K, Sakakura, T, Komeda, M, Okura, H, Yoshida, K, Zeppellini, R, Noni, M, Rigo, T, Erente, G, Carasi, M, Costa, A, Ramondo, BA, Thorell, L, Akesson-Lindow, T, Shahgaldi, K, Germanakis, I, Fotaki, A, Peppes, S, Sifakis, S, Parthenakis, F, Makrigiannakis, A, Richter, U, Sveric, K, Forkmann, M, Wunderlich, C, Strasser, RH, Djikic, D, Potpara, T, Polovina, M, Marcetic, Z, Peric, V, Ostenfeld, E, Werther-Evaldsson, A, Engblom, H, Ingvarsson, A, Roijer, A, Meurling, C, Holm, J, Radegran, G, Carlsson, M, Tabuchi, H, Yamanaka, T, Katahira, Y, Tanaka, M, Kurokawa, T, Nakajima, H, Ohtsuki, S, Saijo, Y, Yambe, T, Dalto, M, Romeo, E, Argiento, P, Dandrea, A, Vanderpool, R, Correra, A, Sarubbi, B, Calabro, R, Russo, MG, Naeije, R, Saha, S K, Warsame, T A, Caelian, A G, Malicse, M, Kiotsekoglou, A, Omran, A S, Sharif, D, Sharif-Rasslan, A, Shahla, C, Khalil, A, Rosenschein, U, Erturk, M, Oner, E, Kalkan, AK, Pusuroglu, H, Ozyilmaz, S, Akgul, O, Aksu, HU, Akturk, F, Celik, O, Uslu, N, Bandera, F, Pellegrino, M, Generati, G, Donghi, V, Alfonzetti, E, Guazzi, M, Rangel, I, Goncalves, A, Sousa, C, Correia, AS, Martins, E, Silva-Cardoso, J, Macedo, F, Maciel, MJ, Lee, S, Kim, W, Yun, H, Jung, L, Kim, E, Ko, J, Enescu, OA, Florescu, M, Rimbas, RC, Cinteza, M, Vinereanu, D, Kosmala, W, Rojek, A, Cielecka-Prynda, M, Laczmanski, L, Mysiak, A, Przewlocka-Kosmala, M, Liu, D, Hu, K, Niemann, M, Herrmann, S, Cikes, M, Gaudron, PD, Knop, S, Ertl, G, Bijnens, B, Weidemann, F, Saravi, M, Tamadoni, AHMAD, Jalalian, ROZITA, Hojati, MOSTAF, Ramezani, SAEED, Yildiz, A, Inci, U, Bilik, MZ, Yuksel, M, Oyumlu, M, Kayan, F, Ozaydogdu, N, Aydin, M, Akil, MA, Tekbas, E, Shang, Q, Zhang, Q, Fang, F, Wang, S, Li, R, Lee, A PW, Yu, CM, Mornos, C, Ionac, A, Cozma, D, Popescu, I, Ionescu, G, Dan, R, Petrescu, L, Sawant, AC, Srivatsa, SV, Adhikari, P, Mills, PK, Srivatsa, SS, Boshchenko, A, Vrublevsky, A, Karpov, R, Trifunovic, D, Stankovic, S, Vujisic-Tesic, B, Petrovic, M, Nedeljkovic, I, Banovic, M, Tesic, M, Petrovic, M, Dragovic, M, Ostojic, M, Zencirci, E, Esen Zencirci, A, Degirmencioglu, A, Karakus, G, Ekmekci, A, Erdem, A, Ozden, K, Erer, HB, Akyol, A, Eren, M, Zamfir, D, Tautu, O, Onciul, S, Marinescu, C, Onut, R, Comanescu, I, Oprescu, N, Iancovici, S, Dorobantu, M, Melao, F, Pereira, M, Ribeiro, V, Oliveira, S, Araujo, C, Subirana, I, Marrugat, J, Dias, P, Azevedo, A, study, EURHOBOP, Grillo, M T, Piamonti, B, Abate, E, Porto, A, Dellangela, L, Gatti, G, Poletti, A, Pappalardo, A, Sinagra, G, Pinto-Teixeira, P, Galrinho, A, Branco, L, Fiarresga, A, Sousa, L, Cacela, D, Portugal, G, Rio, P, Abreu, J, Ferreira, R, Fadel, B, Abdullah, N, Al-Admawi, M, Pergola, V, Bech-Hanssen, O, Di Salvo, G, Tigen, M K, Pala, S, Karaahmet, T, Dundar, C, Bulut, M, Izgi, A, Esen, A M, Kirma, C, Boerlage-Van Dijk, K, Yamawaki, M, Wiegerinck, EMA, Meregalli, PG, Bindraban, NR, Vis, MM, Koch, KT, Piek, JJ, Bouma, BJ, Baan, J, Mizia, M, Sikora-Puz, A, Gieszczyk-Strozik, K, Lasota, B, Chmiel, A, Chudek, J, Jasinski, M, Deja, M, Mizia-Stec, K, Silva Fazendas Adame, P R, Caldeira, D, Stuart, B, Almeida, S, Cruz, I, Ferreira, A, Lopes, L, Joao, I, Cotrim, C, Pereira, H, Unger, P, Dedobbeleer, C, Stoupel, E, Preumont, N, Argacha, JF, Berkenboom, G, Van Camp, G, Malev, E, Reeva, S, Vasina, L, Pshepiy, A, Korshunova, A, Timofeev, E, Zemtsovsky, E, Jorgensen, P G, Jensen, JS, Fritz-Hansen, T, Biering-Sorensen, T, Jons, C, Olsen, NT, Henri, C, Magne, J, Dulgheru, R, Laaraibi, S, Voilliot, D, Kou, S, Pierard, L, Lancellotti, P, Tayyareci, Y, Dworakowski, R, Kogoj, P, Reiken, J, Kenny, C, Maccarthy, P, Wendler, O, Monaghan, MJ, Song, JM, Ha, TY, Jung, YJ, Seo, MO, Choi, SA, Kim, YJ, Sun, BJ, Kim, DH, Kang, DH, Song, JK, Le Tourneau, T, Topilsky, Y, Inamo, J, Mahoney, D, Suri, R, Schaff, H, Enriquez-Sarano, M, Bonaque Gonzalez, JC, Sanchez Espino, AD, Merchan Ortega, G, Bolivar Herrera, N, Ikuta, I, Macancela Quinonez, JJ, Munoz Troyano, S, Ferrer Lopez, R, Gomez Recio, M, Dreyfus, J, Cimadevilla, C, Brochet, E, Himbert, D, Iung, B, Vahanian, A, Messika-Zeitoun, D, Izumo, M, Takeuchi, M, Seo, Y, Yamashita, E, Suzuki, K, Ishizu, T, Sato, K, Aonuma, K, Otsuji, Y, Akashi, YJ, Muraru, D, Addetia, K, Veronesi, F, Corsi, C, Mor-Avi, V, Yamat, M, Weinert, L, Lang, RM, Badano, LP, Minamisawa, M, Koyama, J, Kozuka, A, Motoki, H, Izawa, A, Tomita, T, Miyashita, Y, Ikeda, U, Florescu, C, Niemann, M, Liu, D, Hu, K, Herrmann, S, Gaudron, PD, Scholz, F, Stoerk, S, Ertl, G, Weidemann, F, Marchel, M, Serafin, A, Kochanowski, J, Piatkowski, R, Madej-Pilarczyk, A, Filipiak, KJ, Hausmanowa-Petrusewicz, I, Opolski, G, Meimoun, P, Mbarek, D, Clerc, J, Neikova, A, Elmkies, F, Tzvetkov, B, Luycx-Bore, A, Cardoso, C, Zemir, H, Mansencal, N, Arslan, M, El Mahmoud, R, Pilliere, R, Dubourg, O, Ikonomidis, I, Lambadiari, V, Pavlidis, G, Koukoulis, C, Kousathana, F, Varoudi, M, Tritakis, V, Triantafyllidi, H, Dimitriadis, G, Lekakis, I, Kovacs, A, Kosztin, A, Solymossy, K, Celeng, C, Apor, A, Faludi, M, Berta, K, Szeplaki, G, Foldes, G, Merkely, B, Kimura, K, Daimon, M, Nakajima, T, Motoyoshi, Y, Komori, T, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Uno, K, Takenaka, K, Komuro, I, Gabric, I D, Vazdar, LJ, Pintaric, H, Planinc, D, Vinter, O, Trbusic, M, Bulj, N, Nobre Menezes, M, Silva Marques, J, Magalhaes, R, Carvalho, V, Costa, P, Brito, D, Almeida, AG, Nunes-Diogo, AG, Davidsen, E S, Bergerot, C, Ernande, L, Barthelet, M, Thivolet, S, Decker-Bellaton, A, Altman, M, Thibault, H, Moulin, P, Derumeaux, G, Huttin, O, Voilliot, D, Frikha, Z, Aliot, E, Venner, C, Juilliere, Y, Selton-Suty, C, Yamada, T, Ooshima, M, Hayashi, H, Okabe, S, Johno, H, Murata, H, Charalampopoulos, A, Tzoulaki, I, Howard, LS, Davies, RJ, Gin-Sing, W, Grapsa, J, Wilkins, MR, Gibbs, JSR, Castillo, JMDC, Bandeira, AMPB, Albuquerque, ESA, Silveira, C, Pyankov, V, Chuyasova, Y, Lichodziejewska, B, Goliszek, S, Kurnicka, K, Dzikowska Diduch, O, Kostrubiec, M, Krupa, M, Grudzka, K, Ciurzynski, M, Palczewski, P, Pruszczyk, P, Arana, X, Oria, G, Onaindia, JJ, Rodriguez, I, Velasco, S, Cacicedo, A, Palomar, S, Subinas, A, Zumalde, J, Laraudogoitia, E, Saeed, S, Kokorina, MV, Fromm, A, Oeygarden, H, Waje-Andreassen, U, Gerdts, E, Gomez, ELENA, Vallejo, NURIA, Pedro-Botet, LUISA, Mateu, LOURDE, Nunyez, RAQUEL, Llobera, LAIA, Bayes, ANTONI, Sabria, MIQUEL, Antonini-Canterin, F, Mateescu, AD, La Carrubba, S, Vriz, O, Di Bello, V, Carerj, S, Zito, C, Ginghina, C, Popescu, BA, Nicolosi, GL, Mateescu, AD, La Carrubba, S, Vriz, O, Di Bello, V, Carerj, S, Zito, C, Ginghina, C, Popescu, BA, Nicolosi, GL, Antonini-Canterin, F, Pudil, R, Praus, R, Vasatova, M, Vojacek, J, Palicka, V, Hulek, P, P37/03, Prvouk, Pradel, S, Mohty, D, Damy, T, Echahidi, N, Lavergne, D, Virot, P, Aboyans, V, Jaccard, A, Mateescu, AD, La Carrubba, S, Vriz, O, Di Bello, V, Carerj, S, Zito, C, Ginghina, C, Popescu, BA, Nicolosi, GL, Antonini-Canterin, F, Doulaptsis, C, Symons, R, Matos, A, Florian, A, Masci, PG, Dymarkowski, S, Janssens, S, Bogaert, J, Lestuzzi, C, Moreo, A, Celik, S, Lafaras, C, Dequanter, D, Tomkowski, W, De Biasio, M, Cervesato, E, Massa, L, Imazio, M, Watanabe, N, Kijima, Y, Akagi, T, Toh, N, Oe, H, Nakagawa, K, Tanabe, Y, Ikeda, M, Okada, K, Ito, H, Milanesi, O, Biffanti, R, Varotto, E, Cerutti, A, Reffo, E, Castaldi, B, Maschietto, N, Vida, VL, Padalino, M, Stellin, G, Bejiqi, R, Retkoceri, R, Bejiqi, H, Retkoceri, A, Surdulli, SH, Massoure, PL, Cautela, J, Roche, NC, Chenilleau, MC, Gil, JM, Fourcade, L, Akhundova, A, Cincin, A, Sunbul, M, Sari, I, Tigen, MK, Basaran, Y, Suermeci, G, Butz, T, Schilling, IC, Sasko, B, Liebeton, J, Van Bracht, M, Tzikas, S, Prull, MW, Wennemann, R, Trappe, HJ, Attenhofer Jost, C H, Pfyffer, M, Scharf, C, Seifert, B, Faeh-Gunz, A, Naegeli, B, Candinas, R, Medeiros-Domingo, A, Wierzbowska-Drabik, K, Roszczyk, N, Sobczak, M, Plewka, M, Krecki, R, Kasprzak, JD, Ikonomidis, I, Varoudi, M, Papadavid, E, Theodoropoulos, K, Papadakis, I, Pavlidis, G, Triantafyllidi, H, Anastasiou - Nana, M, Rigopoulos, D, Lekakis, J, Tereshina, O, Surkova, E, Vachev, A, Merchan Ortega, G, Bonaque Gonzalez, JC, Sanchez Espino, AD, Bolivar Herrera, N, Bravo Bustos, D, Ikuta, I, Aguado Martin, MJ, Navarro Garcia, F, Ruiz Lopez, F, Gomez Recio, M, Merchan Ortega, G, Bonaque Gonzalez, JC, Bravo Bustos, D, Sanchez Espino, AD, Bolivar Herrera, N, Bonaque Gonzalez, JJ, Navarro Garcia, F, Aguado Martin, MJ, Ruiz Lopez, MF, Gomez Recio, M, Eguchi, H, Maruo, T, Endo, K, Nakamura, K, Yokota, K, Fuku, Y, Yamamoto, H, Komiya, T, Kadota, K, Mitsudo, K, Nagy, A I, Manouras, AI, Gunyeli, E, Shahgaldi, K, Winter, R, Hoffmann, R, Barletta, G, Von Bardeleben, S, Kasprzak, J, Greis, C, Vanoverschelde, J, Becher, H, Hu, K, Liu, D, Niemann, M, Herrmann, S, Cikes, M, Gaudron, PD, Knop, S, Ertl, G, Bijnens, B, Weidemann, F, Di Salvo, G, Al Bulbul, Z, Issa, Z, Khan, AM, Faiz, AA, Rahmatullah, SH, Fadel, BM, Siblini, G, Al Fayyadh, M, Menting, M E, Van Den Bosch, AE, Mcghie, JS, Cuypers, JAAE, Witsenburg, M, Van Dalen, BM, Geleijnse, ML, Roos-Hesselink, JW, Olsen, FJ, Jorgensen, PG, Mogelvang, R, Jensen, JS, Fritz-Hansen, T, Bech, J, Biering-Sorensen, T, Agoston, G, Pap, R, Saghy, L, Forster, T, Varga, A, Scandura, S, Capodanno, D, Dipasqua, F, Mangiafico, S, Caggegi, A M, Grasso, C, Pistritto, A M, Imme, S, Ministeri, M, Tamburino, C, Cameli, M, Lisi, M, Dascenzi, F, Cameli, P, Losito, M, Sparla, S, Lunghetti, S, Favilli, R, Fineschi, M, Mondillo, S, Ojaghihaghighi, Z, Javani, B, Haghjoo, M, Moladoust, H, Shahrzad, S, Ghadrdoust, B, Altman, M, Aussoleil, A, Bergerot, C, Bonnefoy-Cudraz, E, Derumeaux, G A, Thibault, H, Shkolnik, E, Vasyuk, Y, Nesvetov, V, Shkolnik, L, Varlan, G, Gronkova, N, Kinova, E, Borizanova, A, Goudev, A, Saracoglu, E, Ural, D, Sahin, T, Al, N, Cakmak, H, Akbulut, T, Akay, K, Ural, E, Mushtaq, S, Andreini, D, Pontone, G, Bertella, E, Conte, E, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Fiorentini, C, Pepi, M, Cosgrove, C, Carr, L, Chao, C, Dahiya, A, Prasad, S, Younger, JF, Biering-Sorensen, T, Christensen, LM, Krieger, DW, Mogelvang, R, Jensen, JS, Hojberg, S, Host, N, Karlsen, FM, Christensen, H, Medressova, A, Abikeyeva, L, Dzhetybayeva, S, Andossova, S, Kuatbayev, Y, Bekbossynova, M, Bekbossynov, S, Pya, Y, Farsalinos, K, Tsiapras, D, Kyrzopoulos, S, Spyrou, A, Stefopoulos, C, Romagna, G, Tsimopoulou, K, Tsakalou, M, Voudris, V, Cacicedo, A, Velasco Del Castillo, S, Anton Ladislao, A, Aguirre Larracoechea, U, Onaindia Gandarias, J, Romero Pereiro, A, Arana Achaga, X, Zugazabeitia Irazabal, G, Laraudogoitia Zaldumbide, E, Lekuona Goya, I, Varela, A, Kotsovilis, S, Salagianni, M, Andreakos, V, Davos, CH, Merchan Ortega, G, Bonaque Gonzalez, JC, Sanchez Espino, AD, Bolivar Herrera, N, Macancela Quinones, JJ, Ikuta, I, Ferrer Lopez, R, Munoz Troyano, S, Bravo Bustos, D, and Gomez Recio, M
- Abstract
Purpose: Cardiac deconditioning due to immobilization is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The physiology of cardiac adaptation to deconditioning has not been fully elucidated. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effects of 21-days of strict head-down (-6 degrees) bed-rest (BR) deconditioning on left ventricular (LV) dimensions and mass measured by MRI. Methods: Ten healthy men (mean age 32±6) were enrolled; the experiment was conducted at DLR (Koln, Germany) as part of the European Space Agency BR studies. Steady-state free precession MRI images (7mm thickness, no gap, no overlap) were obtained (Symphony 1.5T, Siemens) in a stack of short-axis views from LV base to LV apex, before (PRE), at the end of BR (HDT20), and four days after the BR conclusion (POST). Endocardial and epicardial semi-automated contouring was performed using freely available software (Segment). Results: At HDT20, significant reductions in LV mass (16%), end-diastolic (26%) and end-systolic (27%) volumes and stroke volume (27%) were observed, while ejection fraction did not change. These changes were accompanied by a measured decrease (14%) in plasma and blood volume (by gas-rebreathing technique), as well as by a significant reduction (14%) in VO2max aerobic power, measured using a graded cycle ergometer test protocol to volitional fatigue, at one day after the BR conclusion, while expiratory exchange ratio did not change. At POST, LV volumes were restored, while LV mass was still trending towards control values. Conclusions: Cardiac adaptation to deconditioning affected LV mass and dimensions, as a combined result of LV remodeling and fluids loss, accompanied by worsening in aerobic power. This should be taken into account in patients with cardiovascular diseases, when immobilized in bed, to proper adjust the therapy, or to define appropriate physical exercises when possible, in order to avoid further complications.
Cardiac MRI parameters PRE HDT20 POST LV mass (g) 121±6 102±11* 114±16 End-diastolic volume (ml) 119±25 90±14* 118±25 End-systolic volume (ml) 42±8 31±8* 45±14 Stroke volume (ml) 76±22 59±11* 73±15 Ejection fraction (%) 64±6 65±7 62±7 *: p<.01 vs PRE (one-way Anova for paired data and Tukey test) - Published
- 2013
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22. Poster session Friday 13 December - AM: 13/12/2013, 08:30-12:30 * Location: Poster area
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Gertsen, M, Nemes, A, Szolnoky, G, Altmayer, A, Gavaller, H, Kemeny, L, Forster, T, Park, J R, Jo, SY, Kim, KH, Kho, JS, Kwack, CH, Hwang, JY, Popovic, D, Ostojic, MC, Petrovic, M, Vujisic-Tesic, B, Arandjelovic, A, Banovic, M, Vukcevic, V, Petrovic, I, Popovic, B, Damjanovic, S, Placido, R, Marta, L, Ramalho, AR, Nobre Menezes, M, Cortez-Dias, N, Martins, S, Goncalves, S, Almeida, AG, Silva-Marques, J, Nunes-Diogo, A, Germanakis, I, Kakouri, P, Karachaliou, M, Vassilaki, M, Chatzi, L, Roumeliotaki, T, Kogevinas, M, Horst, J-P, Kelter-Kloepping, A, Koerperich, H, Barth, P, Haas, NA, Kececioglu, D, Laser, KT, Laser, KT, Horst, J-P, Kelter-Kloepping, A, Barth, P, Haas, NA, Kececioglu, D, Koerperich, H, Samiei, N, Nabati, M, Azari-Jafari, M, Vakili-Zarch, A, Parsaee, M, Haghjoo, M, Ahmed, A J, Val-Mejias, J E, Von Bulow, F M, Baltussen, E J M, Darban, AM, Claus, P, Voigt, JU, Rodriguez Munoz, DA, Moya Mur, JL, Gonzalez, A, Garcia Martin, A, Becker Filho, D, Fernandez Santos, S, Lazaro Rivera, C, Recio Vazquez, M, Fernandez Golfin, C, Zamorano Gomez, JL, Bandera, F, Pellegrino, M, Generati, G, Alfonzetti, E, Donghi, V, Castelvecchio, S, Garatti, A, Menicanti, L, Guazzi, M, Kowalik, E, Klisiewicz, A, Hoffman, P, Kim, EJ, Cho, I J, Oh, J, Chang, HJ, Park, J, Shin, S, Shim, CY, Hong, GR, Ha, JW, Chung, N, Park, JH, Lee, HS, Kim, HS, Ahn, KT, Kim, JH, Lee, JH, Choi, SW, Jeong, JO, Seong, IW, Holzendorf, V, Gelbrich, G, Wachter, R, Loeffler, M, Pieske, BM, Broda, A, Edelmann, F, Failure, German Competence Network for Heart, Kim, YH, Kim, DH, Kim, SH, Ahn, JC, Song, WH, Hashimoto, G, Suzuki, M, Yoshikawa, H, Otsuka, T, Kusunose, Y, Nakamura, M, Sugi, K, De Knegt, M C, Biering-Sorensen, T, Sogaard, P, Sivertsen, J, Jensen, JS, Mogelvang, R, Murbraech, K, Smeland, KH, Holte, H, Loge, JH, Kiserud, CE, Aakhus, S, Peteiro, J, Gargallo-Fernandez, P, Garcia-Guimaraes, M, Bouzas-Mosquera, A, Yanez-Wronenburger, JC, Martinez-Ruiz, D, Castro-Beiras, A, Trzcinski, PT, Jaskowski, MJ, Nowak, JN, Pawlus, MP, Figiel, LF, Kasprzak, JDK, Lipiec, PL, Zhong, L, Su, Y, Teo, SK, Le, TT, Tan, RS, Tesic, M, Djordjevic-Dikic, A, Giga, V, Jovanovic, I, Paunovic, I, Petrovic, MT, Trifunovic, D, Beleslin, B, Stepanovic, J, Vujisic-Tesic, B, Parato, V M, Partemi, M, Nardini, E, Pasanisi, E, Park, T-H, Lee, J-E, Lee, D-H, Park, J-S, Park, K, Kim, M-H, Kim, Y-D, Vegsundvag, J, Holte, E, Wiseth, R, Hegbom, K, Hole, T, Fusini, L, Tamborini, G, Ghulam Ali, S, Muratori, M, Gripari, P, Cefalu, C, Maffessanti, F, Celeste, F, Alamanni, F, Pepi, M, Negrea, SL, Alexandrescu, C, Rossi, P, Iacuzio, L, Dreyfus, G, Moatemri, F, Mahdhaoui, A, Bouraoui, H, Ernez, S, Jeridi, G, Yuan, L, Feng, JL, Jin, X Y, Seoane Garcia, T, Delgado Ortega, M, Mesa Rubio, D, Ruiz Ortiz, M, Martin Hidalgo, M, Carrasco Avalos, F, Casares Mediavilla, J, Alados, P, Lopez Granados, A, Suarez De Lezo Cruz Conde, J, Mutuberria Urdaniz, M, Rodriguez-Palomares, JF, Baneras-Rius, JF, Acosta-Velez, JG, Buera-Surribas, I, Gonzalez-Alujas, MT, Teixido, G, Evangelista, A, Tornos, P, Garcia-Dorado, D, Iliuta, L, Boerlage-Van Dijk, K, Van Riel, ACMJ, De Bruin-Bon, HACM, Wiegerinck, EMA, Koch, KT, Vis, MM, Meregalli, PG, Piek, JJ, Bouma, BJ, Baan, J, Enache, R, Muraru, D, Piazza, R, Popescu, BA, Coman, M, Calin, A, Rosca, M, Beladan, CC, Nicolosi, GL, Ginghina, C, Song, JM, Kim, JJ, Ha, TY, Jung, SH, Hwang, IS, Lee, IC, Sun, BJ, Kim, DH, Kang, DH, Song, JK, Sturmberger, T, Ebner, CE, Aichinger, J, Tkalec, W, Niel, J, Steringer-Mascherbauer, R, Kabicher, G, Winter, S, Nesser, HJ, Hofmann-Bowman, M, Lin Yan, LY, Puri, TP, Chin, C W L, Doris, M, Shah, A, Mills, N, Semple, S, Prasad, S, White, A, Dweck, M, Newby, D, Debonnaire, P, Al Amri, I, Leong, DP, Joyce, E, Katsanos, S, Kamperidis, V, Schalij, MJ, Bax, JJ, Ajmone Marsan, N, Delgado, V, Cerin, G, Popa, B A, Lanzillo, G, Benea, D, Karazanishvili, L, Diena, M, Dedobbeleer, C, Schnell, F, Jotrand, E, El Mourad, M, Thebault, C, Plein, D, Donal, E, Unger, P, Spampinato, RA, Tasca, M, Da Rocha E Silva, JG, Strotdrees, E, Schloma, V, Dmitrieva, Y, Mende, M, Borger, MA, Mohr, FW, Veronesi, F, Muraru, D, Addetia, K, Corsi, C, Lamberti, C, Lang, RM, Mor-Avi, V, Badano, LP, Zemanek, D, Tomasov, P, Belehrad, M, Kara, T, Veselka, J, Igual Munoz, B, Estornell Erill, JORDI, Maceira Gonzalez Alicia, AMG, Monmeneu Menadas, JVMM, Lopez Lereu Pilar, PLL, Molina Aguilar, PMA, Domingo-Valero, DDV, Osca Asensi, JOA, Zorio Grima, EZG, Salvador Sanz Antonio, ASS, Ibrahimi, P, Bajraktari, G, Poniku, A, Hysenaj, V, Ahmeti, A, Jashari, F, Haliti, E, Henein, MY, Maramao, F, Conde, Y, Maramao, L, Rulli, F, Roussin, I, Drakopoulou, M, Bhattacharyya, S, Simpkin, V, Sharma, R, Rosen, S, Prasad, S, Senior, R, Lyon, AR, Kimura, K, Tanimoto, T, Akasaka, T, Fijalkowski, M, Jaguszewski, M, Fijalkowska, M, Nowak, R, Galaska, R, Rojek, A, Narkiewicz, K, Rynkiewicz, A, Azevedo, O, Marques, N, Cruz, I, Picarra, B, Lima, R, Amado, J, Pereira, V, Almeida, AR, SUNSHINE, Zito, C, Crea, P, Cusma Piccione, M, Vriz, O, Bitto, A, Minisini, R, Madaffari, A, Acri, E, Oteri, A, Carerj, S, Leggio, S, Buccheri, S, Tamburino, C, Monte, I P, Mihalcea, D, Florescu, M, Enescu, OA, Magda, LS, Radu, E, Acasandrei, AM, Balanescu, P, Rimbas, RC, Jinga, D, Vinereanu, D, 112/2011, Research grant, Miyoshi, T, Tanaka, H, Kaneko, A, Matsumoto, K, Imanishi, J, Motoji, Y, Mochizuki, Y, Minami, H, Kawai, H, Hirata, K, Ryu, SK, Shin, DG, Son, JW, Choi, JH, Goh, CW, Choi, JW, Park, JY, Hong, GR, Le Page, P, Mitchell, ARJ, Maclachlan, HI, Hurry, RW, Villagraz Tecedor, L, Jimenez Lopez Guarch, C, Alonso Chaterina, S, Mayordomo Gomez, S, Blazquez Arrollo, L, Lombera Romero, F, Lopez Melgar, B, Escribano Subias, MP, Lichodziejewska, B, Kurnicka, K, Goliszek, S, Kostrubiec, M, Dzikowska Diduch, O, Krupa, M, Grudzka, K, Ciurzynski, M, Palczewski, P, Pruszczyk, P, Lovric, D, Carmona, C, Bergerot, C, Schnell, F, Thibault, H, Barthelet, M, Ninet, J, Revel, D, Croisille, P, Derumeaux, G, Jensen, MT, Rossing, P, Sogaard, P, Andersen, HU, Bech, J, Hansen, TF, Gustafsson, I, Galatius, S, Jensen, JS, Shang, Q, Zhang, Q, Sanderson, JE, Tam, LS, Lee, A PW, Fang, F, Li, E KM, Yu, CM, Bruin De- Bon, HACM, Tan, HL, Hardziyenka, M, Symersky, P, Bonta, PI, Brink Van Den, RBA, Bouma, BJ, Bader, RS, Punn, R, Silverman, N, Cruz, C, Pinho, T, Lebreiro, A, Dias, CC, Silva Cardoso, J, Julia Maciel, M, Melao, F, Ribeiro, V, Cruz, C, Maciel, MJ, Attenhofer Jost, C H, Schmidt, D, Pfyffer, M, Biaggi, P, Seifert, B, Weber, R, De Pasquale, G, Kretschmar, O, Seeliger, T, Greutmann, M, Johansson, M C, Mirzada, N, Ladenvall, P, Besiroglu, F, Samadov, F, Atas, H, Sari, I, Tufekcioglu, O, Birincioglu, CL, Acar, B, Duman, I, Colak, A, Zagatina, A, Krylova, L, Zhuravskaya, N, Vareldzhyan, Y, Tyurina, TV, Clitsenko, O, Castro, M, Dores, H, Carvalho, MS, Reis, C, Horta, E, Trabulo, MS, Andrade, MJ, Mendes, M, Gasior, Z, Plonska-Gosciniak, E, Wita, K, Mizia-Stec, K, Kulach, A, Szwed, H, Chrzanowski, L, Tomaszewski, A, Sinkiewicz, W, Wojciechowska, C, Aggeli, C, Felekos, I, Stergiou, P, Roussakis, G, Kakiouzi, V, Kastellanos, S, Koutagiar, I, Stefanadis, C, Bouzas Mosquera, A, Peteiro, J, Alvarez-Garcia, N, Broullon, FJ, Garcia-Guimaraes, MM, Martinez-Ruiz, D, Yanez-Wonenburger, JC, Bouzas-Zubeldia, B, Fabregas, R, Castro-Beiras, A, Brugger, N, Huerzeler, M, Wustmann, K, Wahl, A, Steck, H, Seiler, C, Sarwar, R, Malhotra, A, Wong, KC, Betts, TR, Bashir, Y, Rajappan, K, Newton, JD, Casanova Rodriguez, C, Cano Carrizal, R, Iglesias Del Valle, D, Martin Penato Molina, A, Garcia Garcia, A, Prieto Moriche, E, Alvarez Rubio, J, Paredes Gonzalez, B, De Juan Baguda, J, Plaza Perez, I, Van Den Oord, SCH, Akkus, Z, Roeters Van Lennep, JE, Bosch, JG, Van Der Steen, AFW, Sijbrands, EJG, Schinkel, AFL, Muraru, D, Calore, C, Badano, LP, Melacini, C, Mihaila, S, Peluso, D, Puma, L, Kocabay, G, Rizzon, G, Iliceto, S, Bochard Villanueva, B, Paya-Serrano, R, Garcia-Gonzalez, P, Fabregat-Andres, O, Perez-Bosca, JL, Cubillos-Arango, A, Ferrando-Beltran, M, Chacon-Hernandez, N, Albiach-Montanana, C, Ridocci-Soriano, F, Ancona, R, Comenale Pinto, S, Caso, P, Arenga, F, Coppola, MG, Calabro, R, Tarr, A, Stoebe, S, Pfeiffer, D, Hagendorff, A, Hollekim, SM, Bjorgaas, MR, Tjonna, AE, Wisloff, U, Ingul, CB, (CERG), Cardiac Exercise Research Group, Oreto, L, Zito, C, Cusma-Piccione, M, Calabro, MP, Todaro, MC, Vita, GL, Messina, S, Vita, G, Sframeli, M, Carerj, S, Remoli, R, Lamberti, F, Bellini, C, Mercurio, M, Dottori, S, Bellusci, F, Mazzuca, V, Gaspardone, A, Rimbas, RC, Enescu, OA, Mihaila, S, Ciobanu, A, Vinereanu, D, Henri, C, Magne, J, Dulgheru, R, Laaraibi, S, Voilliot, D, Kou, S, Pierard, L, Lancellotti, P, Wellnhofer, E, Kriatselis, C, Gerds-Li, H, Furundzija, VESNA, Thanabalasingam, U, Fleck, E, Graefe, M, Kouris, N, Keramida, K, Karidas, V, Kostopoulos, V, Kostakou, P, Mprempos, G, Olympios, CD, Duchateau, N, Giraldeau, G, Gabrielli, L, Penela, D, Evertz, R, Mont, L, Brugada, J, Berruezo, A, Bijnens, BH, Sitges, M, Bernard, A, Donal, E, Reynaud, A, Schnell, F, Daubert, JC, Leclercq, C, Hernandez, A, Keramida, K, Kouris, N, Kostopoulos, V, Karidas, V, Dagre, A, Ntarladimas, I, Damaskos, D, Stamatelatou, M, Olympios, CD, Panetta, G L, Peraldo Neja, C, Urbano Moral, JA, Evangelista, A, Azzolini, P, Gaudio, C, Pandian, NG, Barbier, P, Mirea, O, Savioli, G, Cefalu, C, Guglielmo, M, Fusini, L, Maltagliati, A, Hamdy, AM, Fereig, HM, Nabih, MA, Abdel-Aziz, A, Ali, AA, Buccheri, S, Mangiafico, S, Leggio, S, B, VE, Tropea, L, Tamburino, C, Monte, I P, Garcia-Gonzalez, P, Chacon-Hernandez, N, Cozar-Santiago, P, Fabregat-Andres, O, Sanchez-Jurado, R, Higueras-Ortega, L, Albiach-Motanana, C, Perez-Bosca, JL, Paya-Serrano, R, Ridocci-Soriano, F, Flori, M, Valette, F, Guijarro, D, Pallardy, A, Le Tourneau, T, Kraeber-Bodere, F, Piriou, N, Saxena, A, Ramakrishnan, S, Tulunay Kaya, C, Ongun, A, Kilickap, M, Candemir, B, Altin, AT, Gerede, M, Ozcan, OU, Erol, C, Yue, WS, Yang, F, Huang, D, Gu, P, Luo, Y, Lv, Z, Siu, CW, Tse, HF, Yiu, KH, Saura Espin, D, Lopez Cuenca, A, Espinosa Garcia, MD, Oliva Sandoval, MJ, Lopez Ruiz, M, Gonzalez Carrillo, J, Garcia Navarro, MJ, Valdes Chavarri, M, De La Morena Valenzuela, G, Gustafsson, U, Spuhler, JH, Hoffman, J, Brodin, LÅ, Kisko, A, Dernarova, L, Hudakova, A, Santova, T, Jakubikova, M, Mikulak, M, Horlenko, O, Kishko, N, Svystak, V, Shyp, A, Faden, G, Gaibazzi, N, Rigo, F, Mureddu, GF, Moreo, A, Bussadori, G, Facchetti, R, Cesana, F, Giannattasio, C, Faggiano, P, and group, APRES collaborative
- Abstract
Pulmonary vascular dysfunction is claimed to be a contributor to the development of pulmonary hypertension (PH). Impaired systemic vascular reactivity is one of the essential factors in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease. The aim of the investigation was to study whether there is any association between systemic vascular function and pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) in patients who have associated causes for PH development, such as coronary heart disease (CHD) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: The brachial artery vasodilator responses were measured by the ultrasound technique in twenty patients with mild to moderate COPD (group I) and twenty age–matched and COPD stage-matched patients who had past history of myocardial infarction (NYHA II) (group II).Conventional echocardiographic variables were measured in the said patients too. Results: Both flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) and nitrate-mediated dilatation (NMD) were significantly lower, and PAP was significantly higher in the group II patients compared to the same parameters of group I patients. NMD was inversely correlated with PAP (r=-0.7, p=0.02) in group I patients. There was no interrelation between FMD and PAP in patients from group I. Neither FMD nor NMD were correlated with PAP in group II patients. A significant positive correlation between PAP and left ventricular mass index (r=0.8, p=0.003) was revealed in the said patients as well. Conclusions: Attenuated vasodilator response of brachial artery to nitroglycerine is associated with PAP elevation in COPD patients. PH is closely related to cardiac remodeling in COPD patients in whom CHD developed. These data suggest different "stages" of vascular and cardiac remodeling in patients with COPD alone and in coexistence with CHD. The obtained data can be useful in the selection of treatment as regards these patient categories.
- Published
- 2013
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23. Moderated Posters session * The emerging role of 2-dimensional strain in clinical practice: 13/12/2013, 14:00-18:00 * Location: Moderated Poster area
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Muraru, D, Mihaila, S, Piasentini, E, Casablanca, S, Naso, P, Puma, L, Ermacora, D, Zoppellaro, G, Iliceto, S, Badano, LP, Farsalinos, K, Daraban, A, Unlu, S, Pellikka, P, Lancellotti, P, Thomas, J, Badano, L, Voigt, J-U, Force, EACVI-ASE Standardization Task, Antoine, C, Dadfarin-Bejou, A, Gallet, R, Bremont, C, Dubois-Rande, JL, Lim, P, Acosta Martinez, J, Lopez-Haldon, JE, Rodriguez-Rodriguez, JE, Lopez-Pardo, F, Martinez-Martinez, A, Nylander, E, Hard, L, Andersson, J, Lindqvist, P, Remmets, J, Winter, R, Andersson, B, Roijer, A, Gao, S, Maret, E, Esposito, R, Santoro, C, Raia, R, Schiano-Lomoriello, V, Lauria, R, Arpino, G, De Simone, G, Galderisi, M, El Ghannudi, S, Samet, H, Germain, P, Jeung, MI-Y, Gangi, A, Roy, C, Marta, L, Placido, R, Ramalho, A, Cortez-Dias, N, Nobre Menezes, M, Santos, L, Infante Oliveira, E, Martins, S, Almeida, AG, Nunes Diogo, A, Bech-Hanssen, O, Pergola, V, Fadel, BM, Di Salvo, G, Buccheri, S, Mangiafico, S, Lavanco, V, Bottari, VE, Arcidiacono, A, Tamburino, C, and Monte, I P
- Abstract
Purpose: Intervendor differences of 2D/3D strain measurements are well known issues that significantly limit their adoption in clinical routine. Whether a similar discordance affects also the quantitation of left ventricular (LV) geometry and function and the LV normative ranges for different 3D echo softwares has not been investigated. Methods: Full-volume LV 3D data sets (35±6 vps) have been acquired in 235 healthy volunteers (44±14 years, range 18–76 years, 104 men) using a GE Vivid E9 scanner. Exclusion criteria were athletic training, pregnancy, body mass index > 30 kg/m2, and poor apical acoustic window. An experienced researcher analyzed all LV data sets using a vendor-specific software (EchoPac BT12, GE Healthcare, N). Three months later, the same researcher repeated the analysis with a vendor-independent DICOM-based software (4D LV Analysis 3.1, TomTec, D), being blinded from previous measurements. Results: Despite the differences in LV parameters obtained with the two softwares were statistically significant (Table), Bland-Altman analysis shows a clinically irrelevant bias and reasonable limits of agreement for LV volumes and EF. LV mass measurements by EchoPac were slightly larger than those by TomTec and had relatively wider limits of agreement than LV volumes. Both softwares showed significant and consistent relationships of LV 3D parameters with age, gender and body size in healthy subjects (p<0.0001 for all relationships). Conclusion: Our data shows that converting 3D data sets in DICOM format does not significantly affect the normative values for LV volumes and ejection fraction with respect to those provided by proprietary software. The availability of vendor-independent softwares and respective normative values will encourage the adoption of 3D echocardiography for routine LV quantitation in multi-vendor echo labs.
Vendor-specific software Vendor-independent software p Bias Limits of agreement End-diastolic volume (ml) 108±26 106±25 0.002 2 -17 to +21 End-systolic volume (ml) 40±11 39±11 0.516 0.2 -8 to +9 Stroke-volume (ml) 68±16 66±15 <0.001 2 -13 to +17 Ejection fraction (%) 64±4 63±4 0.007 1 -6 to +7 Mass (g) 133±22 124±28 <0.001 9 -24 to +43 - Published
- 2013
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24. Digital health in cardiovascular medicine: An overview of key applications and clinical impact by the Portuguese Society of Cardiology Study Group on Digital Health.
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Griné M, Guerreiro C, Moscoso Costa F, Nobre Menezes M, Ladeiras-Lopes R, Ferreira D, and Oliveira-Santos M
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- Humans, Portugal, Societies, Medical, Digital Health, Telemedicine, Cardiology, Cardiovascular Diseases therapy
- Abstract
Digital health interventions including telehealth, mobile health, artificial intelligence, big data, robotics, extended reality, computational and high-fidelity bench simulations are an integral part of the path toward precision medicine. Current applications encompass risk factor modification, chronic disease management, clinical decision support, diagnostics interpretation, preprocedural planning, evidence generation, education, and training. Despite the acknowledged potential, their development and implementation have faced several challenges and constraints, meaning few digital health tools have reached daily clinical practice. As a result, the Portuguese Society of Cardiology Study Group on Digital Health set out to outline the main digital health applications, address some of the roadblocks hampering large-scale deployment, and discuss future directions in support of cardiovascular health at large., (Copyright © 2024 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2025
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25. Effects of radial artery spasm prophylaxis on intracoronary vasomotor responses during acetylcholine spasm provocation testing.
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Schäufele T, Nobre Menezes M, Schulte Steinberg B, Hubert A, Martínez Pereyra V, Arndt H, Sechtem U, Bekeredjian R, and Ong P
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Vasodilator Agents administration & dosage, Coronary Vessels physiopathology, Coronary Vessels drug effects, Coronary Vessels diagnostic imaging, Vasomotor System drug effects, Vasomotor System physiopathology, Radial Artery drug effects, Radial Artery diagnostic imaging, Acetylcholine administration & dosage, Acetylcholine pharmacology, Coronary Vasospasm physiopathology, Coronary Vasospasm prevention & control, Coronary Vasospasm chemically induced, Coronary Vasospasm diagnosis, Coronary Angiography methods
- Abstract
Background: Invasive coronary angiography via the radial approach is commonly performed following radial artery spasm prophylaxis (RASP). It is however unknown, whether RASP influences the results of coronary spasm provocation testing performed after diagnostic angiography. We aimed to investigate the effects of RASP on vasomotor responses during intracoronary acetylcholine (ACh) testing., Methods: We retrospectively screened 372 consecutive patients (51 % female, mean age 61 ± 11 years) with angina and non-obstructive coronary arteries, who underwent intracoronary provocation with ACh according to a standardized protocol. During testing, dose-dependent clinical discomfort and concomitant ischemic electrocardiographic changes were recorded in addition to visual reductions of epicardial lumen diameters. Of these patients, 156 (42 %) received RASP (i.e. 200 μg nitroglycerin and 2.5 mg verapamil), while no RASP was administered in 216 (58 %) patients. Both groups were compared regarding age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors and ACh-test results., Results: ACh provocation testing revealed a pathological test result in 71 patients (46 %) with RASP and 103 patients (48 %) without (p = 0.752) [epicardial spasm: in 20 patients (28 %) with RASP and 42 patients (41 %) without (p = 0.120); microvascular spasm: in 51 patients (72 %) with RASP and 61 patients (59 %) without (p = 0.362)]. Overall, RASP did not significantly alter coronary artery vasomotor responses, neither regarding the frequency (p = 0.752) or type of coronary spasm (microvascular vs. epicardial; p = 0.108) nor regarding the ACh dose leading to spasm (p = 0.151)., Conclusions: RASP does not significantly affect coronary vasomotor responses to ACh, suggesting that radial artery spasm prophylaxis can be routinely administered even in patients in whom intracoronary spasm testing is performed., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors report no relationships that could be construed as a conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2025
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26. Response to the letter "Cardio-oncology guidelines, structural heart disease and Kounis syndrome in the upcoming guidelines".
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Nobre Menezes M, Tavares da Silva M, Magalhães A, Melica B, Cristina Toste J, Calé R, Almeida M, Fiuza M, and Infante de Oliveira E
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- Humans, Heart Diseases etiology, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms therapy, Cardio-Oncology, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Kounis Syndrome etiology, Kounis Syndrome diagnosis, Kounis Syndrome therapy
- Published
- 2024
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27. Comparison of the accuracy of four diagnostic prediction rules for pulmonary embolism in patients admitted to the emergency department.
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Valente Silva B, Jorge C, Plácido R, Nobre Menezes M, Mendonça C, Luísa Urbano M, Rigueira J, G Almeida A, and Pinto FJ
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Predictive Value of Tests, Clinical Decision Rules, Middle Aged, Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products analysis, Pulmonary Embolism diagnosis, Pulmonary Embolism diagnostic imaging, Emergency Service, Hospital
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: Ruling out pulmonary embolism (PE) through a combination of clinical assessment and D-dimer level can potentially avoid excessive use of computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA). We aimed to compare the diagnostic accuracy of the standard approach based on the Wells and Geneva scores combined with a standard D-dimer cut-off (500 ng/ml), with three alternative strategies (age-adjusted and the YEARS and PEGeD algorithms) in patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) with suspected PE., Methods: Consecutive outpatients admitted to the ED who underwent CTPA due to suspected PE were retrospectively assessed. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, likelihood ratios and diagnostic odds ratios were calculated and compared between the different diagnostic prediction rules., Results: We included 1402 patients (mean age 69±18 years, 54% female), and PE was confirmed in 25%. Compared to the standard approach (p<0.001), an age-adjusted strategy increased specificity with a non-significant decrease in sensitivity only in patients older than 70 years. Compared to the standard and age-adjusted approaches, the YEARS and PEGeD algorithms had the highest specificity across all ages, but were associated with a significant decrease in sensitivity (p<0.001), particularly in patients aged under 60 years (sensitivity of 81% in patients aged between 51 and 60 years)., Conclusion: Compared to the standard approach, all algorithms were associated with increased specificity. The age-adjusted strategy was the only one not associated with a significant decrease in sensitivity compared to the standard approach, enabling CTPA requests to be reduced safely., (Copyright © 2024. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U.)
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- 2024
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28. Old Habits Die Hard: Can AI Help Bring Coronary Angiography Into the 21st Century?
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Nobre Menezes M, Oliveira CS, Silva JL, Silva BV, Silva Marques J, Guerreiro C, Guedes JP, Oliveira-Santos M, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
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- 2024
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29. A Narrative Review of Revascularization in Chronic Coronary Syndrome/Disease: Concepts and Misconceptions.
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Nogueira-Garcia B, Vilela M, Oliveira C, Caldeira D, Martins AM, and Nobre Menezes M
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Ischemic heart disease represents a significant global burden of morbidity and mortality. While revascularization strategies are well defined in acute settings, there are uncertainties regarding chronic coronary artery disease treatment. Recent trials have raised doubts about the necessity of revascularization for "stable", chronic coronary syndromes or disease, leading to a shift towards a more conservative approach. However, the issue remains far from settled. In this narrative review, we offer a summary of the most pertinent evidence regarding revascularization for chronic coronary disease, while reflecting on less-often-discussed details of major clinical trials. The cumulative evidence available indicates that there can be a prognostic benefit from revascularization in chronic coronary syndrome patients, provided there is significant ischemia, as demonstrated by either imaging or coronary physiology. Trials that have effectively met this criterion consistently demonstrate a reduction in rates of spontaneous myocardial infarction, which holds both prognostic and clinical significance. The prognostic benefit of revascularization in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction remains especially problematic, with a single contemporary trial favouring surgical revascularization. The very recent publication of a trial focused on revascularizing non-flow-limiting "vulnerable" plaques adds further complexity to the field. The ongoing debates surrounding revascularization in chronic coronary syndromes emphasize the importance of personalized strategies. Revascularization, added to the foundational pillar of medical therapy, should be considered, taking into account symptoms, patient preferences, coronary anatomy and physiology, ischemia tests and intra-coronary imaging.
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- 2024
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30. Coronary Intravascular Lithotripsy Effectiveness and Safety in a Real-World Cohort.
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Oliveira C, Vilela M, Nobre Menezes M, Silva Marques J, Jorge CM, Rodrigues T, Almeida Duarte J, Marques da Costa J, Carrilho Ferreira P, Francisco AR, Cardoso PP, and Pinto FJ
- Abstract
Background : Coronary artery calcification is a predictor of adverse outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) is a promising tool for the treatment of calcified lesions. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of IVL. Methods : A single-center observational study of PCI procedure, with assessment of the outcomes of patients undergoing PCI using IVL, was performed. Angiographic procedural success was used as the primary effectiveness endpoint. The primary safety endpoint was defined as a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction and target vessel revascularization within 30 days. Results : A total of 111 patients were included. Indications for PCI spanned the spectrum of chronic (53.2%) and acute coronary syndromes (43%). Lesion preparation before IVL was performed with non-compliant (42%), cutting or OPN (14.4%) balloons and with atherectomy techniques in 11% of procedures. Intravascular imaging was used in 21.6% of procedures. The primary effectiveness endpoint was achieved in 100% and the primary safety endpoint in 3.6% of procedures. Peri-procedural complications were minimal and successfully resolved. Conclusions : IVL was an effective and safe technique for the treatment of calcified coronary lesions. These findings contribute to the growing body of evidence supporting the use of IVL in the management of these challenging scenarios.
- Published
- 2024
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31. PCI in Cancer Patients: Adding Another Piece to a Complex and Still Very Incomplete Puzzle.
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Nobre Menezes M and Mamas MA
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- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Risk Factors, Chronic Disease, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects, Coronary Occlusion, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Disclosures None.
- Published
- 2024
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32. Coronary physiology instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR) derived from x-ray angiography using artificial intelligence deep learning models: a pilot study.
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Nobre Menezes M, Lourenço Silva J, Silva B, Marante de Oliveira R, Rodrigues T, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, X-Rays, Coronary Angiography, Artificial Intelligence, Deep Learning
- Abstract
Objectives: Coronary angiography (CAG)-derived physiology methods have been developed in an attempt to simplify and increase the usage of coronary physiology, based mostly on dynamic fluid computational algorithms. We aimed to develop a different approach based on artificial intelligence methods, which has seldom been explored., Methods: Consecutive patients undergoing invasive instantaneous free-wave ratio (iFR) measurements were included. We developed artificial intelligence (AI) models capable of classifying target lesions as positive (iFR ≤ 0.89) or negative (iFR > 0.89). The predictions were then compared to the true measurements., Results: Two hundred-fifty measurements were included, and 3 models were developed. Model 3 had the best overall performance: accuracy, negative predictive value (NPV), positive predictive value (PPV), sensitivity, and specificity were 69%, 88%, 44%, 74%, and 67%, respectively. Performance differed per target vessel. For the left anterior descending artery (LAD), model 3 had the highest accuracy (66%), while model 2 the highest NPV (86%) and sensitivity (91%). PPV was always low/modest. Model 1 had the highest specificity (68%). For the right coronary artery, model 1's accuracy was 86%, NPV was 97%, and specificity was 87%, but all models had low PPV (maximum 25%) and low/modest sensitivity (maximum 60%). For the circumflex, model 1 performed best: accuracy, NPV, PPV, sensitivity, and specificity were 69%, 96%, 24%, 80%, and 68%, respectively., Conclusions: We developed 3 AI models capable of binary iFR estimation from CAG images. Despite modest accuracy, the consistently high NPV is of potential clinical significance, as it would enable avoiding further invasive maneuvers after CAG. This pivotal study offers proof of concept for further development.
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- 2024
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33. Interventional cardiology in cancer patients: A position paper from the Portuguese Cardiovascular Intervention Association and the Portuguese Cardio-Oncology Study Group of the Portuguese Society of Cardiology.
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Nobre Menezes M, Tavares da Silva M, Magalhães A, Melica B, Toste JC, Calé R, Almeida M, Fiuza M, and Infante de Oliveira E
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- Humans, Cardio-Oncology, Portugal, Cardiotoxicity, Heart Diseases, Cardiology, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
The field of Cardio-Oncology has grown significantly, especially during the last decade. While awareness of cardiotoxicity due to cancer disease and/or therapies has greatly increased, much of the attention has focused on myocardial systolic disfunction and heart failure. However, coronary and structural heart disease are also a common issue in cancer patients and encompass the full spectrum of cardiotoxicity. While invasive percutaneous or surgical intervention, either is often needed or considered in cancer patients, limited evidence or guidelines are available for dealing with coronary or structural heart disease. The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions consensus document published in 2016 is the most comprehensive document regarding this particular issue, but relevant evidence has emerged since, which render some of its considerations outdated. In addition to that, the recent 2022 ESC Guidelines on Cardio-Oncology only briefly discuss this topic. As a result, the Portuguese Association of Cardiovascular Intervention and the Cardio-Oncology Study Group of the Portuguese Society of Cardiology have partnered to produce a position paper to address the issue of cardiac intervention in cancer patients, focusing on percutaneous techniques. A brief review of available evidence is provided, followed by practical considerations. These are based both on the literature as well as accumulated experience with these types of patients, as the authors are either interventional cardiologists, cardiologists with experience in the field of Cardio-Oncology, or both., (Copyright © 2023 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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34. Intracardiac echocardiography-guided left atrial appendage occlusion - A path worth following?
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Nobre Menezes M
- Published
- 2023
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35. Segmentation of X-ray coronary angiography with an artificial intelligence deep learning model: Impact in operator visual assessment of coronary stenosis severity.
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Nobre Menezes M, Silva B, Silva JL, Rodrigues T, Marques JS, Guerreiro C, Guedes JP, Oliveira-Santos M, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
- Abstract
Background: Visual assessment of the percentage diameter stenosis (%DS
VE ) of lesions is essential in coronary angiography (CAG) interpretation. We have previously developed an artificial intelligence (AI) model capable of accurate CAG segmentation. We aim to compare operators' %DSVE in angiography versus AI-segmented images., Methods: Quantitative coronary analysis (QCA) %DS (%DSQCA ) was previously performed in our published validation dataset. Operators were asked to estimate %DSVE of lesions in angiography versus AI-segmented images in separate sessions and differences were assessed using angiography %DSQCA as reference., Results: A total of 123 lesions were included. %DSVE was significantly higher in both the angiography (77% ± 20% vs. 56% ± 13%, p < 0.001) and segmentation groups (59% ± 20% vs. 56% ± 13%, p < 0.001), with a much smaller absolute %DS difference in the latter. For lesions with %DSQCA of 50%-70% (60% ± 5%), an even higher discrepancy was found (angiography: 83% ± 13% vs. 60% ± 5%, p < 0.001; segmentation: 63% ± 15% vs. 60% ± 5%, p < 0.001). Similar, less pronounced, findings were observed for %DSQCA < 50% lesions, but not %DSQCA > 70% lesions. Agreement between %DSQCA /%DSVE across %DSQCA strata (<50%, 50%-70%, >70%) was approximately twice in the segmentation group (60.4% vs. 30.1%; p < 0.001). %DSVE inter-operator differences were smaller with segmentation., Conclusion: %DSVE was much less discrepant with segmentation versus angiography. Overestimation of %DSQCA < 70% lesions with angiography was especially common. Segmentation may reduce %DSVE overestimation and thus unwarranted revascularization., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2023
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36. The cusp-overlap technique for reducing pacemaker implantation after transcatheter aortic valve implantation: Game-changer or gimmick?
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Nobre Menezes M
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- Humans, Aortic Valve surgery, Treatment Outcome, Risk Factors, Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement methods, Pacemaker, Artificial, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Heart Valve Prosthesis
- Published
- 2023
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37. Coronary X-ray angiography segmentation using Artificial Intelligence: a multicentric validation study of a deep learning model.
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Nobre Menezes M, Silva JL, Silva B, Rodrigues T, Guerreiro C, Guedes JP, Santos MO, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
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- Humans, Artificial Intelligence, Constriction, Pathologic, Retrospective Studies, X-Rays, Predictive Value of Tests, Coronary Angiography methods, Coronary Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Coronary Stenosis therapy, Deep Learning
- Abstract
Introduction: We previously developed an artificial intelligence (AI) model for automatic coronary angiography (CAG) segmentation, using deep learning. To validate this approach, the model was applied to a new dataset and results are reported., Methods: Retrospective selection of patients undergoing CAG and percutaneous coronary intervention or invasive physiology assessment over a one month period from four centers. A single frame was selected from images containing a lesion with a 50-99% stenosis (visual estimation). Automatic Quantitative Coronary Analysis (QCA) was performed with a validated software. Images were then segmented by the AI model. Lesion diameters, area overlap [based on true positive (TP) and true negative (TN) pixels] and a global segmentation score (GSS - 0 -100 points) - previously developed and published - were measured., Results: 123 regions of interest from 117 images across 90 patients were included. There were no significant differences between lesion diameter, percentage diameter stenosis and distal border diameter between the original/segmented images. There was a statistically significant albeit minor difference [0,19 mm (0,09-0,28)] regarding proximal border diameter. Overlap accuracy ((TP + TN)/(TP + TN + FP + FN)), sensitivity (TP / (TP + FN)) and Dice Score (2TP / (2TP + FN + FP)) between original/segmented images was 99,9%, 95,1% and 94,8%, respectively. The GSS was 92 (87-96), similar to the previously obtained value in the training dataset., Conclusion: the AI model was capable of accurate CAG segmentation across multiple performance metrics, when applied to a multicentric validation dataset. This paves the way for future research on its clinical uses., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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38. Artificial intelligence-based diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism: Development of a machine learning model using 12-lead electrocardiogram.
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Valente Silva B, Marques J, Nobre Menezes M, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
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- Humans, Machine Learning, Electrocardiography methods, Retrospective Studies, Artificial Intelligence, Pulmonary Embolism diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Pulmonary embolism (PE) is a life-threatening condition, in which diagnostic uncertainty remains high given the lack of specificity in clinical presentation. It requires confirmation by computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA). Electrocardiography (ECG) signals can be detected by artificial intelligence (AI) with precision. The purpose of this study was to develop an AI model for predicting PE using a 12-lead ECG., Methods: We extracted 1014 ECGs from patients admitted to the emergency department who underwent CTPA due to suspected PE: 911 ECGs were used for development of the AI model and 103 ECGs for validation. An AI algorithm based on an ensemble neural network was developed. The performance of the AI model was compared against the guideline recommended clinical prediction rules for PE (Wells and Geneva scores combined with a standard D-dimer cut-off of 500 ng/mL and an age-adjusted cut-off, PEGeD and YEARS algorithm)., Results: The AI model achieves greater specificity to detect PE than the commonly used clinical prediction rules. The AI model shown a specificity of 100% (95% confidence interval (CI): 94-100) and a sensitivity of 50% (95% CI: 33-67). The AI model performed significantly better than the other models (area under the curve 0.75; 95% CI 0.66-0.82; p<0.001), which had nearly no discriminative power. The incidence of typical PE ECG features was similar in patients with and without PE., Conclusion: We developed and validated a deep learning-based AI model for PE diagnosis using a 12-lead ECG and it demonstrated high specificity., (Copyright © 2023. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. Development of deep learning segmentation models for coronary X-ray angiography: Quality assessment by a new global segmentation score and comparison with human performance.
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Nobre Menezes M, Lourenço-Silva J, Silva B, Rodrigues O, Francisco ARG, Carrilho Ferreira P, Oliveira AL, and Pinto FJ
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- Humans, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Artificial Intelligence, Retrospective Studies, X-Rays, Coronary Angiography, Deep Learning
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: Although automatic artificial intelligence (AI) coronary angiography (CAG) segmentation is arguably the first step toward future clinical application, it is underexplored. We aimed to (1) develop AI models for CAG segmentation and (2) assess the results using similarity scores and a set of criteria defined by expert physicians., Methods: Patients undergoing CAG were randomly selected in a retrospective study at a single center. Per incidence, an ideal frame was segmented, forming a baseline human dataset (BH), used for training a baseline AI model (BAI). Enhanced human segmentation (EH) was created by combining the best of both. An enhanced AI model (EAI) was trained using the EH. Results were assessed by experts using 11 weighted criteria, combined into a Global Segmentation Score (GSS: 0-100 points). Generalized Dice Score (GDS) and Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) were also used for AI models assessment., Results: 1664 processed images were generated. GSS for BH, EH, BAI and EAI were 96.9+/-5.7; 98.9+/-3.1; 86.1+/-10.1 and 90+/-7.6, respectively (95% confidence interval, p<0.001 for both paired and global differences). The GDS for the BAI and EAI was 0.9234±0.0361 and 0.9348±0.0284, respectively. The DSC for the coronary tree was 0.8904±0.0464 and 0.9134±0.0410 for the BAI and EAI, respectively. The EAI outperformed the BAI in all coronary segmentation tasks, but performed less well in some catheter segmentation tasks., Conclusions: We successfully developed AI models capable of CAG segmentation, with good performance as assessed by all scores., (Copyright © 2022 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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40. Clinical experience of a cardio-oncology consultation at a tertiary university hospital in Portugal: An observational study.
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Fiuza M, Magalhães A, Nobre Menezes M, Costa P, Abreu Ribeiro L, Abreu C, Brás R, Vieira J, Duarte AI, Morais P, Silva B, Costa L, and Pinto FJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Male, Quality of Life, Medical Oncology, Anthracyclines adverse effects, Tertiary Care Centers, Cardiotoxicity etiology, Neoplasms therapy, Neoplasms drug therapy, Heart Diseases complications, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Heart disease and cancer are the two leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Advances in cancer screening and management have led to longer survival and better quality of life. Despite this progress, many cancer patients experience cardiovascular complications during and after cancer treatment. This study describes the experience of a cardio-oncology program at tertiary academic hospital., Methods: In this retrospective observational study, cancer patients referred to the CHULN cardio-oncology consultation (COC) between January 2016 and December of 2019 were included. Data collected included: patient demographics, cancer type, reason for referral, cardiovascular risk factors, cardiac and oncologic treatments and clinical outcomes., Results: A total of 520 patients (mean age: 65 ± 14 years; 65% women) were referred to the COC. The main reasons for referral were suspected heart failure (26%), pre-high risk chemotherapy assessment (20%) and decreased LVEF (15%). Pre-existing cardiovascular risk factors were common (79%) and 309 (59%) were taking cardiac medications. The most common type of malignancy was breast cancer (216, 41%) followed by gastrointestinal (139, 27%). More than half received anthracycline-based regimens (303, 58%). Most patients (401; 77%) successfully completed cancer therapy. At the time of last data collection, the majority of patients were alive (430, 83%). Cardiac-related mortality was observed in 16%., Conclusions: The close collaboration between cardiology and oncology teams and timely cardiac monitoring was the key to the majority of patients to completing their prescribed cancer therapy., (Copyright © 2022 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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41. There's more to a coronary thrombus than just platelets and fibrin - a new potential therapeutic target in the form of SGK-1 modulation?
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Nobre Menezes M
- Published
- 2022
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42. The CTo-aBCDE score: A new predictor of success in chronic total occlusions.
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Rigueira J, Aguiar-Ricardo I, Nobre Menezes M, Santos R, Rodrigues T, Cunha N, G Francisco AR, Marques da Costa J, Carrilho Ferreira P, Jorge C, Infante Oliveira E, Duarte J, Torres D, Pinto Cardoso P, Pinto FJ, and Canas da Silva P
- Subjects
- Aged, Coronary Angiography, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Occlusion surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
- Abstract
Introduction: Patient selection for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in chronic total occlusions (CTOs) is crucial to procedural success. Our aim was to identify independent predictors of success in CTO PCI in order to create an accurate score., Methods: In a single-center observational registry of CTO PCI, demographic and clinical data and anatomical characteristics of coronary lesions were recorded. Linear and logistic regression analysis were used to identify predictors of success. A score to predict success was created and its accuracy was measured by receiver operating curve analysis., Results: A total of 377 interventions were performed (334 patients, age 68±11 years, 75% male). The success rate was 65% per patient and 60% per procedure. Predictors of success in univariate analysis were absence of active smoking (OR 2.02, 95% CI 1.243-3.29; p=0.005), presence of tapered stump (OR 5.2, 95% CI 2.7-10.2; p<0.001), absence of tortuosity (OR 6.44; 95% CI 3.02-13.75; p<0.001), absence of bifurcation (OR 1.95; 95% CI 1.08-3.51; p=0.026), absence of calcification (OR 3.1; 95% CI 3.10-5.41; p<0.001), LAD as target vessel (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.0-3.5; p=0.048), and CTO length <20 mm (OR 3.00, 95% CI 1.69-5.3; p<0.001). Only anatomical factors were independent predictors of success, and an anatomical score (0-11 points) with high accuracy (area under the curve 0.831) was subsequently created. A score <3 was associated with low probability of success (15%), 3-8 with intermediate probability (55%), and >8 with high probability (95%)., Conclusion: In our sample only anatomical characteristics were predictors of success. The creation of a score to predict success, with good accuracy, may enable selection of cases that can be treated by any operator, those in which a dedicated operator will be desirable, and those with an extremely low probability of success, which should be considered individually for conservative management, surgical revascularization or PCI by a team experienced in CTO., (Copyright © 2020 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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43. Transradial left ventricular endomyocardial biopsy feasibility, safety and clinical usefulness: Initial experience of a tertiary university center.
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Nobre Menezes M, Infante Oliveira E, Costa E Silva A, Brito D, Azevedo Coutinho MDC, Canas da Silva P, and Pinto FJ
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- Adult, Aged, Biopsy, Endocardium, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Heart Ventricles, Universities
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: Over the last decade, several studies have suggested that left ventricular endomyocardial biopsy is safer and has a higher diagnostic yield than transvenous right ventricular biopsy. In addition, recent publications indicate that the transradial approach is a feasible and safe alternative to the transfemoral approach for sampling the left ventricle. We report our initial experience with transradial endomyocardial biopsy with regards to feasibility, safety and usefulness., Methods: Single-center registry of consecutive patients undergoing intended transradial left endomyocardial biopsy. Clinical and technical data were collected prospectively, with a particular focus on success rate and complications., Results: Twenty-seven patients were screened for left ventricle biopsy. Twenty (25) were selected for an intended transradial approach (mean age 51±18 years old, 22 male). Success rate was 100% with no crossover to femoral approach. There were no major complications. Two patients experienced mild radial spasm. One of them also had a run of non-sustained ventricular tachycardia. Indication for biopsy was either myocarditis or cardiomyopathy of unknown etiology. The final diagnosis was acute lymphocytic myocarditis in five patients, chronic myocarditis in one patient, amyloid light-chain amyloidosis in four patients and transthyretin amyloidosis in six patients. Myocarditis was ruled out in eight patients and amyloidosis in one patient., Conclusions: Transradial left ventricle endomyocardial biopsy is a very safe and feasible method of sampling the myocardium for histopathological analysis, with a good diagnostic yield and clinically meaningful results in properly selected patients., (Copyright © 2020 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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44. Transradial Approach for Left Ventricular Endomyocardial Biopsy.
- Author
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Choudhury T, Schäufele TG, Lavi S, Makino K, Nobre Menezes M, Solomonica A, Bertrand OF, Gilchrist IC, Mamas MA, and Bagur R
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radial Artery, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Factors, Biopsy methods, Cardiac Catheterization methods, Cardiomyopathies diagnosis, Endocardium pathology, Heart Ventricles pathology
- Abstract
Background: Left ventricular endomyocardial biopsy (LV-EMB) may offer a superior diagnostic yield compared with right ventricular endomyocardial biopsy (RV-EMB) in conditions predominantly affecting the LV but is underused compared with RV-EMB. Despite the steep uptake of radial approach in coronary interventions, LV-EMB is usually performed via the femoral artery in contemporary practice. Therefore, the aim of this study was to assess the safety and feasibility of LV-EMB via a transradial approach in a multicentre registry., Methods: One-hundred and two patients who underwent LV-EMB via transradial approach were included. Clinical characteristics, procedural, safety and feasibility data were evaluated., Results: LV-EMB was successfully performed via transradial access in 101 (99%) patients. Mild or moderate radial artery spasm occurred in 12 (12%) patients, but only 1 (0.98%) patient required conversion to femoral access due to severe spasm. A total of 80 (78%) patients had LV-EMB via a sheathless guide catheter. Among those, 77 (96.3%) patients had 7.5-French sheathless guides, and 3 (3.8%) patients had 8.5-French sheathless guides inserted. Radial sheaths were used in the remaining 22 patients, with 5-French sheaths in 21 of 22 patients. Heparin was administered to 93.1% of patients at a median dose of 5000 (3000-5000) IU. The remaining patients followed a provisional strategy upon patent hemostasis achievement. No access site-related complications were reported. There were no major complications (pericardial tamponade, life-threatening arrhythmia, cerebrovascular accident or death)., Conclusions: In a population of patients undergoing transradial LV-EMB, the procedural success rate was high and showed an excellent safety profile. Further studies comparing transradial and transfemoral routes may help expand the use of transradial access for LV-EMB., (Copyright © 2018 Canadian Cardiovascular Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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45. Comparative analysis of fractional flow reserve and instantaneous wave-free ratio: Results of a five-year registry.
- Author
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Nobre Menezes M, Francisco ARG, Carrilho Ferreira P, Jorge C, Torres D, Cardoso P, Duarte JA, Marques da Costa J, Infante de Oliveira E, Pinto FJ, and Canas da Silva P
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Coronary Stenosis diagnosis, Coronary Stenosis physiopathology, Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial, Heart Function Tests methods
- Abstract
Introduction and Objective: Assessment of coronary lesions by the instantaneous wave free ratio (iFR) has generated significant debate. We aimed to assess the diagnostic performance of iFR and its impact on the decision to use fractional flow reserve (FFR) and on procedural characteristics., Methods: In this single-center registry of patients undergoing functional assessment of coronary lesions, FFR was used as a reference for assessing the diagnostic performance of iFR. An iFR value <0.86 was considered positive and a value >0.93 was considered negative., Results: Functional testing was undertaken of 402 lesions, of which 154 were assessed with both techniques, 222 with FFR only, and 26 with iFR only. Using a cut-off of ≤0.80 for iFR, the area under the curve was 0.73 (95% CI 0.65-0.81), with an optimal value of ≤0.91. FFR was undertaken in 93 out of 94 lesions with an inconclusive iFR and was performed in 69.1% of the remaining iFR-tested lesions. Concordance between iFR and FFR was 87% (chi-square=22.43; p<0.001). Notwithstanding, there were four out of 13 cases (30.7%) of positive iFR with negative FFR and three out of 42 (7.1%) cases of negative iFR and positive FFR. This difference was significant (p=0.026). iFR had no impact on procedure time, fluoroscopy time or radiation dose., Conclusion: iFR had a reasonable diagnostic performance. Operators often chose to perform FFR despite conclusive iFR results. iFR and FFR were highly concordant, but a non-negligible proportion of lesions classified as ischemic by iFR were classified as non-ischemic by FFR. iFR had no impact on procedural characteristics., (Copyright © 2018 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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46. Triple-site pacing for cardiac resynchronization in permanent atrial fibrillation: follow-up results from a prospective observational study.
- Author
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Marques P, Nobre Menezes M, Lima da Silva G, Guimarães T, Bernardes A, Cortez-Dias N, Carpinteiro L, de Sousa J, and Pinto FJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Echocardiography methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Portugal, Prosthesis Fitting methods, Risk Adjustment methods, Risk Factors, Stroke Volume, Treatment Outcome, Atrial Fibrillation diagnosis, Atrial Fibrillation epidemiology, Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy methods, Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Devices, Heart Failure diagnosis, Heart Failure physiopathology, Heart Failure therapy
- Abstract
Aims: Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (CRT) is associated with a particularly high non-response rate in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). We aimed to assess the effectiveness of triple-site (Tri-V) pacing CRT in this population., Methods and Results: Prospective observational study of patients with permanent AF who underwent CRT implantation with an additional right ventricle lead in the outflow tract septal wall. After implantation, programming mode (Tri-V or biventricular pacing) was selected based on cardiac output determination. Patients were classified as responders if NYHA class was reduced by at least one level and echocardiographic ejection fraction (EF) increased ≥ 10%, and as super-responders if in NYHA class I and EF ≥ 50%. Forty patients (93% male, mean age 72 ± 10 years) were included. Thirty-three were programmed in Tri-V. The following results pertain to this subgroup. At baseline, 58% were in NYHA class III and 36% NYHA class II. At 1 year follow-up, Minnesota QoL score was reduced (36 ± 23 vs. 8 ± 6; P = 0.001) and the 6MWT distance improved (384 ± 120 m to 462 ± 87 m, P = 0.003). Mean EF increased (26% ± 8 vs. 39 ± 10; P < 0.001 at 6 months and 41 ± 10; P < 0.001 at 12 months). Responder rate was 59% at 6 months and 79% at 12 months. Super-responder rate was 9% at 6 months and 16% at 12 months. One year survival free from heart failure hospitalization was 87.9%., Conclusion: Tri-V CRT yielded higher response and super-response rates than usually reported for CRT in patients with permanent AF using clinical and remodeling criteria.
- Published
- 2018
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47. Hypercalcemic crisis and primary hyperparathyroidism: Cause of an unusual electrical storm.
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Guimarães T, Nobre Menezes M, Cruz D, do Vale S, Bordalo A, Veiga A, Pinto FJ, and Brito D
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Hypercalcemia complications, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary complications, Tachycardia, Ventricular etiology
- Abstract
Hypercalcemia is a known cause of heart rhythm disorders, however its association with ventricular arrhythmias is rare. The authors present a case of a fifty-three years old male patient with a ischemic and ethanolic dilated cardiomyopathy, and severely reduced ejection fraction, carrier of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) with cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), admitted in the emergency department with an electrical storm, with multiple appropriated ICD shocks, refractory to antiarrhythmic therapy. In the etiological investigation was documented severe hypercalcemia secondary to primary hyperparathyroidism undiagnosed until then. Only after the serum calcium level reduction ventricular tachycardia was stopped., (Copyright © 2017 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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48. Extracorporeal Circulatory Support in Acute Coronary Syndromes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Pavasini R, Cirillo C, Campo G, Nobre Menezes M, Biscaglia S, Tonet E, Ferrari R, Patel BV, and Price S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation adverse effects, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Acute Coronary Syndrome mortality, Acute Coronary Syndrome therapy, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation methods
- Abstract
Objectives: Extracorporeal circulatory support is a life-saving technique, and its use is increasing in acute coronary syndromes. A meta-analysis on pooled event rate of short-term mortality and complications of acute coronary syndrome patients treated with extracorporeal circulatory support was performed., Data Sources: Articles were searched in MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, and Biomed Central., Study Selection: Inclusion criteria were observational studies on acute coronary syndrome patients treated with extracorporeal circulatory support. Primary outcome was short-term mortality. Secondary outcomes were extracorporeal circulatory support-related complications, causes of death, long-term mortality, and bridge therapy., Data Extraction: Sixteen articles were selected. Data about clinical characteristics, acute coronary syndrome diagnosis and treatment, extracorporeal circulatory support setting, outcome definitions, and event rate were retrieved from the articles. Random effect meta-analytic pooling was performed reporting results as a summary point estimate and 95% CI., Data Synthesis: A total of 739 patients were included (mean age, 59.8 ± 2.9). The event rate of short-term mortality was 58% (95% CI, 51-64%), 6-month mortality was affecting 24% (95% CI, 5-63%) of 1-month survivors, and 1-year mortality 17% (95% CI, 6-40%) of 6-month survivors. The event rates of extracorporeal circulatory support-related complications were acute renal failure 41%, bleeding 25%, neurologic damage in survivors 21%, sepsis/infections 21%, and leg ischemia 12%. Between causes of death, multiple organ failure and brain death affected respectively 40% and 27% of patients. Bridge to ventricular assistance device was offered to 14% of patients, and 7% received a transplant., Conclusions: There is still a high rate of short-term mortality and complications in acute coronary syndrome patients treated with extracorporeal circulatory support. New studies are needed to optimize and standardize extracorporeal circulatory support.
- Published
- 2017
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49. Combined MitraClip implantation and left atrial appendage occlusion using the Watchman device: A case series from a referral center.
- Author
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Francisco ARG, Infante de Oliveira E, Nobre Menezes M, Carrilho Ferreira P, Canas da Silva P, Nobre Â, and Pinto FJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Cardiac Surgical Procedures methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prosthesis Implantation methods, Referral and Consultation, Retrospective Studies, Atrial Appendage surgery, Atrial Fibrillation surgery, Septal Occluder Device
- Abstract
Introduction: Patients referred for percutaneous transcatheter mitral valve repair using the MitraClip
® system frequently have atrial fibrillation, which imposes additional challenges due to the need for oral anticoagulation. Left atrial appendage occlusion is currently regarded as a non-inferior alternative to anticoagulation in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation and both high thromboembolic and bleeding risk. Considering that both MitraClip implantation and left atrial appendage occlusion are percutaneous techniques that require transseptal puncture, it is technically attractive to consider their concomitant use., Objectives: We aim to evaluate the feasibility of a combined approach with MitraClip implantation and left atrial appendage occlusion in a single procedure., Methods: We report the first case series regarding this issue, discussing the specific advantages, pitfalls and technical aspects of combining these two procedures., Results: Five patients underwent left atrial appendage occlusion with the Watchman® device followed by MitraClip implantation in the same procedure. All patients experienced significant reduction in mitral valve regurgitation of at least two grades, optimal occluder position, no associated complications and significant clinical improvement assessed by NYHA functional class (reduction of at least one functional class, with four patients in class I at one-month follow-up)., Conclusion: In selected patients rejected for surgical mitral valve repair, with atrial fibrillation and increased risk of bleeding and embolic events, a combined approach with MitraClip implantation and left atrial appendage occlusion in a single procedure is feasible, safe and effective., (Copyright © 2017 Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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50. Subacute Retrograde TAVI Migration Successfully Treated With a Valve-in-valve Procedure.
- Author
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Nobre Menezes M, Canas da Silva P, Nobre Â, Infante de Oliveira E, Carrilho Ferreira P, and Pinto FJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnosis, Computed Tomography Angiography, Echocardiography, Transesophageal, Foreign-Body Migration diagnosis, Foreign-Body Migration etiology, Humans, Male, Prosthesis Failure, Reoperation methods, Aortic Valve surgery, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Foreign-Body Migration surgery, Heart Valve Prosthesis adverse effects, Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement adverse effects
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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