3 results on '"Salloum FN"'
Search Results
2. Apoptosis in patients with acute myocarditis.
- Author
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Abbate A, Sinagra G, Bussani R, Hoke NN, Merlo M, Varma A, Toldo S, Salloum FN, Biondi-Zoccai GG, Vetrovec GW, Crea F, Silvestri F, and Baldi A
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Biomarkers analysis, Biopsy, Needle, Echocardiography, Female, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, In Situ Nick-End Labeling, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Myocarditis mortality, Myocarditis physiopathology, Probability, Prospective Studies, Recovery of Function, Sensitivity and Specificity, Severity of Illness Index, Statistics, Nonparametric, Survival Rate, Apoptosis, Myocarditis diagnostic imaging, Myocarditis pathology, Myocytes, Cardiac pathology
- Abstract
Acute myocarditis is an acute inflammatory syndrome characterized by acute myocardial damage and dysfunction followed by a variable recovery over time with some patients progressing toward severe dilated cardiomyopathy. Cardiomyocyte apoptosis, a key pathologic feature of heart failure, may play a critical role in functional recovery in patients with acute myocarditis. The aim of the study was to investigate whether apoptosis predicts functional recovery in patients with acute myocarditis. Sixteen patients with biopsy-documented acute myocarditis were followed for 1 year with serial transthoracic echocardiography. Functional recovery was defined as 12-month left ventricular ejection fraction >40%. Cardiomyocyte apoptosis, leukocyte infiltration, and cell proliferation was assessed in all samples. A group of cases in which the diagnosis of acute myocarditis was made after death was also selected for comparison, and morphologically normal hearts from patients who died from a noncardiac cause were selected as controls. Six patients (38%) had functional recovery at 12 months, whereas 10 (62%) did not. The 2 groups had similar characteristics except for lower baseline left ventricular ejection fraction in the group with functional recovery. Apoptotic rate was found to be significantly higher in patients with acute myocarditis than in control hearts, and, unexpectedly, patients with functional recovery had significantly higher apoptotic rates than patients without recovery (3.2% vs 0.5%, p = 0.001). None of the patients with apoptotic rates below the median had functional recovery versus 86% of patients with apoptotic rates above the median (p <0.001). In conclusion, higher rates of cardiomyocyte apoptosis in patients with acute myocarditis are associated with functional recovery at 1 year.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Right ventricular cardiomyocyte apoptosis in patients with acute myocardial infarction of the left ventricular wall.
- Author
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Abbate A, Bussani R, Sinagra G, Barresi E, Pivetta A, Perkan A, Hoke NH, Salloum FN, Kontos MC, Biondi-Zoccai GG, Vetrovec GW, Sabbadini G, Baldi F, Silvestri F, Kukreja RC, and Baldi A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Female, Heart Septum pathology, Humans, In Situ Nick-End Labeling, Male, Middle Aged, Ventricular Remodeling, Apoptosis, Heart Ventricles pathology, Myocardial Infarction pathology, Myocytes, Cardiac pathology
- Abstract
Cardiac remodeling after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is characterized by molecular and cellular mechanisms involving both the left (LV) and right ventricular (RV) walls. Cardiomyoycte apoptosis in the peri-infarct and remote LV myocardium has a central role in cardiac remodeling. Whether apoptosis also occurs in the right ventricle of patients with ischemic heart disease has not been investigated. The aim of the present study was to investigate the presence of cardiomyocyte apoptosis in the right ventricle in patients with AMI. We assessed the number of apoptotic cardiomyocytes using multiple samplings in the LV and RV walls of 12 patients selected at autopsy who died 4 to 42 days after AMI. Five patients without cardiac disease were also selected at autopsy as controls. Apoptotic rates were calculated from the number of cardiomyocytes showing double positive staining for in situ end-labeling of DNA fragmentation (TUNEL) and for activated caspase-3. Potentially false-positive results (DNA synthesis and RNA splicing) were excluded from cell counts. The apoptotic rate in the right ventricle in patients with AMI was significantly higher than in control hearts (median 0.8%, interquartile range 0.3 to 1.0 vs median 0.01%, interquartile range 0.01 to 0.03, p <0.001). RV apoptosis significantly correlated with such parameters of global adverse remodeling as cardiac diameter to LV free wall thickness (R = +0.57, p = 0.050). RV apoptosis was significantly higher in five cases (42%) with infarct involving the ventricular septum and an adjacent small area of the RV walls (median 1.0%, interquartile range 0.8 to 2.2 vs median 0.5%, interquartile range 0.2 to 1.0, p = 0.048, p <0.001 vs controls). The association between apoptotic rate in the right ventricle and cardiac remodeling was apparent even after exclusion of cases with RV AMI involvement (R = +0.82, p = 0.023 for diameter to LV wall thickness ratio and R = -0.91, p = 0.002 for RV free wall thickness). In conclusion, patients with cardiac remodeling after AMI had a significant increase in RV apoptosis even when ischemic involvement of the RV wall was not apparent.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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