9 results on '"Djordjevic Dikic, A."'
Search Results
2. Acute insulin resistance in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in non-diabetic patients is associated with incomplete myocardial reperfusion and impaired coronary microcirculatory function
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Emilija Nestorovic, Dragana Sobic-Saranovic, Nina Djukanovic, Jelena Marinkovic, Ivana Nedeljkovic, Sanja Stankovic, Arsen D. Ristić, Bosiljka Vujisic-Tesic, Branko Beleslin, Dejan Orlic, Danijela Trifunovic, Olga Vasovic, Jelena Kostic, Milorad Tesic, Jelena Stepanovic, Olga Petrovic, Milan Petrovic, Miodrag Ostojic, Ana Djordjevic-Dikic, Marija Petrović, and Marko Banovic
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocardial Infarction ,Acute myocardial infarction ,Infarct size ,Myocardial perfusion imaging ,Coronary circulation ,ST-E resolution ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Internal medicine ,Coronary Circulation ,medicine ,ST segment ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Prospective Studies ,Original Investigation ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Coronary flow reserve ,Insulin resistance ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Acute Disease ,Homeostatic model assessment ,Cardiology ,Coronary microcirculation ,Female ,Myocardial infarction diagnosis ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Insulin resistance (IR) assessed by the Homeostatic Model Assessment (HOMA) index in the acute phase of myocardial infarction in non-diabetic patients was recently established as an independent predictor of intrahospital mortality. In this study we postulated that acute IR is a dynamic phenomenon associated with the development of myocardial and microvascular injury and larger final infarct size in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) treated by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI). Methods In 104 consecutive patients with the first anterior STEMI without diabetes, the HOMA index was determined on the 2nd and 7th day after pPCI. Worst-lead residual ST-segment elevation (ST-E) on postprocedural ECG, coronary flow reserve (CFR) determined by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography on the 2nd day after pPCI and fixed perfusion defect on single-photon emission computed tomography myocardial perfusion imaging (SPECT-MPI) determined six weeks after pPCI were analyzed according to HOMA indices. Results IR was present in 55 % and 58 % of patients on day 2 and day 7, respectively. Incomplete post-procedural ST-E resolution was more frequent in patients with IR compared to patients without IR, both on day 2 (p = 0.001) and day 7 (p 20% (OR 11.37, 95% CI 1.34-96.21, p = 0.026). Conclusion IR assessed by the HOMA index during the acute phase of the first anterior STEMI in patients without diabetes treated by pPCI is independently associated with poorer myocardial reperfusion, impaired coronary microcirculatory function and potentially with larger final infarct size.
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- 2014
3. Prognostic value of calcium score and coronary flow velocity reserve in asymptomatic diabetic patients.
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Dikic, Miodrag, Tesic, Milorad, Markovic, Zeljko, Giga, Vojislav, Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana, Stepanovic, Jelena, Beleslin, Branko, Jovanovic, Ivana, Mladenovic, Ana, Seferovic, Jelena, Ostojic, Miodrag, and Arandjelovic, Aleksandra
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of calcium ,HIGH-calcium diet ,DIABETES ,PEOPLE with diabetes ,ATHEROSCLEROSIS ,HEALTH - Abstract
Background: The risk stratification of patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) is a major objective for the clinicians, and it can be achieved by coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) or with coronary artery calcium score (CS). CS evaluates underlying coronary atherosclerotic plaque burden and CFVR estimates both presence of coronary artery stenosis and microvascular function. Consequently, CFVR may provide unique risk information beyond the extent of coronary atherosclerosis. Aim: Our aim is to assess joint prognostic value of CFVR and CS in asymptomatic DM patients. Materials and methods: We prospectively included 200 asymptomatic patients (45,5 % male, mean age 57,35 ± 11,25), out of which, there were 101 asymptomatic patients with DM and 99 asymptomatic patients without DM, but with one or more conventionally risk factors for coronary artery disease. We analyzed clinical, biochemical, metabolic, inflammatory parameters, CS by Agatston method, transthoracic Doppler echocardiography CFVR of left anterior descending artery and echocardiographic parameters. Results: Total CS and CS LAD were significantly higher, while mean CFVR was lower in diabetics compared to the nondiabetics. During 1 year follow-up, 24 patients experienced cardio-vascular events (one cardiovascular death, two strokes, three myocardial infarctions, nine new onsets of unstable angina and nine myocardial revascularizations): 19 patients with DM and five non DM patients, (p = 0,003). Overall event free survival was significantly higher in non DM group, compared to the DM group (94,9 % vs. 81,2 %, p = 0,002 respectively), while the patients with CS ≥200 and CFVR <2 had the worst outcome during 1 year follow up in the whole study population as well as in the DM group. At multivariable analysis CFVR on LAD (HR 12.918, 95 % CI 3.865-43.177, p < 0.001) and total CS (HR 13.393, 95 % CI 1.675-107.119, p = 0.014) were independent prognostic predictors of adverse events in DM group of patients. Conclusion: Both CS and CFVR provide independent and complementary prognostic information in asymptomatic DM patients. When two parameters are analyzed together, the risk stratification ability improves, even when DM patients are analyzed together with non DM patients. As a result, DM patients with CS ≥200 and CFVR <2 had the worst outcome. Consequently, the use of two tests identified subset of patients who can derive the most benefit from the intensive prevention measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. The effects of nicorandil on microvascular function in patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing primary PCI.
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Kostic, Jelena, Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana, Dobric, Milan, Milasinovic, Dejan, Nedeljkovic, Milan, Stojkovic, Sinisa, Stepanovic, Jelena, Tesic, Milorad, Trifunovic, Zoran, Zamaklar-Tifunovic, Danijela, Radosavljevic-Radovanovic, Mina, Ostojic, Miodrag, and Beleslin, Branko
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MYOCARDIAL infarction treatment , *NICORANDIL , *PERCUTANEOUS coronary intervention , *DOPPLER ultrasonography , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPH research - Abstract
Background: Nicorandil, as a selective potassium channel opener, has dual action including coronary and peripheral vasodilatation and cardioprotective effect through ischemic preconditioning. Considering those characteristics, nicorandil was suggested to reduce the degree of microvascular dysfunction. Methods: Thirty-two patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) were included in the study. Index of microvascular resistance (IMR) was measured in all patients immediatelly after pPCI before the after administration of Nicorandil. ST segment resolution was monitored before intervention and 60 min after terminating the procedure. Echocardiographic evaluation of myocardial function and transthoracic Doppler derived Coronary flow reserve (CFR) of infarct related artery (IRA) was performed during hospitalization and 3 months later. Results: IMR was significantly lower after administration of Nicorandil (9.9 ± 3.7 vs. 14.1 ± 5.1, p < 0.001). There was significant difference in ST segment elevation before and after primary PCI with administration of Nicorandil (6.9 ± 3.7 mm vs. 1.6 ± 1.6 mm, p < 0.001). Transthoracic Doppler CFR measurement improved after 3 months (2.69 ± 0.38 vs. 2.92 ± 0.54, p = 0.021), as well as WMSI (1.14 ± 0.17 vs. 1.07 ± 0.09, p = 0.004). Conclusion: Intracoronary Nicorandil administration after primary PCI significantly decreases IMR, resulting in improved CFR and ventricular function in patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Acute insulin resistance in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in non-diabetic patients is associated with incomplete myocardial reperfusion and impaired coronary microcirculatory function.
- Author
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Trifunovic, Danijela, Stankovic, Sanja, Sobic-Saranovic, Dragana, Marinkovic, Jelena, Petrovic, Marija, Orlic, Dejan, Beleslinx, Branko, Banovic, Marko, Vujisic-Tesic, Bosiljka, Petrovic, Milan, Nedeljkovic, Ivana, Stepanovic, Jelena, Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana, Tesic, Milorad, Djukanovic, Nina, Petrovic, Olga, Vasovic, Olga, Nestorovic, Emilija, Kostic, Jelena, and Ristic, Arsen
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INSULIN resistance ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,MYOCARDIAL reperfusion ,DIABETES complications ,DOPPLER echocardiography - Abstract
Background Insulin resistance (IR) assessed by the Homeostatic Model Assessment (HOMA) index in the acute phase of myocardial infarction in non-diabetic patients was recently established as an independent predictor of intrahospital mortality. In this study we postulated that acute IR is a dynamic phenomenon associated with the development of myocardial and microvascular injury and larger final infarct size in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) treated by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI). Methods In 104 consecutive patients with the first anterior STEMI without diabetes, the HOMA index was determined on the 2nd and 7th day after pPCI. Worst-lead residual ST-segment elevation (ST-E) on postprocedural ECG, coronary flow reserve (CFR) determined by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography on the 2nd day after pPCI and fixed perfusion defect on singlephoton emission computed tomography myocardial perfusion imaging (SPECT-MPI) determined six weeks after pPCI were analyzed according to HOMA indices. Results IR was present in 55 % and 58 % of patients on day 2 and day 7, respectively. Incomplete post-procedural ST-E resolution was more frequent in patients with IR compared to patients without IR, both on day 2 (p = 0.001) and day 7 (p < 0.001). The HOMA index on day 7 correlated with SPECT-MPI perfusion defect (r = 0.331), whereas both HOMA indices correlated well with CFR (r = -0.331 to -0.386) (p < 0.01 for all). In multivariable backward logistic regression analysis adjusted for significant univariate predictors and potential confounding variables, IR on day 2 was an independent predictor of residual ST-E ⩾ 2 mm (OR 11.70, 95% CI 2.46-55.51, p = 0.002) and CFR < 2 (OR = 5.98, 95% CI 1.88-19.03, p = 0.002), whereas IR on day 7 was an independent predictor of SPECT-MPI perfusion defect > 20% (OR 11.37, 95% CI 1.34-96.21, p = 0.026). Conclusion IR assessed by the HOMA index during the acute phase of the first anterior STEMI in patients without diabetes treated by pPCI is independently associated with poorer myocardial reperfusion, impaired coronary microcirculatory function and potentially with larger final infarct size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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6. Comparison of exercise, dobutamine-atropine and dipyridamole-atropine stress echocardiography in detecting coronary artery disease.
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Nedeljkovic, Ivana, Ostojic, Miodrag, Beleslin, Branko, Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana, Stepanovic, Jelena, Nedeljkovic, Milan, Stojkovic, Sinisa, Stankovic, Goran, Saponjski, Jovica, Petrasinovic, Zorica, Giga, Vojislav, and Mitrovic, Predrag
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ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,DIAGNOSTIC ultrasonic imaging ,CARDIAC imaging ,CORONARY disease ,CHEST disease diagnosis ,MYOCARDIAL infarction - Abstract
Background: Dipyridamole and dobutamine stress echocardiography testing are most widely utilized, but their sensitivity remained suboptimal in comparison to routine exercise stress echocardiography. The aim of our study is to compare, head-to-head, exercise, dobutamine and dipyridamole stress echocardiography tests, performed with state-of-the-art protocols in a large scale prospective group of patients. Methods: Dipyridamole-atropine (Dipatro: 0.84 mg/kg over 10 min i.v. dipyridamole with addition of up to 1 mg of atropine), dobutamine-atropine (Dobatro: up to 40 mcg/kg/min i.v. dobutamine with addition of up to 1 mg of atropine) and exercise (Ex, Bruce) were performed in 166 pts. Of them, 117 pts without resting wall motion abnormalities were enrolled in study (91 male; mean age 54 ± 10 years; previous non-transmural myocardial infarction in 32 pts, angina pectoris in 69 pts and atypical chest pain in 16 pts). Tests were performed in random sequence, in 3 different days, within 5 day period under identical therapy. All patients underwent coronary angiography. Results: Significant coronary artery disease (CAD; =50% diameter stenosis) was present in 69 pts (57 pts 1-vessel CAD, 12 multivessel CAD) and absent in 48 pts. Sensitivity (Sn) was 96%, 93% and 90%, whereas specificity (Sp) was 92%, 92% and 87% for Dobatro, Dipatro and Ex, respectively (p = ns). Concomitant beta blocker therapy did not influence peak rate-pressure product and Sn of Dobatro and Dipatro (p = ns). Conclusion: When state-of-the-art protocols are used, dipyridamole and dobutamine stress echocardiography have comparable and high diagnostic accuracy, similar to maximal post-xercise treadmill stress echocardiography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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7. Low-dose adenosine stress echocardiography: Detection of myocardial viability.
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Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana, Ostojic, Miodrag, Beleslin, Branko, Nedeljkovic, Ivana, Stepanovic, Jelena, Stojkovic, Sinisa, Petrasinovic, Zorica, Nedeljkovic, Milan, Saponjski, Jovica, and Giga, Vojislav
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STRESS echocardiography , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *MYOCARDIAL revascularization , *EXERCISE tests , *ADENOSINES , *ANGIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic potential of low-dose adenosine stress echocardiography in detection of myocardial viability. Background: Vasodilation through low dose dipyridamole infusion may recruit contractile reserve by increasing coronary flow or by increasing levels of endogenous adenosine. Methods: Forty-three patients with resting dyssynergy, due to previous myocardial infarction, underwent low-dose adenosine (80, 100, 110 mcg/kg/min in 3 minutes intervals) echocardiography test. Gold standard for myocardial viability was improvement in systolic thickening of dyssinergic segments of ≥ 1 grade at follow-up. Coronary angiography was done in 41 pts. Twenty-seven patients were revascularized and 16 were medically treated. Echocardiographic follow up data (12±2 months) were available in 24 revascularized patients. Results: Wall motion score index improved from rest 1.55±0.30 to 1.33±0.26 at low-dose adenosine (p < 0.001). Of the 257 segments with baseline dyssynergy, adenosine echocardiography identified 122 segments as positive for viability, and 135 as necrotic since no improvement of systolic thickening was observed. Follow-up wall motion score index was 1.31±0.30 (p < 0.001 vs. rest). The sensitivity of adenosine echo test for identification of viable segments was 87%, while specificity was 95%, and diagnostic accuracy 90%. Positive and negative predictive values were 97% and 80%, respectively. Conclusion: Low-dose adenosine stress echocardiography test has high diagnostic potential for detection of myocardial viability in the group of patients with left ventricle dysfunction due to previous myocardial infarction. Low dose adenosine stress echocardiography may be adequate alternative to low-dose dobutamine test for evaluation of myocardial viability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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8. Quality control of B-lines analysis in stress Echo 2020.
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Scali MC, Ciampi Q, Picano E, Bossone E, Ferrara F, Citro R, Colonna P, Costantino MF, Cortigiani L, Andrea A, Severino S, Dodi C, Gaibazzi N, Galderisi M, Barbieri A, Monte I, Mori F, Reisenhofer B, Re F, Rigo F, Trambaiolo P, Amor M, Lowenstein J, Merlo PM, Daros CB, de Castro E Silva Pretto JL, Miglioranza MH, Torres MAR, de Azevedo Bellagamba CC, Chaves DQ, Simova I, Varga A, Čelutkienė J, Kasprzak JD, Wierzbowska-Drabik K, Lipiec P, Weiner-Mik P, Szymczyk E, Wdowiak-Okrojek K, Djordjevic-Dikic A, Dekleva M, Stankovic I, Neskovic AN, Zagatina A, Di Salvo G, Perez JE, Camarozano AC, Corciu AI, Boshchenko A, Lattanzi F, Cotrim C, Fazendas P, Haberka M, Sobkowic B, Kosmala W, Witkowski T, Gosciniak P, Salustri A, Rodriguez-Zanella H, Leal LIM, Nikolic A, Gligorova S, Urluescu ML, Fiorino M, Novo G, Preradovic-Kovacevic T, Ostojic M, Beleslin B, Villari B, De Nes M, Paterni M, and Carpeggiani C
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- Female, Humans, Internet, Male, Middle Aged, Echocardiography, Stress standards, Lung diagnostic imaging, Pulmonary Edema diagnosis, Quality Control
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Background: The effectiveness trial "Stress echo (SE) 2020" evaluates novel applications of SE in and beyond coronary artery disease. The core protocol also includes 4-site simplified scan of B-lines by lung ultrasound, useful to assess pulmonary congestion., Purpose: To provide web-based upstream quality control and harmonization of B-lines reading criteria., Methods: 60 readers (all previously accredited for regional wall motion, 53 B-lines naive) from 52 centers of 16 countries of SE 2020 network read a set of 20 lung ultrasound video-clips selected by the Pisa lab serving as reference standard, after taking an obligatory web-based learning 2-h module ( http://se2020.altervista.org ). Each test clip was scored for B-lines from 0 (black lung, A-lines, no B-lines) to 10 (white lung, coalescing B-lines). The diagnostic gold standard was the concordant assessment of two experienced readers of the Pisa lab. The answer of the reader was considered correct if concordant with reference standard reading ±1 (for instance, reference standard reading of 5 B-lines; correct answer 4, 5, or 6). The a priori determined pass threshold was 18/20 (≥ 90%) with R value (intra-class correlation coefficient) between reference standard and recruiting center) > 0.90. Inter-observer agreement was assessed with intra-class correlation coefficient statistics., Results: All 60 readers were successfully accredited: 26 (43%) on first, 24 (40%) on second, and 10 (17%) on third attempt. The average diagnostic accuracy of the 60 accredited readers was 95%, with R value of 0.95 compared to reference standard reading. The 53 B-lines naive scored similarly to the 7 B-lines expert on first attempt (90 versus 95%, p = NS). Compared to the step-1 of quality control for regional wall motion abnormalities, the mean reading time per attempt was shorter (17 ± 3 vs 29 ± 12 min, p < .01), the first attempt success rate was higher (43 vs 28%, p < 0.01), and the drop-out of readers smaller (0 vs 28%, p < .01)., Conclusions: Web-based learning is highly effective for teaching and harmonizing B-lines reading. Echocardiographers without previous experience with B-lines learn quickly.
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- 2018
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9. Stress echo 2020: the international stress echo study in ischemic and non-ischemic heart disease.
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Picano E, Ciampi Q, Citro R, D'Andrea A, Scali MC, Cortigiani L, Olivotto I, Mori F, Galderisi M, Costantino MF, Pratali L, Di Salvo G, Bossone E, Ferrara F, Gargani L, Rigo F, Gaibazzi N, Limongelli G, Pacileo G, Andreassi MG, Pinamonti B, Massa L, Torres MA, Miglioranza MH, Daros CB, de Castro E Silva Pretto JL, Beleslin B, Djordjevic-Dikic A, Varga A, Palinkas A, Agoston G, Gregori D, Trambaiolo P, Severino S, Arystan A, Paterni M, Carpeggiani C, and Colonna P
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- Aged, Cardiomyopathies physiopathology, Female, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Ischemia physiopathology, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Cardiomyopathies diagnosis, Echocardiography, Stress methods, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Ischemia diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Stress echocardiography (SE) has an established role in evidence-based guidelines, but recently its breadth and variety of applications have extended well beyond coronary artery disease (CAD). We lack a prospective research study of SE applications, in and beyond CAD, also considering a variety of signs in addition to regional wall motion abnormalities., Methods: In a prospective, multicenter, international, observational study design, > 100 certified high-volume SE labs (initially from Italy, Brazil, Hungary, and Serbia) will be networked with an organized system of clinical, laboratory and imaging data collection at the time of physical or pharmacological SE, with structured follow-up information. The study is endorsed by the Italian Society of Cardiovascular Echography and organized in 10 subprojects focusing on: contractile reserve for prediction of cardiac resynchronization or medical therapy response; stress B-lines in heart failure; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; mitral regurgitation after either transcatheter or surgical aortic valve replacement; outdoor SE in extreme physiology; right ventricular contractile reserve in repaired Tetralogy of Fallot; suspected or initial pulmonary arterial hypertension; coronary flow velocity, left ventricular elastance reserve and B-lines in known or suspected CAD; identification of subclinical familial disease in genotype-positive, phenotype- negative healthy relatives of inherited disease (such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy)., Results: We expect to recruit about 10,000 patients over a 5-year period (2016-2020), with sample sizes ranging from 5,000 for coronary flow velocity/ left ventricular elastance/ B-lines in CAD to around 250 for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or repaired Tetralogy of Fallot. This data-base will allow to investigate technical questions such as feasibility and reproducibility of various SE parameters and to assess their prognostic value in different clinical scenarios., Conclusions: The study will create the cultural, informatic and scientific infrastructure connecting high-volume, accredited SE labs, sharing common criteria of indication, execution, reporting and image storage of SE to obtain original safety, feasibility, and outcome data in evidence-poor diagnostic fields, also outside the established core application of SE in CAD based on regional wall motion abnormalities. The study will standardize procedures, validate emerging signs, and integrate the new information with established knowledge, helping to build a next-generation SE lab without inner walls.
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- 2017
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