163 results on '"Michael Laule"'
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152. Meßtechnische Aspekte
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Karl Stangl and Michael Laule
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- 1990
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153. Zukünftige Entwicklungen
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Karl Stangl and Michael Laule
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- 1990
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154. Noninvasive Detection of Coronary Artery Stenoses with Multislice Computed Tomography or Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Michael Laule, Marc Dewey, Gert Baumann, Adrian C. Borges, Tania Schink, Florian Teige, Patrik Rogalla, Klaus-Dieter Wernecke, Dirk Schnapauff, Bernd Hamm, Matthias Taupitz, and Wolfgang Rutsch
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary Angiography ,Revascularization ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Angina ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Coronary Stenosis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,equipment and supplies ,medicine.disease ,Coronary arteries ,Stenosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Patient Satisfaction ,Angiography ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,human activities ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Artery - Abstract
Multislice computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are the main candidates for noninvasive coronary angiography; however, multislice CT, unlike MRI, exposes patients to radiation and an iodinated intravenous contrast agent.To compare the diagnostic accuracy of multislice CT and MRI for noninvasive detection of clinically significant coronary stenoses (or =50%).Prospective intention-to-diagnose study.Single tertiary referral center, Berlin, Germany.129 consecutive patients with suspected coronary artery disease.Multislice CT and MRI were both performed within a median of 1 day before conventional coronary angiography, which served as the reference standard.Diagnostic performance of multislice CT and MRI.129 patients completed the study. Altogether, 108 patients with 430 vessels could be examined with both multislice CT and MRI and were used for analysis. In the per-patient analysis, the sensitivity of multislice CT (92% [95% CI, 82% to 96%]) was significantly higher than that of MRI (74% [CI, 61% to 83%]; P = 0.013). The sensitivity for detecting clinically significant stenoses was 82% for multislice CT and 54% for MRI (P0.001). Specificity and negative predictive value of multislice CT and MRI in the per-vessel analysis were 90% versus 87% (P = 0.73) and 95% versus 90% (P = 0.032), respectively. The effective radiation dose used with multislice CT (mean, 12.3 mSv [SD, 1.4]) in a consecutive subgroup of 73 patients was not significantly different from that used with diagnostic cardiac catheterization (11.4 mSv [SD, 4.8]) (P = 0.169). Most patients (74%) indicated that they would prefer multislice CT for future diagnostic imaging (P0.001).This was a single-center study with 129 patients.In patients referred for conventional coronary angiography, multislice CT compares favorably with MRI for noninvasive detection of coronary stenoses.
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- 2006
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155. Pulmonary and coronary net release of adrenomedullin peptides in human congestive heart failure
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Verena Stangl, Christoph Richter, Michael Laule, Thomas Dschietzig, Gert Baumann, and Karl Stangl
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Adrenomedullin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2000
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156. Plasma levels of relaxin-2 correlate with severity of human congestive heart failure
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Christoph Richter, Karl Stangl, Thomas Dschietzig, Verena Stangl, Michael Laule, and Gert Baumann
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Relaxin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Heart failure ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Plasma levels ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2000
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157. A minimally invasive method for induction of myocardial infarction in an animal model using tungsten spirals.
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Daniel Peukert, Michael Laule, Nicola Kaufels, Jörg Schnorr, Matthias Taupitz, Bernd Hamm, and Marc Dewey
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Abstract Most animal models use surgical thoracotomy with ligation of a coronary artery to induce myocardial infarction. Incision of the chest wall and myocardium affect remodeling after myocardial infarction. The aim of our study was to evaluate a new minimally invasive technique for inducing acute myocardial infarction in pigs. To this end, coronary angiography using a 6-F cardiac catheter was performed in 20 pigs. The cardiac catheter was advanced into the left circumflex artery (LCX) under electrocardiographic monitoring and small tungsten spirals were deployed in the vessel. LCX occlusion was verified by coronary angiography. Two days later, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed to estimate the extent of infarction. Thereafter, all animals were euthanized and the hearts stained with 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride for histologic measurement of infarct size. Tungsten spirals were successfully placed in the LCX in all 20 pigs. About 13 of the 20 animals survived until the end of the experiment. The mean infarct size in the area supplied by the LCX was 4.4 ± 2.3 cm3 at MRI and 4.3 ± 2.2 cm3 at histology (r = 0.99, P [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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158. Rate Control with an External SO2 Closed Loop System
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Michael Laule, Karl Stangl, O. Loghschmidt, G. Göbl, Roland Heinze, Alexander Wirtzfeld, and K. Seitz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Steady state (electronics) ,business.industry ,Rate control ,General Medicine ,Intrinsic heart rate ,Signal ,Transvenous pacing ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Treadmill ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Lead (electronics) ,business ,Closed loop - Abstract
In 20 volunteers (mean age 35.5 y) and 12 pacemaker patients (mean age 68.7 y), central venous oxygen saturation (SO2) was monitored continuously by means of an optical sensor integrated in an external transvenous pacing lead placed in the right ventricular cavity. From the SO2 signal recorded at rest and during various modalities of exercise, an algorithm for controlling pacing rate of an external pacing system was developed. An open loop system was used in the volunteers, allowing the comparison of the computed pacing rate with the individual intrinsic heart rate. There was an excellent correlation between the two frequencies as far as the dynamic characteristics and the steady state relationship were concerned. In five pacemaker patients who were stimulated via the external lead, a closed loop control of pacing rate was used. In one patient with a DDD pacemaker implanted for third degree AV-block, the rate response of the SO2 driven pacemaker was well in accordance with the rate attained with the implanted atrial triggered system. With both pacing modes, exercise capacity as determined on a symptom limited treadmill test was identical. In four patients (3 AV block III, 1 bradyarrhythmia) an improvement in exercise tolerance up to 65 percent could be demonstrated with the rate responsive pacing mode. In all patients, it could be shown that an autoregulating pacemaker system with SO2 is an open possibility.
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- 1986
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159. A New Multisensor Pacing System Using Stroke Volume, Respiratory Rate, Mixed Venous Oxygen Saturation, And Temperature, Right Atrial Pressure, Right Ventricular Pressure, And dP/dt
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Alexander Wirtzfeld, Karl Stangl, Gerhard Göbl, Michael Laule, Roland Heinze, and Klaus Seitz
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Adult ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Respiratory rate ,Blood Pressure ,Body Temperature ,Internal medicine ,Respiration ,medicine ,Humans ,Oxygen saturation ,Aged ,business.industry ,Central venous pressure ,Stroke Volume ,General Medicine ,Stroke volume ,Middle Aged ,Oxygen ,Blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,Ventricular pressure ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Sensitivity (electronics) - Abstract
A new multisensor pacing device using respiratory rate (RR), stroke volume (SV), oxygen saturation (SO2), temperature (T), right atrial pressure (RAP), right ventricular pressure (RVP) and right ventricular dP/dt, has been developed. It consists of a 7F multisensor catheter and an external pacing unit. It allows simultaneous recording of the input signals and the corresponding data can be compared among the different parameters under identical conditions. Furthermore, several parameters can be combined in such a way as to form a new combination better suitable for rate responsive pacing. The response of each parameter to exercise was studied in 12 healthy volunteers (mean age: 28 years). Exercise testing was carried out using a bicycle ergometer, with workloads up to 200 W. The dynamic characteristics, response and sensitivity to changes of workloads of each parameter were analyzed and compared to one another. SO2 proved to be a quick responding parameter (less than 10 sec) with higher sensitivity in the low exercise range (less than 75 W), T, on the other hand, responded slowly (greater than 30 sec) to exercise changes and had the highest sensitivity in the exercise range beyond 75 W. RR displayed a slow response (greater than 30 sec) and an adequate sensitivity was only found in the upper exercise range (greater than 100 W). SV reacted rapidly to workload changes (less than 10 sec) but showed poor sensitivity at all exercise levels. RAP, RVP and dP/dt displayed quick responses and constantly good sensitivity throughout the workload range. Furthermore, respiratory rate was easily derived from the RAP curve. Special algorithms were developed for each parameter so that pacing rate would reproduce sinus rate behavior. We found that SO2 and all pressure parameter imitated sinus rate response quite well. When using parameter combinations, SO2 and T proved to be superior. Five patients (mean age 68 years) with third degree AV-block were stimulated temporarily using this system. Compared to fixed rate stimulation (VVI 70), exercise performance improved, using SO2 as the input parameter for rate response, by 25% to 50%.
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- 1988
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160. CT or Invasive Coronary Angiography in Stable Chest Pain
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Pál Maurovich-Horvat, 1, Maria Bosserdt, 1, F Kofoed, Klaus, Nina Rieckmann, 1, Theodora Benedek, 1, Patrick Donnelly, 1, José Rodriguez-Palomares, 1, Andrejs Erglis, 1, Cyril Štěchovský, 1, Gintare Šakalyte, 1, Nada Čemerlić Adić, 1, Matthias Gutberlet, 1, D Dodd, Jonathan, Ignacio Diez, 1, Gershan Davis, 1, Elke Zimmermann, 1, Cezary Kępka, 1, Radosav Vidakovic, 1, Marco Francone, 1, Małgorzata Ilnicka-Suckiel, 1, Fabian Plank, 1, Juhani Knuuti, 1, Rita Faria, 1, Stephen Schröder, 1, Colin Berry, 1, Luca Saba, 1, Balazs Ruzsics, 1, Christine Kubiak, 1, Iñaki Gutierrez-Ibarluzea, 1, Kristian Schultz Hansen, 1, Jacqueline Müller-Nordhorn, 1, Bela Merkely, 1, D Knudsen, Andreas, Imre Benedek, 1, Clare Orr, 1, Filipa Xavier Valente, 1, Ligita Zvaigzne, 1, Vojtěch Suchánek, 1, Laura Zajančkauskiene, 1, Filip Adić, 1, Michael Woinke, 1, Mark Hensey, 1, Iñigo Lecumberri, 1, Erica Thwaite, 1, Michael Laule, 1, Mariusz Kruk, 1, N Neskovic, Aleksandar, Massimo Mancone, 1, Donata Kuśmierz, 1, Gudrun Feuchtner, 1, Mikko Pietilä, 1, Vasco Gama Ribeiro, 1, Tanja Drosch, 1, Christian Delles, 1, Gildo Matta, 1, Michael Fisher, 1, Bálint Szilveszter, 1, Linnea Larsen, 1, Mihaela Ratiu, 1, Stephanie Kelly, 1, Bruno Garcia Del Blanco, 1, Ainhoa Rubio, 1, D Drobni, Zsófia, Birgit Jurlander, 1, Ioana Rodean, 1, Susan Regan, 1, Hug Cuéllar Calabria, 1, Melinda Boussoussou, 1, Thomas Engstrøm, 1, Roxana Hodas, 1, E Napp, Adriane, Robert Haase, 1, Sarah Feger, 1, M Serna-Higuita, Lina, Konrad Neumann, 1, Henryk Dreger, 1, Matthias Rief, 1, Viktoria Wieske, 1, Melanie Estrella, 1, Peter Martus, 1, Marc, Dewey, Béla, Merkely, Pál, Maurovich-Horvat, Thomas, Engstroem, Klaus, F. Kofoed, Imre, Benedek, Theodora, Benedek, Patrick, Donnelly, José, F. Rodríguez-Palomares, Bruno Garcia Del Blanco, Andrejs, Erglis, Ligita, Zvaigzne, Vojtěch, Suchánek, Josef, Veselka, Antanas, Jankauskas, Gintare, Šakalyte, Nada Čemerlić Ađić, Oto, Ađić, Matthias, Gutberlet, Michael, Woinke, Jonathan, D. Dodd, Martin, Quinn, Ignacio Díez González, Inigo, Lecumberri, Gershan, K. Davis, Erika, Thwaite, Michael, Laule, Elke, Zimmermann, Henryk, Dreger, Matthias, Rief, Cezary, Kępka, Mariusz, Kruk, Aleksandar, N. Neskovic, Radosav, Vidakovic, Marco Francone, Massimo Mancone, Tomasz, Haran, Malgorzata, Ilnicka-Suckiel, Gudrun, Feuchtner, Guy, Friedrich, Juhani, Knuuti, Mikko, Pietilä, Rita, Faria, Vasco Gama Ribeiro, Stephen, Schröder, Thomas, Zelesny, Christian, Delles, Colin, Berry, Bruno, Loi, Gildo, Matta, Michael, Fisher, Balasz, Ruzsics, Adriane, E. Napp, Maria, Bosserdt, Melanie, Estrella, Jacob, Geleijns, Christine, Kubiak, Corinna, Meier-Windhorst, Rita, Pilger, Iñaki, Gutiérrez-Ibarluzea, Nora, Ibargoyen-Roteta, Itziar, Etxeandia, Gaizka, Benguria-Arrate, Lorea, Galnares-Cordero, Karsten, Vrangbaeck, Hans, Keiding, Kristian Schultz Hansen, Jacqueline, Müller-Nordhorn, Nina, Rieckmann, Peter, Schlattmann, Mihály, Károlyi, Júlia, Karády, Laszló, Gellér, Levente, Molnár, Tamás, Bárány, István, Édes, Dávid, Becker, Száraz Lili Milan Vecsey-Nagy, Borbala, Vattay, Tem, Jørgensen, Knut, Lindvig, Charlotte, Sørum, Helena Domínguez Vall-Lamora, Thomas, Hermann, Charlotte, Kragelund, Thomas Fritz Hansen, Jawdat, Abdulla, Jens Dahlgaard Hove, Kjeld Skødebjerg Kristensen, Leah, Hammond, Albert Roque Pérez, Imanol Otaegui Irurueta, Enzo Javier Alderete, Sebastian, Albornoz, Karlis, Strenge, Marina, Berzina, Iveta, Mintale, Marija, Tokmanceva, Linda, Glazere, Vita, Saripo, Zanda, Krastina, Dace, Sondore, Theodor, Adla, Martin, Horváth, Tadeáš, Butta, Petra, Hajžmanová, Audronė, Vaitiekienė, Gediminas, Jaruševičius, Kristina, Morkūnaitė, Eglė, Montrimavičienė, Laura, Radionovaitė, Milenko, Cankovic, Andrea, Ljubotina, Christian, Krieghoff, Robin, Gohman, Fabian, Juhrich, Patrick, Seitz, Stephen, Keane, Diarmaid, Cadogan, Claire, O. Dowling, Rudaynah, A. Alali, Siobhan, Quinlan, Edel, Meaney, Peter, Doran, Gerald, Kearns, Siobhan, O. Rourke, Sarah, Foley, Joanne, Clarke, Abdi, Abdi, Aine, Hahessy, Brian, Meehan, Michelle, Healy, Sonya, Allen, Colin, P. Cantwell, Niall, Mulvihill, Charles, Mccreery, David, Keane, Ken, Mcdonald, Peter, Quigley, Sadhbh, O. Sullivan, Brian, O. Riordan, Lara, Toerien, John, Irwin, Paddy, Barrett, Dermot, Malone, Abel, Andres, Eva, Amuriza, Arun, Ranjit, Jaroslav, Hasara, Mohammed, Obeidat, Catherine, Toohey, Sandra, Fullalove, Kate, Fenlon, Nicola, Lawler, Anju, Rawat, Francis, Beni, Julie, Ashcroft, Shirley, Cooper, Jeanette, Hawkins, Kate, Hughes, Nicola, Ashall, Doireann, Dickinson, Gemma, Halligan, Julie, Rawcliffe, Dominik, Laskowski, Anna-Maria, Mielke, Laura, Elzenbeck, Daniel, Preuß, Anne, Karas, Anja, Bärrn, Gustavo, Gehling, Florian, Specht, Lisa, Timm, Karl, Stangl, Verena, Stangl, Anna, Brand, Bernhard, Föllmer, Eser, Isler, Federico, Biavati, Mahmoud, Mohamed, Katrin, Stoyanova, Bohdan, Pryplotskyi, Christian, Wald, Steffen, Lukas, Anna, Oleksiak, Vladimir, Jovanovic, Aleksandra, Maksimovic, Milica, Stefanovic, Aleksandra, Zivanic, Andrea Ceccacci, Gianluca De Rubeis, Pambianchi, Giacomo, Paolo Severino, Tomasz, Harań, Natalia, Ilnicka, Katarzyna, Romanowska, Tomasz, Roleder, Christoph, Beyer, Antti, Saraste, Pedro, Teixeira, Mónica, Carvalho, Wilson, Ferreira, Claúdia, Dias, Nuno, Ferreira, Raquel Menezes Fernandes, André Azul Freitas, Pedro Ribeiro Queirós, Lisa Maria Costa Ribeiro Ferraz, Marion, Steindl, Giles, Roditi, Damien, Collison, Laura, Kelly, Katriona, Brooksbank, Andrew, Dougherty, Rosemary, Woodward, Elizabeth, Boyd, Kate, Smith, Michele, Porcu, Maurizio, Porcu, Francesco, Allegra, Vitanio, Palmisano, Stefano, Cossa, Alberto, Boi, Marco, Melis, Riccardo, Cau, and Christine, Denby
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Angina Pectoris Coronary Angiography Coronary Artery Disease Computed Tomography
161. First clinical experience with an oxygen saturation controlled pacemaker in man
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Michael Laule, R. Heinze, Alexander Wirtzfeld, and Karl Stangl
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Cardiac output ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,Time Factors ,Cardiac pacing ,business.industry ,Observation period ,Physical Exertion ,Cardiac Pacing, Artificial ,Hemodynamics ,General Medicine ,Equipment Design ,Right atrial ,Oxygen ,Heart Rate ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,Exercise Test ,Medicine ,Humans ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Oxygen saturation (medicine) ,Aged - Abstract
This article describes the characteristics of a new implantable pacemaker controlled by right atrial oxygen saturation and reports the first clinical experience in man. During the observation period over 5 months, there was no evidence of malfunction due to tissue growth. The system's reaction to exercise changes proved to be quick (5 s to 17 s); decay times varied depending on the magnitude of the power previously performed. Under various exercise tests, the rate increase was linear to the stress load. Measurements of cardiac output showed the system's hemodynamic feedback and its potential self-optimization of pacing rate.
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- 1988
162. Mutations in the human paraoxonase 1 gene: Frequencies, allelic linkages, and association with coronary artery disease
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Ivar Roots, Michael Laule, Gert Baumann, Alexander Mrozikiewicz, Ingolf Cascorbi, Claudia Andel, Karl Stangl, and Przemyslaw M. Mrozikiewicz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Genetic Linkage ,Coronary Disease ,Gastroenterology ,Coronary artery disease ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Myocardial infarction ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Allele ,Molecular Biology ,Allele frequency ,Genetics (clinical) ,Alleles ,DNA Primers ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Aryldialkylphosphatase ,Haplotype ,Paraoxonase ,Esterases ,medicine.disease ,PON1 ,Endocrinology ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
Oxidative damage is a major cause of atherosclerosis. Since human paraoxonase has been postulated as a factor which plays a role in protection from low density lipoprotein oxidation, recent studies have dealt with the impact of hereditary PON1 gene polymorphisms as risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD). The results from these studies are conflicting. In a case-control study, 1000 Caucasian patients with angiographically confirmed CAD were recruited and matched by age and gender to 1000 control individuals. PON1 mutations in codons 55 and 192 were evaluated by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism and allocated to defined haplotypes *1 (55L/192Q), *2 (55L/192R), and *3 (55M/192Q). Frequency of PON1 genotypes without any mutation (PON1*1/*1, wild-type) in CAD cases was 16.9% versus 17.1% in control individuals. PON1*2/*2 showed a frequency of 6.6% versus 7.3% (P = 0.68 compared to wild-type), and PON1*3/3 occurred in 11.8% in CAD cases versus 10.3% among control individuals (P = 0.40). There was also no difference in the distribution of carriers heterozygous for *2 or *3 among cases and control individuals. A haplotype containing both mutations 55M and 192R was not observed. None of the investigated genotypes demonstrated association with early manifestation, severity of disease, acute coronary syndromes, or myocardial infarction. Logistic regression analysis with adjustment for age, gender, diabetes, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia and smoking revealed no evidence of increased coronary risk associated with PON1 genotypes. These results suggest that PON1 polymorphisms are not major genetic determinants of CAD.
163. TCT-129 Percutaneous Transfemoral Management of Severe Secondary Tricuspid Regurgitation with Edwards Sapien XT Bioprosthesis in patients with severe heart failure: first in man experience
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Fabian Knebel, Karl Stangl, Wasiem Sanad, Michael Laule, Gert Baumann, and Verena Stangl
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Moderate to severe ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,Advanced stage ,macromolecular substances ,Regurgitation (circulation) ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Heart failure ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,In patient ,business ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Edwards sapien - Abstract
Severe tricuspid regurgitation (STR) is a common final pathway in advanced stages of heart failure (HF) and associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The prevalence of moderate to severe TR is 35% in HF patients occurring in 1.6 Mio patients in the US. In advanced TR stages, the surgical
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