667 results on '"Del Nido P"'
Search Results
2. Impact of Residual Lesion Severity on Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Following Congenital Heart Surgery in Infancy and Childhood
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Sengupta, Aditya, Gauvreau, Kimberlee, Sadhwani, Anjali, Butler, Samantha C., Newburger, Jane W., del Nido, Pedro J., and Nathan, Meena
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- 2024
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3. Challenges and Priorities for Children With Congenital Valvar Heart Disease
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Holly Bauser-Heaton, MD, PhD, Oliver M. Barry, MD, Sophie C. Hofferberth, MD, Justin T. Tretter, MD, Michael Ma, MD, Andrew Goldstone, MD, Aimee Armstrong, MD, Thomas K. Jones, MD, Ajit Yoganathan, PhD, and Pedro del Nido, MD
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collaboration in valve treatment ,congenital valve disease ,transcatheter valve therapy ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
The Heart Valve Collaboratory is a multidisciplinary, patient-centered community of stakeholders addressing complex problems and embracing innovation to help patients with heart valve disease achieve their fullest potential for health. The Scientific Council is composed of cardiologists, surgeons, ex-officio representatives of the Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, National Heart Lung Blood Institute, and representatives from industry partners. In October 2022, this group convened a workshop that included experts from stakeholder groups to address the unmet and clinical needs of patients with pediatric and congenital heart valve disease. The following document includes the discussion and summary of the current state of valve therapy and the needs being addressed for valve development.
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- 2024
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4. Postoperative Troponin Levels in Children Undergoing Open Heart Surgery With and Without Coronary Intervention
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Gikandi, Ajami, Gauvreau, Kimberlee, Kohlsaat, Katherine, Newburger, Jane W., del Nido, Pedro J., Quinonez, Luis, and Nathan, Meena
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- 2024
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5. Early and long-term outcomes following cardiac surgery for patients with heterotaxy syndromeCentral MessagePerspective
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Victor S. Alemany, MD, MS, Alexis Crawford, BA, Kimberlee Gauvreau, ScD, Emily M. Bucholz, MD-PhD, MPH, Pedro J. del Nido, MD, David N. Schidlow, MD, MMus, and Meena Nathan, MD, MPH
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asplenia ,congenital heart disease ,Fontan operation ,heterotaxy syndrome ,single ventricle ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Objective: Heterotaxy syndrome is a complex multisystem abnormality historically associated with high morbidity and mortality. We sought to evaluate the early and long-term outcomes after cardiac surgery in heterotaxy syndrome. Methods: This is a single-center retrospective review of patients with heterotaxy syndrome undergoing single-ventricle palliation or primary or staged biventricular repair from 1998 to 2018. Patients were stratified by single ventricle versus biventricular physiology, and the severity of atrioventricular valve regurgitation. Demographics, anatomic characteristics, and early and late outcomes, including the length of stay, mortality, and surgical or catheter reinterventions, were analyzed. Results: Among 250 patients, 150 (60%) underwent biventricular repair. In-hospital mortality was 7.6% (n = 19). Median follow-up was 5.2 (range, 0-16) years. Among survivors to discharge, mortality was 19% (n = 44) and reintervention was 52% (n = 120). Patients with moderate/severe atrioventricular valve regurgitation were older (32 vs 16 months, P = .02), were more likely to experience adverse events during their index surgical admission (72% vs 46%, P
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- 2024
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6. Experience Curve With the Cone Procedure for Ebstein’s Anomaly
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Peter Chiu, MD, MS, Abdelilah El Azfi, MS, Brandon Kwon, BA, Sitaram M. Emani, MD, Gerald Marx, MD, and Pedro J. del Nido, MD
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experience curve ,health economics ,public policy ,regionalization ,specialty care ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Background: The volume-outcome relationship is well-known in health care. The Experience Curve, initially developed by the Boston Consulting Group for manufacturing, offers insight on this relationship and has never before been applied to health care. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of experience on cost and resource utilization for the Cone procedure. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of patients who underwent Cone reconstruction for Ebstein’s anomaly at Boston Children’s Hospital between October 2010 and October 2021. Cardiopulmonary bypass time and aortic cross clamp time over time were evaluated using exponential regression to assess the surgeon-level learning curve. At the hospital level, length of stay and cost over time were assessed using exponential regression. Results: There were 115 patients included in the study. Median hospital length of stay was 7.9 days (IQR: 6.4-10.2 days) with a decline of 3.3% per year. Median intensive care unit [ICU] length of stay was 3.2 days (IQR: 2-5.7 days) with a decline of 10.5% per year. Adjusted direct costs indexed to 2020 prices fell by 4% per year. There was no statistically significant change in cardiopulmonary bypass or aortic cross clamp time. In mediation analysis, the reduction in cost was completely accounted for in the decline in ICU length of stay. ICU length of stay was correlated with duration of intubation. Conclusions: Increasing familiarity with Ebstein’s anomaly and Cone reconstruction led to a reduction in resource utilization.
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- 2024
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7. Multiphysiologic State Computational Fluid Dynamics Modeling for Planning Fontan With Interrupted Inferior Vena Cava
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David M. Hoganson, MD, Vijay Govindarajan, PhD, Noah E. Schulz, MS, Emily R. Eickhoff, MS, Roger E. Breitbart, MD, Gerald R. Marx, MD, Pedro J. del Nido, MD, and Peter E. Hammer, PhD
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3D model ,flow modeling ,Fontan ,single ventricle ,virtual surgery ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Background: Single ventricle (SV) patients with interrupted inferior vena cava (iIVC) and azygos continuation are at high risk for unbalanced hepatic venous flow (HVF) distribution to the lungs after Fontan completion and subsequent pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) formation. Objectives: The aim of the study was to utilize computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis to avoid maldistribution of HVF to the lungs after Fontan surgery. Methods: Four SV subjects with iIVC were prospectively studied with a 3-dimensional (3D) modeling workflow with digital 3D models created from segmented magnetic resonance images or computer tomography scans, virtual surgery, and CFD analysis over multiple physiologic states for the evaluation of operative plans to achieve balanced HVF to both lungs. Three of the patients were Fontan revision candidates with existing AVMs. All patients underwent Fontan completion or revision surgery. Results: CFD predicted that existing or proposed Fontan completion in all patients would result in 100% of HVF to one lung. Improved HVF balance was achieved with CFD analysis of alternative surgical approaches resulting in the average distribution of HVF to the right/left pulmonary arteries of 37%/63% ± 10.4%. A hepatoazygos shunt was required in all patients and additional creation of an innominate vein in one. CFD analysis was validated by the comparison of pre-operative predicted and postoperative MRI-measured total right/left pulmonary flow (51%/49% ± 5.4% vs 49%/51% ± 8.5%). Conclusions: A 3D modeling workflow with CFD simulation for SV patients with iIVC may avoid HVF maldistribution and development of AVMs after Fontan completion.
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- 2024
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8. Intervention for critical aortic stenosis in Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome
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Leslie B. Gordon, Sammy Basso, Justine Maestranzi, Elena Aikawa, Cassandra L. Clift, Antonio Giovanni Cammardella, Tommaso Hinna Danesi, Pedro J. del Nido, Elazer R. Edelman, Abeer Hamdy, Sheila M. Hegde, Monica E. Kleinman, Nicola Maschietto, Mandeep R. Mehra, Srinivasan Mukundan, Francesco Musumeci, Marco Russo, Frank J. Rybicki, Pinak Bipin Shah, William A. Suarez, Kelsey Tuminelli, Katherine Zaleski, Ashwin Prakash, and Marie Gerhard-Herman
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aging ,aortic stenosis ,apico-aortic conduit ,atherosclerosis ,progeria ,transcatheter aortic valve replacement ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS) is an ultra-rare genetic premature aging disease that is historically fatal in teenage years, secondary to severe accelerated atherosclerosis. The only approved treatment is the farnesyltransferase inhibitor lonafarnib, which improves vascular structure and function, extending average untreated lifespan of 14.5 years by 4.3 years (30%). With this longer lifespan, calcific aortic stenosis (AS) was identified as an emerging critical risk factor for cardiac death in older patients. Intervention to relieve critical AS has the potential for immediate improvement in healthspan and lifespan. However, HGPS patient-device size mismatch, pervasive peripheral arterial disease, skin and bone abnormalities, and lifelong failure to thrive present unique challenges to intervention. An international group of experts in HGPS, pediatric and adult cardiology, cardiac surgery, and pediatric critical care convened to identify strategies for successful treatment. Candidate procedures were evaluated by in-depth examination of 4 cases that typify HGPS clinical pathology. Modified transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and left ventricular Apico-Aortic Conduit (AAC) placement were deemed high risk but viable options. Two cases received TAVR and 2 received AAC post-summit. Three were successful and 1 patient died perioperatively due to cardiovascular disease severity, highlighting the importance of intervention timing and comparative risk stratification. These breakthrough interventions for treating critical aortic stenosis in HGPS patients could rewrite the current clinical perspective on disease course by greatly improving late-stage quality of life and increasing lifespan. Expanding worldwide medical and surgical competency for this ultra-rare disease through expert information-sharing could have high impact on treatment success.
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- 2024
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9. The Yasui operation: A single institutional experience over 30 yearsCentral MessagePerspective
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Christina L. Greene, MD, Brandi Scully, MD, Steven J. Staffa, MS, Mariana Chavez, MD, Kevin G. Friedman, MD, Pedro del Nido, MD, Luis G. Quinonez, MD, Sitaram M. Emani, MD, and Christopher W. Baird, MD
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Yasui ,biventricular repair ,aortic atresia ,interrupted aortic arch ,left ventricular outflow tract obstruction ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Objective: The Yasui operation was introduced in 1987 for patients with 2 adequate ventricles, a ventricular septal defect, and aortic atresia or interrupted aortic arch. Despite promising early outcomes, left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (LVOTO) remains a long-term concern. The purpose of this study is to report our institutional experience with the Yasui operation. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed all patients undergoing the Yasui operation between 1989 and 2021. Results are reported as median with interquartile range (IQR). Results: Twenty-five patients underwent a Yasui operation (19 primary), at 11 days (IQR, 7-218 days) of life and weight of 3 kg (IQR, 2.8-4.1 days). Fundamental diagnosis was ventricular septal defect/interrupted aortic arch in 11 patients and ventricular septal defect/aortic atresia in 14. Follow-up was 96% (24 out of 25) at 5 years (IQR, 1.4-14.7) with 92% survival. Freedom from LVOTO reoperation was 91% at late follow-up with 2 patients requiring baffle revision at 6 and 9 years. Latest echocardiogram showed 100% of patients had normal biventricular function and 87% (20 out of 23) less than mild LVOTO at 5 years (IQR, 2.3-14.9). Diagnosis, aortic valve morphology, and material used were not predictors of LVOTO. Freedom from right ventricle-to-pulmonary artery conduit reoperation was 48% at a median of 5 years (IQR, 1.4-14.7). Conduit type was not a predictor of reintervention. Conclusions: The Yasui operation can be performed with low morbidity and mortality in patients with 2 acceptable-size ventricles and aortic atresia or interrupted aortic arch with severe LVOTO. Despite some burden of reoperation, midterm reoperation for LVOTO is not common and ventricular function is preserved.
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- 2023
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10. Mitochondrial transplantation: the advance to therapeutic application and molecular modulation
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James D. McCully, Pedro J. del Nido, and Sitaram M. Emani
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mitochondria ,mitochondrial transplantation ,heart ,transcriptomics ,proteomics ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Mitochondrial transplantation provides a novel methodology for rescue of cell viability and cell function following ischemia-reperfusion injury and applications for other pathologies are expanding. In this review we present our methods and acquired data and evidence accumulated to support the use of mitochondrial transplantation.
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- 2023
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11. Staged ventricular recruitment and biventricular conversion following single-ventricle palliation in unbalanced atrioventricular canal defectsCentral MessagePerspective
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Nicholas A. Oh, MD, Ilias P. Doulamis, MD, Alvise Guariento, MD, Breanna Piekarski, BSN, RN, Gerald R. Marx, MD, Pedro J. del Nido, MD, and Sitaram M. Emani, MD
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single ventricle palliation ,unbalanced atrioventricular canal defect ,biventricular repair ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Objective: Restoration of biventricular circulation is an alternative management strategy in unbalanced atrioventricular canal defects (uAVCDs), especially in patients with risk factors for single-ventricle palliation (SVP) failure. When ventricular volume is inadequate for biventricular circulation, recruitment procedures may accommodate its growth. In this study, we review our uAVCD experience with biventricular conversion (BIVC) after prior SVP. Methods: This is a single-institution, retrospective cohort study of uAVCD patients who underwent BIVC after SVP, with staged recruitment (staged) or primary BIVC (direct) between 2003 to 2018. Mortality, unplanned reinterventions, imaging, and catheterization data were analyzed. Results: Sixty-five patients underwent BIVC from SVP (17 stage 1, 42 bidirectional Glenn, and 6 Fontan). Decision for conversion was based on poor SVP candidacy (n = 43) or 2 adequately sized ventricles (n = 22). Of the 65 patients, 20 patients underwent recruitment before conversion. The staged group had more severe ventricular hypoplasia than the direct group, reflected in prestaging end-diastolic volume z scores (–4.0 vs –2.6; P
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- 2023
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12. Transcriptomic and proteomic pathways of diabetic and non-diabetic mitochondrial transplantation
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Ilias P. Doulamis, Rio S. Nomoto, Aspasia Tzani, Xuechong Hong, Thomas Duignan, Aybuke Celik, Pedro J. del Nido, and James D. McCully
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Reduced mitochondrial function increases myocardial susceptibility to ischemia–reperfusion injury (IRI) in diabetic hearts. Mitochondrial transplantation (MT) ameliorates IRI, however, the cardioprotective effects of MT may be limited using diabetic mitochondria. Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats were subjected to temporary myocardial RI and then received either vehicle alone or vehicle containing mitochondria isolated from either diabetic ZDF or non-diabetic Zucker lean (ZL) rats. The ZDF rats were allowed to recover for 2 h or 28 days. MT using either ZDF- or ZL-mitochondria provided sustained reduction in infarct size and was associated with overlapping upregulation of pathways associated with muscle contraction, development, organization, and anti-apoptosis. MT using either ZDF- or ZL-mitochondria also significantly preserved myocardial function, however, ZL- mitochondria provided a more robust long-term preservation of myocardial function through the mitochondria dependent upregulation of pathways for cardiac and muscle metabolism and development. MT using either diabetic or non-diabetic mitochondria decreased infarct size and preserved functional recovery, however, the cardioprotection afforded by MT was attenuated in hearts receiving diabetic compared to non-diabetic MT.
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- 2022
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13. Mechanical strain triggers endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition of the endocardium in the immature heart
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Vorisek, Carina, Weixler, Viktoria, Dominguez, Massiel, Axt-Fliedner, Roland, Hammer, Peter E., Lin, Ruei-Zeng, Melero-Martin, Juan M., del Nido, Pedro J., and Friehs, Ingeborg
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- 2022
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14. A multi-disciplinary, comprehensive approach to management of children with heterotaxy
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Thomas G. Saba, Gabrielle C. Geddes, Stephanie M. Ware, David N. Schidlow, Pedro J. del Nido, Nathan S. Rubalcava, Samir K. Gadepalli, Terri Stillwell, Anne Griffiths, Laura M. Bennett Murphy, Andrew T. Barber, Margaret W. Leigh, Necia Sabin, and Adam J. Shapiro
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Heterotaxy ,Laterality disorder ,Congenital heart disease ,Asplenia ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Heterotaxy (HTX) is a rare condition of abnormal thoraco-abdominal organ arrangement across the left–right axis of the body. The pathogenesis of HTX includes a derangement of the complex signaling at the left–right organizer early in embryogenesis involving motile and non-motile cilia. It can be inherited as a single-gene disorder, a phenotypic feature of a known genetic syndrome or without any clear genetic etiology. Most patients with HTX have complex cardiovascular malformations requiring surgical intervention. Surgical risks are relatively high due to several serious comorbidities often seen in patients with HTX. Asplenia or functional hyposplenism significantly increase the risk for sepsis and therefore require antimicrobial prophylaxis and immediate medical attention with fever. Intestinal rotation abnormalities are common among patients with HTX, although volvulus is rare and surgical correction carries substantial risk. While routine screening for intestinal malrotation is not recommended, providers and families should promptly address symptoms concerning for volvulus and biliary atresia, another serious morbidity more common among patients with HTX. Many patients with HTX have chronic lung disease and should be screened for primary ciliary dyskinesia, a condition of respiratory cilia impairment leading to bronchiectasis. Mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions need to be carefully considered among this population of patients living with a substantial medical burden. Optimal care of children with HTX requires a cohesive team of primary care providers and experienced subspecialists collaborating to provide compassionate, standardized and evidence-based care. In this statement, subspecialty experts experienced in HTX care and research collaborated to provide expert- and evidence-based suggestions addressing the numerous medical issues affecting children living with HTX.
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- 2022
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15. Endothelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition as Underlying Mechanism for the Formation of Double-Chambered Right Ventricle
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Weixler, Viktoria, Kramer, Peter, Lindner, Judith, Murin, Peter, Cho, Mi-Young, del Nido, Pedro, Photiadis, Joachim, and Friehs, Ingeborg
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- 2022
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16. Mitochondrial transplantation: Effects on chemotherapy in prostate and ovarian cancer cells in vitro and in vivo
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Aybuke Celik, Arzoo Orfany, Jason Dearling, Pedro J. del Nido, James D. McCully, and Filiz Bakar-Ates
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Mitochondrial transplantation ,Prostate cancer ,Ovarian cancer ,Cisplatin ,Docetaxel ,Paclitaxel ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Prostate and ovarian cancers affect the male and female reproductive organs and are among the most common cancers in developing countries. Previous studies have demonstrated that cancer cells have a high rate of aerobic glycolysis that is present in nearly all invasive human cancers and persists even under normoxic conditions. Aerobic glycolysis has been correlated with chemotherapeutic resistance and tumor aggressiveness. These data suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction may confer a significant proliferative advantage during the somatic evolution of cancer. In this study we investigated the effect of direct mitochondria transplantation on cancer cell proliferation and chemotherapeutic sensitivity in prostate and ovarian cancer models, both in vitro and in vivo. Our results show that the transplantation of viable, respiration competent mitochondria has no effect on cancer cell proliferation but significantly decreases migration and alters cell cycle checkpoints. Our results further demonstrate that mitochondrial transplantation significantly increases chemotherapeutic sensitivity, providing similar apoptotic levels with low-dose chemotherapy as that achieved with high-dose chemotherapy. These results suggest that mitochondria transplantation provides a novel approach for early prostate and ovarian cancer therapy, significantly increasing chemotherapeutic sensitivity in in vitro and in vivo murine models.
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- 2023
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17. Impact of Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status on Outcomes Following First‐Stage Palliation of Single Ventricle Heart Disease
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Aditya Sengupta, Emily M. Bucholz, Kimberlee Gauvreau, Jane W. Newburger, Margaret Schroeder, Aditya K. Kaza, Pedro J. del Nido, and Meena Nathan
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congenital ,disparity ,neonate ,social ,surgery ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background The impact of neighborhood socioeconomic status (SES) on outcomes following first‐stage palliation of single ventricle heart disease remains incompletely characterized. Methods and Results This was a single‐center, retrospective review of consecutive patients who underwent the Norwood procedure from January 1, 1997 to November 11, 2017. Outcomes of interest included in‐hospital (early) mortality or transplant, postoperative hospital length‐of‐stay, inpatient cost, and postdischarge (late) mortality or transplant. The primary exposure was neighborhood SES, assessed using a composite score derived from 6 US census‐block group measures related to wealth, income, education, and occupation. Associations between SES and outcomes were assessed using logistic regression, generalized linear, or Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for baseline patient‐related risk factors. Of 478 patients, there were 62 (13.0%) early deaths or transplants. Among 416 transplant‐free survivors at hospital discharge, median postoperative hospital length‐of‐stay and cost were 24 (interquartile range, 15–43) days and $295 000 (interquartile range, $193 000–$563 000), respectively. There were 97 (23.3%) late deaths or transplants. On multivariable analysis, patients in the lowest SES tertile had greater risk of early mortality or transplant (odds ratio [OR], 4.3 [95% CI, 2.0–9.4; P
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- 2023
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18. A multi-disciplinary, comprehensive approach to management of children with heterotaxy
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Saba, Thomas G., Geddes, Gabrielle C., Ware, Stephanie M., Schidlow, David N., del Nido, Pedro J., Rubalcava, Nathan S., Gadepalli, Samir K., Stillwell, Terri, Griffiths, Anne, Bennett Murphy, Laura M., Barber, Andrew T., Leigh, Margaret W., Sabin, Necia, and Shapiro, Adam J.
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- 2022
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19. Transcriptomic and proteomic pathways of diabetic and non-diabetic mitochondrial transplantation
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Doulamis, Ilias P., Nomoto, Rio S., Tzani, Aspasia, Hong, Xuechong, Duignan, Thomas, Celik, Aybuke, del Nido, Pedro J., and McCully, James D.
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- 2022
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20. Importance of Preserved Tricuspid Valve Function for Effective Soft Robotic Augmentation of the Right Ventricle in Cases of Elevated Pulmonary Artery Pressure
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Wamala, Isaac, Payne, Christopher J., Saeed, Mossab Y., Bautista-Salinas, Daniel, Van Story, David, Thalhofer, Thomas, Staffa, Steven J., Ghelani, Sunil J., del Nido, Pedro J., Walsh, Conor J., and Vasilyev, Nikolay V.
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- 2022
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21. A Tribute to Ajit Yoganathan's Cardiovascular Fluid Mechanics Lab: A Survey of Its Contributions to Our Understanding of the Physiology and Management of Single-Ventricle Patients
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Hammer, Peter E., Hoganson, David M., and del Nido, Pedro J.
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- 2021
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22. Case report: Active clinical manifestation of endocardial fibroelastosis in adolescence in a patient with mitral and aortic obstruction–histologic presence of endothelial-to-mesenchymal transformation
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Daniel Diaz-Gil, Chrystalle Katte Carreon, Natalia Silva-Gomez, Alan E. Benheim, Sitaram M. Emani, Pedro J. del Nido, Gerald R. Marx, and Ingeborg Friehs
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endocardial fibroelastosis ,hypoplastic left heart complex ,endothelial-to-mesenchymal transformation ,ABL1 ,flow disturbance ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
This is the first description of active clinical manifestation of endocardial fibroelastosis (EFE) and remodeling of the endocardium via endothelial-to-mesenchymal transformation (EndMT) in an adolescent with Shone’s variant hypoplastic left heart complex (HLHC) and a genetic heterozygous ABL1 variant. While EFE has not been typically associated HLHC or Shone’s syndrome, in this patient flow alterations in the left ventricle (LV), combined with genetic alterations of intrinsic EndMT pathways led to active clinical manifestation of EFE in adolescence. This case emphasizes that new therapies for EFE might need to focus on molecular factors influenced by intrinsic and extrinsic stimuli of EndMT.
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- 2022
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23. Definitions of adverse events associated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in children: results of an international Delphi process from the ECMO-CENTRAL ARC
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Alexander, Peta M A, Di Nardo, Matteo, Combes, Alain, Vogel, Adam M, Antonini, Marta Velia, Barrett, Nicholas, Benedetti, Giulia M, Bettencourt, Amanda, Brodie, Daniel, Gómez-Gutiérrez, René, Gorga, Stephen M, Hodgson, Carol, Kapoor, Poonam Malhotra, Le, Jennifer, MacLaren, Graeme, O’Neil, Erika R, Ostermann, Marlies, Paden, Matthew L, Patel, Neil, Rojas-Peña, Alvaro, Said, Ahmed S, Sperotto, Francesca, Willems, Ariane, Vercaemst, Leen, Yoganathan, Ajit P, Lorts, Angela, del Nido, Pedro J, Barbaro, Ryan P, Abecasis, Francisco, Al Foudri, Huda, Anders, Marc M., Angus, Derek C., Annich, Gail M., Arachchillage, Deepa J., Akcan-Arikan, Ayse, Armstrong, Aimee K., Balcells, Joan, Barrett, Meredith, Bartlett, Robert H., Belda-Hofheinz, Sylvia, Bembea, Melania M., Best, Derek J., Bonadonna, Desiree, Boonstra, Philip S., Brogan, Thomas V, Brown, Katherine L, Butragueño-Laiseca, Laura, Butt, Warwick W., Camporota, Luigi, Cardenas, Barbara, Cascarano, Maria T., Caspi, Joseph, Chen, Eric, Chiletti, Roberto, Colombo, Giovanna G., Conte, Marisa L., Crowe, Liz, Cvetkovic, Mirjana, Dalton, Heidi J., Daverio, Marco, Davidson, Mark G., Davis, Carl, DiGeronimo, Robert J., Egbunine, Ariel, Ellis, W. Cory, Fan, Eddy, Foster, Claire C, Fraser, John F., Friedman, Matthew L., Furlong-Dillard, Jamie, Fynn-Thompson, Francis, Garcia, Alejandro V., Geppert, Jeffery, Gillette, Nicole, Grazioli, Lorenzo, Greene, Christina L, Guerguerian, Anne-Marie, Guilliams, Kristin P., Haji Fortis, Jumana Y., Hao, Jianming, Heinsar, Silver, Hejduk, Mark W., Himebauch, Adam S., Horvat, Christopher M., Hoskote, Aparna, Hou, Xiaotong, Hyslop, Robert W., Ibrahim, Nicole, Ito, Takuya, Karagiannidis, Christian, Karam, Oliver, Kaushik, Shubhi, Kilbaugh, Todd J., Kim-Campbell, Nahmah, Kirsch, Roxanne E, Kormos, Robert L., Kornberger, Angela, Krucoff, Mitchell W., Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, LaRovere, Kerri L, Leger, Pierre-Louis, Levy, Philip T., Lorusso, Roberto, Lyster, Haifa, Malone, Matthew P., McMullan, D. Michael, Mečířová, Soña, Mehran, Roxana, Merz, Scott I., Mochizuki, Shuichi, Moler, Frank W., Molla, Kalkidan, Monagle, Paul, Morgan, Gareth J., Morgan, Catherine, Morice, Marie-Claude, Muszynski, Jennifer A., Najaf, Tasnim A., Nellis, Marianne E., Newburger, Jane W., O'Rourke, P. Pearl, Ostadal, Petr, Ozment, Caroline P., Pagani, Francis D., Peek, Giles J., Polito, Angelo, Priest, John R., Raman, Lakshmi, Rintoul, Natalie E., Roy, Nathalie, Rubin, Juli, Rumford, Martha, Rycus, Peter, Ryerson, Lindsay M., Sakamoto, Wakako, Segura-Matute, Susana, Shekar, Kiran, Spinella, Philip C., Spitzer, Ernest, Starr, Joanne P., Stead, Christine, Steffen, Katherine, Steiner, Marie E., Tan, Lucy, Tasker, Robert C., Taylor, J. Michael, Thiagarajan, Ravi R., Tonna, Joseph E., Ubertini, Gina M., van Leeuwen, Grace, Vang, Eric, Ventetuolo, Corey E., Venugopal, Prem S., Weinberg, Allison, Westrope, Claire, Wu, Changfu, Wylie, Gillian, Zeymer, Uwe, Zivick, Elizabeth E., and Zochios, Vasileios
- Abstract
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a high-risk and low-volume life support with increasing clinical study. However, heterogenous outcome definitions impede data assimilation into evidence to guide practice. The Academic Research Consortium (ARC), an international collaborative forum committed to facilitating the creation of stakeholder-driven consensus nomenclature and outcomes for clinical trials of medical devices, supported the ECMO Core Elements Needed for Trials Regulation And quality of Life (ECMO-CENTRAL) ARC. The ECMO-CENTRAL ARC was assembled to develop definitions of paediatric ECMO adverse events for use in clinical trials and regulatory device evaluation. An initial candidate list of ECMO adverse events derived from the mechanical circulatory support ARC was supplemented with a review of ECMO-relevant adverse event definitions collated from literature published between Jan 1, 1988, and Feb 20, 2023. Distinct teams of international topic experts drafted separate adverse event definitions that were harmonised to existing literature when appropriate. Draft definitions were revised for paediatric ECMO relevance with input from patients, families, and an international expert panel of trialists, clinicians, statisticians, biomedical engineers, device developers, and regulatory agencies. ECMO-CENTRAL ARC was revised and disseminated across research societies and professional organisations. Up to three rounds of internet-based anonymous surveys were planned as a modified Delphi process. The expert panel defined 13 adverse event definitions: neurological, bleeding, device malfunction, acute kidney injury, haemolysis, infection, vascular access-associated injury, non-CNS thrombosis, hepatic dysfunction, right heart failure, left ventricular overload, lactic acidaemia, and hypoxaemia. Definitional structure varied. Among 165 expert panel members, 114 were eligible to vote and 111 voted. Consensus was achieved for all proposed definitions. Agreement ranged from 82% to 95%. ECMO-CENTRAL ARC paired rigorous development with methodical stakeholder involvement and dissemination to define paediatric ECMO adverse events. These definitions will facilitate new research and the assimilation of data across clinical trials and ECMO device evaluation in children.
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- 2024
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24. Human endothelial colony-forming cells provide trophic support for pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes via distinctively high expression of neuregulin-1
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Hong, Xuechong, Oh, Nicholas, Wang, Kai, Neumeyer, Joseph, Lee, Chin Nien, Lin, Ruei-Zeng, Piekarski, Breanna, Emani, Sitaram, Greene, Arin K., Friehs, Ingeborg, del Nido, Pedro J., and Melero-Martin, Juan M.
- Published
- 2021
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25. The American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS) 2024 expert consensus document: Management of neonates and infants with Ebstein anomaly.
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Konstantinov, Igor E., Chai, Paul, Bacha, Emile, Caldarone, Christopher A., Da Silva, Jose Pedro, Da Fonseca Da Silva, Luciana, Dearani, Joseph, Hornberger, Lisa, Knott-Craig, Christopher, del Nido, Pedro, Qureshi, Muhammad, Sarris, George, Starnes, Vaughn, and Tsang, Victor
- Abstract
Symptomatic neonates and infants with Ebstein anomaly (EA) require complex management. A group of experts was commissioned by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery to provide a framework on this topic focusing on risk stratification and management. The EA Clinical Congenital Practice Standards Committee is a multinational and multidisciplinary group of surgeons and cardiologists with expertise in EA. A citation search in PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science was performed using key words related to EA. The search was restricted to the English language and the year 2000 or later and yielded 455 results, of which 71 were related to neonates and infants. Expert consensus statements with class of recommendation and level of evidence were developed using a modified Delphi method, requiring 80% of members votes with at least 75% agreement on each statement. When evaluating fetuses with EA, those with severe cardiomegaly, retrograde or bidirectional shunt at the ductal level, pulmonary valve atresia, circular shunt, left ventricular dysfunction, or fetal hydrops should be considered high risk for intrauterine demise and postnatal morbidity and mortality. Neonates with EA and severe cardiomegaly, prematurity (<32 weeks), intrauterine growth restriction, pulmonary valve atresia, circular shunt, left ventricular dysfunction, or cardiogenic shock should be considered high risk for morbidity and mortality. Hemodynamically unstable neonates with a circular shunt should have emergent interruption of the circular shunt. Neonates in refractory cardiogenic shock may be palliated with the Starnes procedure. Children may be assessed for later biventricular repair after the Starnes procedure. Neonates without high-risk features of EA may be monitored for spontaneous closure of the patent ductus arteriosus (PDA). Hemodynamically stable neonates with significant pulmonary regurgitation at risk for circular shunt with normal right ventricular systolic pressure should have an attempt at medical closure of the PDA. A medical trial of PDA closure in neonates with functional pulmonary atresia and normal right ventricular systolic pressure (>20-25 mm Hg) should be performed. Neonates who are hemodynamically stable without pulmonary regurgitation but inadequate antegrade pulmonary blood flow may be considered for a PDA stent or systemic to pulmonary artery shunt. Risk stratification is essential in neonates and infants with EA. Palliative comfort care may be reasonable in neonates with associated risk factors that may include prematurity, genetic syndromes, other major medical comorbidities, ventricular dysfunction, or sepsis. Neonates who are unstable with a circular shunt should have emergent interruption of the circular shunt. Neonates who are unstable are most commonly palliated with the Starnes procedure. Neonates who are stable should undergo ductal closure. Neonates who are stable with inadequate pulmonary flow may have ductal stenting or a systemic-to-pulmonary artery shunt. Subsequent procedures after Starnes palliation include either single-ventricle palliation or biventricular repair strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. Book review
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Juan M. del Nido
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Technological innovations. Automation ,HD45-45.2 - Published
- 2021
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27. A Novel Biological Strategy for Myocardial Protection by Intracoronary Delivery of Mitochondria: Safety and Efficacy
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Borami Shin, MD, Mossab Y. Saeed, MD, Jesse J. Esch, MD, Alvise Guariento, MD, David Blitzer, MD, Kamila Moskowitzova, MD, Giovanna Ramirez-Barbieri, MD, Arzoo Orfany, MD, Jerusha K. Thedsanamoorthy, BA, Douglas B. Cowan, PhD, James A. Inkster, PhD, Erin R. Snay, BRS, Steven J. Staffa, MS, Alan B. Packard, PhD, David Zurakowski, PhD, Pedro J. del Nido, MD, and James D. McCully, PhD
- Subjects
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Summary: Mitochondrial dysfunction is the determinant insult of ischemia-reperfusion injury. Autologous mitochondrial transplantation involves supplying one’s healthy mitochondria to the ischemic region harboring damaged mitochondria. The authors used in vivo swine to show that mitochondrial transplantation in the heart by intracoronary delivery is safe, with specific distribution to the heart, and results in significant increase in coronary blood flow, which requires intact mitochondrial viability, adenosine triphosphate production, and, in part, the activation of vascular KIR channels. Intracoronary mitochondrial delivery after temporary regional ischemia significantly improved myocardial function, perfusion, and infarct size. The authors concluded that intracoronary delivery of mitochondria is safe and efficacious therapy for myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. Key Words: ischemia-reperfusion injury, mitochondria, mitochondrial transplantation, myocardial protection
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- 2019
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28. Aortic valve neo-cuspidation using the Ozaki technique for acquired and congenital disease: where does this procedure currently stand?
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Baird, Christopher W., Marathe, Supreet P., and del Nido, Pedro J.
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- 2020
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29. 633 Incorporating checkpoint inhibitors into cancer care: a study of the impact of digital education on clinical competence and practice patterns
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Brian Rini, Michael Overman, Tariqa Ackbarali, Elizabeth del Nido, and Ignacio Witsuba
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2021
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30. Impact of Age-Related Change in Caval Flow Ratio on Hepatic Flow Distribution in the Fontan Circulation.
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Govindarajan, Vijay, Marshall, Lauren, Sahni, Akshita, Cetatoiu, Maria A., Eickhoff, Emily E., Davee, Jocelyn, St. Clair, Nicole, Schulz, Noah E., Hoganson, David M., Hammer, Peter E., Ghelani, Sunil J., Prakash, Ashwin, del Nido, Pedro J., and Rathod, Rahul H.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Fontan operation is a palliative technique for patients born with single ventricle heart disease. The superior vena cava (SVC), inferior vena cava (IVC), and hepatic veins are connected to the pulmonary arteries in a total cavopulmonary connection by an extracardiac conduit or a lateral tunnel connection. A balanced hepatic flow distribution (HFD) to both lungs is essential to prevent pulmonary arteriovenous malformations and cyanosis. HFD is highly dependent on the local hemodynamics. The effect of age-related changes in caval inflows on HFD was evaluated using cardiac magnetic resonance data and patient-specific computational fluid dynamics modeling. METHODS: SVC and IVC flow from 414 patients with Fontan were collected to establish a relationship between SVC:IVC flow ratio and age. Computational fluid dynamics modeling was performed in 60 (30 extracardiac and 30 lateral tunnel) patient models to quantify the HFD that corresponded to patient ages of 3, 8, and 15 years, respectively. RESULTS: SVC:IVC flow ratio inverted at ≈8 years of age, indicating a clear shift to lower body flow predominance. Our data showed that variation of HFD in response to age-related changes in caval inflows (SVC:IVC, 2, 1, and 0.5 corresponded to ages, 3, 8, and 15+, respectively) was not significant for extracardiac but statistically significant for lateral tunnel cohorts. For all 3 caval inflow ratios, a positive correlation existed between the IVC flow distribution to both the lungs and the HFD. However, as the SVC:IVC ratio changed from 2 to 0.5 (age, 3-15+) years, the correlation's strength decreased from 0.87 to 0.64, due to potential flow perturbation as IVC flow momentum increased. CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis provided quantitative insights into the impact of the changing caval inflows on Fontan's long-term HFD, highlighting the importance of SVC:IVC variations over time on Fontan's long-term hemodynamics. These findings broaden our understanding of Fontan hemodynamics and patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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31. Early Experience With Reverse Double Switch Operation for the Borderline Left Heart.
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Scully, Brandi Braud, Feins, Eric N., Tworetzky, Wayne, Ghelani, Sunil, Beroukhim, Rebecca, del Nido, Pedro J., and Emani, Sitaram M.
- Abstract
This study reviews our early experience with the "reverse" double switch operation (R-DSO) for borderline left hearts. A retrospective review of children with borderline left hearts who underwent R-DSO between 2017 and 2021 was conducted. Patient characteristics and early hemodynamic and clinical outcomes were collected. R-DSO was performed in 8 patients with no operative or postoperative deaths; 5 underwent decompressing bidirectional Glenn. Left ventricular (LV) poor-compliance was the dominant pathophysiology. Four patients had undergone staged LV recruitment but were not candidates for anatomical biventricular circulation due to LV hypoplasia and/or diastolic dysfunction. 7/8 patients had risk factors for Fontan circulation including pulmonary vein stenosis, pulmonary hypertension, and pulmonary artery stenosis. Median age at R-DSO was 3.7 years (19 months-12 years). All patients were in sinus rhythm at discharge. At median follow-up of 15 months (57 days-4.1 years) no mortalities, reoperations or heart transplants had occurred. All patients had normal morphologic LV systolic function. In one patient, pre-existing pulmonary hypertension (HTN) resolved after R-DSO. Reinterventions included transcatheter mitral valve replacement for residual mitral stenosis and neo-pulmonary balloon valvuloplasty. In 4 patients follow-up catheterization done at a median of 519 days (320 days-4 years) demonstrated median cardiac index of 3.2 L/min/m2 (2.2-4); median sub-pulmonary left ventricular end diastolic pressure was 9 mm Hg (7-15); median inferior vena cava/baffle pressure was 8 mm Hg (7-13). R-DSO is an alternative to anatomical biventricular repair or single ventricle palliation in patients with borderline left hearts and can result in low inferior vena cava pressures and favorable early results. This approach can also relieve pulmonary HTN and allow future transplant candidacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Staged Ventricular Septation in Double-Inlet Ventricle - A Strategy to Avoid Fontan?
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Prasanna, Anagha, Beroukhim, Rebecca S., Ghelani, Sunil, Feins, Eric N., del Nido, Pedro J., and Emani, Sitaram M.
- Abstract
Single-stage ventricular septation for double-inlet left or right ventricle (DILV or DIRV) has historically been associated with poor outcomes. We hypothesize that staged ventricular septation may demonstrate favorable clinical outcomes to be an alternative to Fontan palliation. This single-center retrospective study reviewed patients with DILV or DIRV who underwent staged ventricular septation between 2015–2021. The strategy involves pulmonary artery banding or Norwood procedure during infancy (stage 1), followed by partial ventricular septation to anchor the septum, while maintaining systemic RV pressure to avoid septal shift (stage 2). Residual septal defects are closed with pulmonary artery band removal at stage 3. Results are reported as median (interquartile range). Twelve patients underwent partial ventricular septation. At a median follow-up time of 17 months (8–30) after stage 2, there were no interstage deaths or cardiac transplants; LV dysfunction was observed in one patient. Hemodynamic evaluation after stage 2 demonstrated median left atrial pressure of 9.5 mm Hg (8.9–11.5), cardiac index of 3.4 L/min/m
2 (3.2–3.6), and RV and LV indexed end-diastolic volumes of 52 ml/m2 (41–67) and 105 ml/m2 (81–115), respectively. Five patients have progressed to stage 3; one required pacemaker for complete heart block. Unplanned reintervention was required in 4 patients after stage 1, 2 patients after stage 2, and 3 patients after stage 3. Staged ventricular septation is an alternative to single-ventricle palliation in a subset of double-inlet ventricle patients and is associated with acceptable early outcomes. Further studies are necessary to determine long-term outcomes. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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33. Impact of Age-related change in Caval Flow Ratio on Hepatic Flow Distribution in Fontan
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Govindarajan, V., primary, Marshall, L., additional, Sahni, A., additional, Cetatoiu, M., additional, Eickhoff, E., additional, Davee, J., additional, St. Clair, N., additional, Schulz, N., additional, Hoganson, D.M., additional, Hammer, P. E., additional, Ghelani, S., additional, Prakash, A., additional, del Nido, P. J., additional, and Rathod, R.H., additional
- Published
- 2023
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34. Reply from authors: A new shared vision on survival analysis: Good news from Baltimore
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Alvise Guariento, MD, Ilias P. Doulamis, MD, PhD, Steven J. Staffa, MS, Laura Gellis, MD, Nicholas A. Oh, MD, Takashi Kido, MD, PhD, John E. Mayer, MD, Christopher W. Baird, MD, Sitaram M. Emani, MD, David Zurakowski, MS, PhD, Pedro J. del Nido, MD, and Meena Nathan, MD, FRCS, MPH
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Published
- 2021
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35. A Novel Pulmonary Valve Replacement Surgery Strategy Using Contracting Band for Patients With Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot: An MRI-Based Multipatient Modeling Study
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Han Yu, Pedro J. del Nido, Tal Geva, Chun Yang, Zheyang Wu, Rahul H. Rathod, Xueying Huang, Kristen L. Billiar, and Dalin Tang
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right ventricle ,Tetralogy of Fallot ,ventricle mechanical model ,surgery simulation ,active contraction band ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
Patients with repaired Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF), a congenital heart defect which includes a ventricular septal defect and severe right ventricular outflow obstruction, account for the majority of cases with late-onset right ventricle (RV) failure. Current surgery procedures, including pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) with right ventricle remodeling, yield mixed results. PVR with active band insertion was hypothesized to be of clinical usage on improving RV function measured by ejection fraction (EF). In lieu of risky open-heart surgeries and experiments on animal and human, computational biomechanical models were adapted to study the impact of PVR with five band insertion options. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) images were acquired from seven TOF patients before PVR surgery for model construction. For each patient, five different surgery plans combined with passive and active contraction band with contraction ratio of 20, 15, and 10% were studied. Those five plans include three single-band plans with different band locations; one plan with two bands, and one plan with three bands. Including the seven no-band models, 147 computational bi-ventricle models were constructed to simulate RV cardiac functions and identify optimal band plans. Patient variations with different band plans were investigated. Surgery plan with three active contraction bands and band active contraction ratio of 20% had the best performance on improving RV function. The mean ± SD RV ejection fraction value from the seven patients was 42.90 ± 5.68%, presenting a 4.19% absolute improvement or a 10.82% relative improvement, when compared with the baseline models (38.71 ± 5.73%, p = 0.016). The EF improvements from the seven patients varied from 2.87 to 6.01%. Surgical procedures using active contraction bands have great potential to improve RV function measured by ejection fraction for patients with repaired ToF. It is possible to have higher right ventricle ejection fraction improvement with more bands and higher band active contraction ratio. Our findings with computational models need to be further validated by animal experiments before clinical trial could become possible.
- Published
- 2021
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36. Temporal enhancement of 2D color Doppler echocardiography sequences by fragment-based frame reordering and refinement
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Terentjev, Alexey B., Perrin, Douglas P., Settlemier, Scott H., Zurakowski, David, Smirnov, Pavel O., del Nido, Pedro J., Shturts, Igor V., and Vasilyev, Nikolay V.
- Published
- 2019
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37. Multi-Band Surgery for Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot Patients With Reduced Right Ventricle Ejection Fraction: A Pilot Study
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Han Yu, Pedro J. del Nido, Tal Geva, Chun Yang, Zheyang Wu, Rahul H. Rathod, Xueying Huang, Kristen L. Billiar, and Dalin Tang
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tetralogy of fallot ,pulmonary valve replacement ,heart failure ,virtual surgery ,mechanical model ,active contraction band ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
IntroductionRight ventricle (RV) failure is one of the most common symptoms among patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (TOF). The current surgery treatment approach including pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) showed mixed post-surgery outcomes. A novel PVR surgical strategy using active contracting bands is proposed to improve the post-PVR outcome. In lieu of testing the risky surgical procedures on real patients, computational simulations (virtual surgery) using biomechanical ventricle models based on patient-specific cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) data were performed to test the feasibility of the PVR procedures with active contracting bands. Different band combination and insertion options were tested to identify optimal surgery designs.MethodCardiac magnetic resonance data were obtained from one TOF patient (male, age 23) whose informed consent was obtained. A total of 21 finite element models were constructed and solved following our established procedures to investigate the outcomes of the band insertion surgery. The non-linear anisotropic Mooney–Rivlin model was used as the material model. Five different band insertion plans were simulated (three single band models with different band locations, one model with two bands, and one model with three bands). Three band contraction ratios (10, 15, and 20%) and passive bands (0% contraction ratio) were tested. RV ejection fraction was used as the measure for cardiac function.ResultsThe RV ejection fraction from the three-band model with 20% contraction increased to 41.58% from the baseline of 37.38%, a 4.20% absolute improvement. The RV ejection fractions from the other four band models with 20% contraction rate were 39.70, 39.45, and 40.70% (two-band) and 39.17%, respectively. The mean RV stress and strain values from all of the 21 models showed only modest differences (5–11%).ConclusionThis pilot study demonstrated that the three-band model with 20% band contraction ratio led to 4.20% absolute improvement in the RV ejection fraction, which is considered as clinically significant. The passive elastic bands led to the reduction of the RV ejection fractions. The modeling results and surgical strategy need to be further developed and validated by a multi-patient study and animal experiments before clinical trial could become possible. Tissue regeneration techniques are needed to produce materials for the contracting bands.
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- 2020
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38. Reply
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James D. McCully, PhD, Sitaram M. Emani, MD, and Pedro J. del Nido, MD
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2020
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39. Impact of surgical pulmonary valve replacement on ventricular strain and synchrony in patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot: a cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature tracking study
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Sowmya Balasubramanian, David M. Harrild, Basavaraj Kerur, Edward Marcus, Pedro del Nido, Tal Geva, and Andrew J. Powell
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Tetralogy of fallot ,Pulmonary valve replacement ,Feature tracking ,Myocardial strain ,Ventricular synchrony ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background In patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), a better understanding of the impact of surgical pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) on ventricular mechanics may lead to improved indications and outcomes. Therefore, we used cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) feature tracking analysis to quantify ventricular strain and synchrony in repaired TOF patients before and after PVR. Methods Thirty-six repaired TOF patients (median age 22.4 years) prospectively underwent CMR a mean of 4.5 ± 3.8 months before PVR surgery and 7.3 ± 2.1 months after PVR surgery. Feature tracking analysis on cine steady-state free precession images was used to measure right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular (LV) circumferential strain from short-axis views at basal, mid-ventricular, and apical levels; and longitudinal strain from 4-chamber views. Intraventricular synchrony was quantified using the maximum difference in time-to-peak strain, the standard deviation of the time-to-peak, and cross correlation delay (CCD) metrics; interventricular synchrony was assessed using the CCD metric. Results Following PVR, RV end-diastolic volume, end-systolic volume, and ejection fraction declined, and LV end-diastolic volume and end-systolic volume both increased with no significant change in the LV ejection fraction. LV global basal and apical circumferential strains, and basal synchrony improved. RV global circumferential and longitudinal strains were unchanged, and there was a varied impact on synchrony across the locations. Interventricular synchrony worsened at the midventricular level but was unchanged at the base and apex, and on 4-chamber views. Conclusions Surgical PVR in repaired TOF patients led to improved LV global strain and no change in RV global strain. LV and RV synchrony parameters improved or were unchanged, and interventricular synchrony worsened at the midventricular level.
- Published
- 2018
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40. Mitochondrial transplantation preserves myocardial function and viability in pediatric and neonatal pig hearts donated after circulatory death.
- Author
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Alemany, Victor S., Nomoto, Rio, Saeed, Mossab Y., Celik, Aybuke, Regan, William L., Matte, Gregory S., Recco, Dominic P., Emani, Sitaram M., del Nido, Pedro J., and McCully, James D.
- Abstract
Mitochondrial transplantation has been shown to preserve myocardial function and viability in adult porcine hearts donated after circulatory death (DCD). Herein, we investigate the efficacy of mitochondrial transplantation for the preservation of myocardial function and viability in neonatal and pediatric porcine DCD heart donation. Circulatory death was induced in neonatal and pediatric Yorkshire pigs by cessation of mechanical ventilation. Hearts underwent 20 or 36 minutes of warm ischemia time (WIT), 10 minutes of cold cardioplegic arrest, and then were harvested for ex situ heart perfusion (ESHP). Following 15 minutes of ESHP, hearts received either vehicle (VEH) or vehicle containing isolated autologous mitochondria (MITO). A sham nonischemic group (SHAM) did not undergo WIT, mimicking donation after brain death heart procurement. Hearts underwent 2 hours each of unloaded and loaded ESHP perfusion. Following 4 hours of ESHP perfusion, left ventricle developed pressure, dP/dt max, and fractional shortening were significantly decreased (P <.001) in DCD hearts receiving VEH compared with SHAM hearts. In contrast, DCD hearts receiving MITO exhibited significantly preserved left ventricle developed pressure, dP/dt max, and fractional shortening (P <.001 each vs VEH, not significant vs SHAM). Infarct size was significantly decreased in DCD hearts receiving MITO as compared with VEH (P <.001). Pediatric DCD hearts subjected to extended WIT demonstrated significantly preserved fractional shortening and significantly decreased infarct size with MITO (P <.01 each vs VEH). Mitochondrial transplantation in neonatal and pediatric pig DCD heart donation significantly enhances the preservation of myocardial function and viability and mitigates against damage secondary to extended WIT. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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41. Transcatheter Palliation With Pulmonary Artery Flow Restrictors in Neonates With Congenital Heart Disease: Feasibility, Outcomes, and Comparison With a Historical Hybrid Stage 1 Cohort.
- Author
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Sperotto, Francesca, Lang, Nora, Nathan, Meena, Kaza, Aditya, Hoganson, David M., Valencia, Eleonore, Odegard, Kirsten, Allan, Catherine K., da Cruz, Eduardo M., Del Nido, Pedro J., Emani, Sitaram M., Baird, Christopher, and Maschietto, Nicola
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neonates with complex congenital heart disease and pulmonary overcirculation have been historically treated surgically. However, subcohorts may benefit from less invasive procedures. Data on transcatheter palliation are limited. METHODS: We present our experience with pulmonary flow restrictors (PFRs) for palliation of neonates with congenital heart disease, including procedural feasibility, technical details, and outcomes. We then compared our subcohort of high-risk single ventricle neonates palliated with PFRs with a similar historical cohort who underwent a hybrid Stage 1. Cox regression was used to evaluate the association between palliation strategy and 6-month mortality. RESULTS: From 2021 to 2023, 17 patients (median age, 4 days; interquartile range [IQR], 2-8; median weight, 2.5 kilograms [IQR, 2.1-3.3]) underwent a PFR procedure; 15 (88%) had single ventricle physiology; 15 (88%) were high-risk surgical candidates. All procedures were technically successful. At a median follow-up of 6.2 months (IQR, 4.0-10.8), 13 patients (76%) were successfully bridged to surgery (median time since PFR procedure, 2.6 months [IQR, 1.1-4.4]; median weight, 4.9 kilograms [IQR, 3.4-5.8]). Pulmonary arteries grew adequately for age, and devices were easily removed without complications. The all-cause mortality rate before target surgery was 24% (n=4). Compared with the historical hybrid stage 1 cohort (n=23), after adjustment for main confounding (age, weight, intact/severely restrictive atrial septum or left ventricle to coronary fistulae), the PFR procedure was associated with a significantly lower all-cause 6-month mortality risk (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.26 [95% CI, 0.08-0.82]). CONCLUSIONS: Transcatheter palliation with PFR is feasible, safe, and represents an effective strategy for bridging highrisk neonates with congenital heart disease to surgical palliation, complete repair, or transplant while allowing for clinical stabilization and somatic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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42. Opciones quirúrgicas actuales y sus resultados en neonatos con síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico
- Author
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Victor Bautista-Hernandez, Alejandro Avila-Alvarez, Gerald R. Marx, and Pedro J. del Nido
- Subjects
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome ,Norwood ,Stage 1 palliation ,Blalock-Taussig shunt ,Right ventricle to pulmonary artery conduit ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Resumen: Desde que Norwood et al. efectuaron la primera paliación exitosa en 1983, ha habido cambios sustanciales en el diagnóstico, el manejo y el pronóstico del síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico. La supervivencia en el estadio i de la paliación quirúrgica ha aumentado hasta el 90% en muchas instituciones, con la posibilidad de sobrevivir hasta la vida adulta. No obstante, la morbimortalidad asociada continúa siendo sustancial.Aunque la premisa de la paliación quirúrgica por etapas del síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico está bien establecida, hay variaciones significativas en la técnica quirúrgica y el manejo entre distintos centros, y varios aspectos controvertidos siguen sin resolverse. En esta revisión resumimos las opciones quirúrgicas y de manejo disponibles actualmente para neonatos con síndrome de corazón hipoplásico, así como sus resultados. Abstract: Since the first successful palliation was performed by Norwood et al. in 1983, there have been substantial changes in diagnosis, management, and outcomes of hypoplastic left heart syndrome, Survival for stage 1 palliation has increased to 90% in many centres, with patients potentially surviving into adulthood. However, the associated morbidity and mortality remain substantial.Although the principles of staged surgical palliation of hypoplastic left heart syndrome are well established, there is significant variability in surgical procedure and management between centres, and several controversial aspects remain unresolved. In this review, we summarize the current surgical and management options for newborns with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and their outcomes.
- Published
- 2019
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43. Current surgical options and outcomes for newborns with hypoplastic left heart syndrome
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Victor Bautista-Hernandez, Alejandro Avila-Alvarez, Gerald R. Marx, and Pedro J. del Nido
- Subjects
Síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico ,Norwood ,Estadio I de paliación ,Fístula de Blalock-Taussig ,Conducto de ventrículo derecho a arteria pulmonar ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Since the first successful palliation was performed by Norwood et al. in 1983, there have been substantial changes in diagnosis, management, and outcomes of hypoplastic left heart syndrome, Survival for stage 1 palliation has increased to 90% in many centres, with patients potentially surviving into adulthood. However, the associated morbidity and mortality remain substantial.Although the principles of staged surgical palliation of hypoplastic left heart syndrome are well established, there is significant variability in surgical procedure and management between centres, and several controversial aspects remain unresolved. In this review, we summarize the current surgical and management options for newborns with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and their outcomes. Resumen: Desde que Norwood et al. efectuaron la primera paliación exitosa en 1983, ha habido cambios sustanciales en el diagnóstico, manejo y pronóstico del síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico. La supervivencia en el estadio I de la paliación quirúrgica ha aumentado hasta el 90% en muchas instituciones, con la posibilidad de sobrevivir hasta la vida adulta. No obstante, la morbimortalidad asociada continúa siendo sustancial.Aunque la premisa de la paliación quirúrgica por etapas del síndrome de corazón izquierdo hipoplásico está bien establecida, hay variaciones significativas en la técnica quirúrgica y el manejo entre distintos centros, y varios aspectos controvertidos siguen sin resolverse. En esta revisión resumimos las opciones quirúrgicas y de manejo disponibles actualmente para neonatos con síndrome de corazón hipoplásico, así como sus resultados.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Ventricle stress/strain comparisons between Tetralogy of Fallot patients and healthy using models with different zero-load diastole and systole morphologies.
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Han Yu, Dalin Tang, Tal Geva, Chun Yang, Zheyang Wu, Rahul H Rathod, Xueying Huang, Kristen L Billiar, and Pedro J Del Nido
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Patient-specific in vivo ventricle mechanical wall stress and strain conditions are important for cardiovascular investigations and should be calculated from correct zero-load ventricle morphologies. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) data were obtained from 6 healthy volunteers and 12 Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) patients with consent obtained. 3D patient-specific CMR-based ventricle models with different zero-load diastole and systole geometries due to myocardium contraction and relaxation were constructed to qualify right ventricle (RV) diastole and systole stress and strain values at begin-filling, end-filling, begin-ejection, and end-ejection, respectively. Our new models (called 2G models) can provide end-diastole and end-systole stress/strain values which models with one zero-load geometries (called 1G models) could not provide. 2G mean end-ejection stress value from the 18 participants was 321.4% higher than that from 1G models (p = 0.0002). 2G mean strain values was 230% higher than that of 1G models (p = 0.0002). TOF group (TG) end-ejection mean stress value was 105.4% higher than that of healthy group (HG) (17.54±7.42kPa vs. 8.54±0.92kPa, p = 0.0245). Worse outcome group (WG, n = 6) post pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) begin-ejection mean stress was 57.4% higher than that of better outcome group (BG, 86.94±26.29 vs. 52.93±22.86 kPa; p = 0.041). Among 7 selected parameters, End-filling stress was the best predictor to differentiate BG patients from WG patients with prediction accuracy = 0.8208 and area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) value at 0.8135 (EE stress). Large scale studies are needed to further validate our findings.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Management of severe calcific aortic stenosis in children with progeria syndrome.
- Author
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Hoganson, David M., Eickhoff, Emily R., Prakash, Ashwin, and del Nido, Pedro J.
- Abstract
[Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Conduction in congenital heart surgery.
- Author
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Feins, Eric N. and del Nido, Pedro J.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A Risk Prediction Model for Reintervention After Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Connection Repair.
- Author
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Sengupta, Aditya, Gauvreau, Kimberlee, Kaza, Aditya, Baird, Christopher W., Schidlow, David N., del Nido, Pedro J., and Nathan, Meena
- Abstract
Outcomes after total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC) repair remain suboptimal due to recurrent pulmonary vein (PV) obstruction requiring reinterventions. We sought to develop a clinical prediction rule for PV reintervention after TAPVC repair. Data from consecutive patients who underwent TAPVC repair at a single institution from January 1980 to January 2020 were retrospectively reviewed after Institutional Review Board approval. The primary outcome was postdischarge (late) unplanned PV surgical or transcatheter reintervention. Echocardiographic criteria were used to assess PV residual lesion severity at discharge (class 1: no residua; class 2: minor residua; class 3: major residua). Competing risk models were used to develop a weighted risk score for late reintervention. Of 437 patients who met entry criteria, there were 81 (18.5%) reinterventions at a median follow-up of 15.6 (interquartile range, 5.5-22.2) years. On univariable analysis, minor and major PV residua, age, single-ventricle physiology, infracardiac and mixed TAPVC, and preoperative obstruction were associated with late reintervention (all P <.05). The final risk prediction model included PV residua (class 2: subdistribution hazard ratio [SHR], 4.8; 95% CI, 2.8-8.1; P <.001; class 3: SHR, 6.4; 95% CI, 3.5-11.7; P <.001), age <1 year (SHR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.3-8.5; P =.014), and preoperative obstruction (SHR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.1-2.8; P =.015). A risk score comprising PV residua (class 2 or 3: 3 points), age (neonate or infant: 2 points), and obstruction (1 point) was formulated. Higher risk scores were significantly associated with worse freedom from reintervention (P <.001). A risk prediction model of late reintervention may guide prognostication of high-risk patients after TAPVC repair. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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48. Response of Endocardial Fibroelastosis-Derived Cells to Flow Alterations and Statins: Hypoplastic Left Ventricle versus Normal Size Left Ventricle
- Author
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Silva-Gomez, N., additional, Diaz-Gil, D., additional, Winkler, A., additional, Emani, S., additional, Piekarski, B. L., additional, Wolf, C. M., additional, Del Nido, P. J., additional, and Friehs, I., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A growth-accommodating implant for paediatric applications
- Author
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Feins, Eric N., Lee, Yuhan, O’Cearbhaill, Eoin D., Vasilyev, Nikolay V., Shimada, Shogo, Friehs, Ingeborg, Perrin, Douglas, Hammer, Peter E., Yamauchi, Haruo, Marx, Gerald, Gosline, Andrew, Arabagi, Veaceslav, Karp, Jeffrey M., and del Nido, Pedro J.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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50. An Intracardiac Soft Robotic Device for Augmentation of Blood Ejection from the Failing Right Ventricle
- Author
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Horvath, Markus A., Wamala, Isaac, Rytkin, Eric, Doyle, Elizabeth, Payne, Christopher J., Thalhofer, Thomas, Berra, Ignacio, Solovyeva, Anna, Saeed, Mossab, Hendren, Sara, Roche, Ellen T., del Nido, Pedro J., Walsh, Conor J., and Vasilyev, Nikolay V.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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