39 results on '"Forsha D"'
Search Results
2. Imaging in dysynchrony and ventricular function: Techniques
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Forsha, D, Risum, N, Smith, PB, Samad, Z, Barker, P, and Kisslo, J
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- 2012
3. P1548 Changes in left ventricular deformation with weight loss in obese adolescents with intellectual and developmental delays (IDD)
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Forsha, D, primary, Ptomey, L, additional, Johnson, T, additional, Goth, N, additional, Kuzava, L, additional, France, R, additional, Kathol, M, additional, Artman, M, additional, and Donnelly, J, additional
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- 2020
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4. P1138Cardiac shear wave velocity in healthy individualsP1139Do still we need E/E prime ratio in predicting left ventricular filling pressures in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction?P1140Evaluation of myocardial dysfunction in children with Beta Thalassemia majorP1141Association of left ventricular size and septal mechanics with right ventricular function and transplant-free survival in infants with hypoplastic left heart syndromeP1142Predictive value of speckle tracking of chronic rejection in middle-aged heart transplant patientsP1143Determinants of the left atrial stiffness in systemic sclerosisP1144Could right atrial peak global longitudinal strain be useful in assessment of right heart function in pulmonary arterial hypertension?P1145Utility of speckle tracked strain assessment of the right ventricle following lung resectionP1146Edge-to-edge-repair in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and secondary mitral regurgitation: effect on myocardial function as assessed by echocardiographic speckle tracking analysisP1147Decongestion, arterial stiffness and ventricular-arterial coupling in AHFP1148Myocardial disfunction in Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD) without left ventricular hypertrophyP1149Assessment of left ventricular twist-untwist mechanics in cardiac amyloidosis using three-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiographyP1150Three-dimensional principal strain analysis for the dependency of preload changes
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Strachinaru, M., primary, Romano, G., primary, Tantawy, AA., primary, Forsha, D., primary, Pavasini, R., primary, Porpaczy, A., primary, Kaznica-Wiatr, M., primary, Mccall, PJ., primary, Faber, L., primary, Sciatti, E., primary, Monte, IP., primary, Capotosto, L., primary, Park, CS., primary, Geleijnse, ML., additional, Bosch, JG., additional, De Jong, N., additional, Van Der Steen, AFW, additional, Van Dalen, BM., additional, Vos, HJ., additional, Magro, S., additional, Mina', C., additional, Novo, G., additional, Dell'oglio, S., additional, Falletta, C., additional, Di Gesaro, G., additional, Clemenza, F., additional, Bellavia, D., additional, Habeeb, N., additional, El Sherif, NHK, additional, Abdelhamid, AE., additional, Li, L., additional, Joseph, N., additional, Kutty, S., additional, Freidberg, MK., additional, Cirillo, C., additional, Mordi, I., additional, Grapsa, J., additional, Tzemos, N., additional, Nogradi, A., additional, Strenner, M., additional, Minier, T., additional, Czirjak, L., additional, Komocsi, A., additional, Faludi, R., additional, Nowacka, M., additional, Kopec, G., additional, Waligora, M., additional, Olszowska, M., additional, Podolec, P., additional, Sonecki, P., additional, Kinsella, J., additional, Shelley, BG., additional, Scholtz, S., additional, Dimitriadis, Z., additional, Graw, A., additional, Bogunovic, N., additional, Scholtz, W., additional, Boergermann, J., additional, Gummert, J., additional, Horstkotte, D., additional, Vizzardi, E., additional, Bonadei, I., additional, Platto, F., additional, Metra, M., additional, Bottari, VE., additional, Gentile, S., additional, Romano, C., additional, Rodolico, MS., additional, Losi, V., additional, Tamburino, C., additional, Ashurov, R., additional, Truscelli, G., additional, Placanica, G., additional, Lai, S., additional, Vitarelli, A., additional, Jeong, MH., additional, Ahn, HS., additional, Cho, JS., additional, and Youn, HJ., additional
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- 2016
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5. O064 Long-term safety of crisaborole topical ointment, 2%, in atopic dermatitis
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Eichenfield, L., primary, Call, R., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Fowler, J., additional, Hebert, A., additional, Spellman, M., additional, Stein Gold, L., additional, Van Syoc, M., additional, Zane, L., additional, and Tschen, E., additional
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- 2016
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6. 033 A novel, nonsteroidal, topical, anti-inflammatory, phosphodiesterase inhibitor, Crisaborole Topical Ointment, 2%, in two phase 3 studies in children and adults with mild to moderate atopic dermatitis
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Paller, A.S., primary, Tom, W.L., additional, Call, R.S., additional, Eichenfield, L., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Rees, W., additional, Spellman, M., additional, Zane, L.T., additional, and Hebert, A.A., additional
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- 2016
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7. 286 Phase 3 studies in atopic dermatitis with the novel, nonsteroidal topical phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor, crisaborole
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Paller, A.S., primary, Tom, W.L., additional, Call, R.S., additional, Eichenfield, L., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Rees, W.C., additional, Zane, L.T., additional, and Hebert, A.A., additional
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- 2016
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8. 280 Long-term safety of crisaborole topical ointment, 2%, in atopic dermatitis
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Eichenfield, L., primary, Call, R.S., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Fowler, J., additional, Hebert, A.A., additional, Spellman, M., additional, Stein Gold, L.F., additional, Van Syoc, M., additional, Zane, L.T., additional, and Tschen, E.H., additional
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- 2016
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9. Imaging in dysynchrony and ventricular function: Techniques
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Grabka, M., primary, Wita, K., additional, Bochenek, T., additional, Paraniak-Gieszczyk, B., additional, Elzbieciak, M., additional, Teixeira, R., additional, Moreira, N., additional, Soares, F., additional, Ribeiro, N., additional, Martins, R., additional, Elvas, L., additional, Providencia, L., additional, Duchateau, N., additional, Piella, G., additional, Doltra, A., additional, Silva, E., additional, Frangi, A., additional, Brugada, J., additional, Mont, L., additional, Sitges, M., additional, De Craene, M., additional, Cho, E., additional, Choi, K., additional, Kwon, B., additional, Kim, D., additional, Jang, S., additional, Park, C., additional, Jung, H., additional, Jeon, H., additional, Youn, H., additional, Kim, J., additional, Bijnens, B., additional, Gabrielli, L., additional, Fernandez-Armenta, J., additional, Rigol, M., additional, Solanes, N., additional, Barcelo, A., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Risum, N., additional, Samad, Z., additional, Smith, P., additional, Rajagopal, S., additional, Kropf, A., additional, Barker, P., additional, Kisslo, J., additional, Lindqvist, P., additional, Henein, M., additional, Soderberg, S., additional, Tossavainen, E., additional, Gonzalez, M., additional, Sidorenko, I., additional, Ostrovski, U., additional, Shumovech, V., additional, Udina, O., additional, Freed, B., additional, Tsang, W., additional, Bhave, N., additional, Yamat, M., additional, Dill, K., additional, Spencer, K., additional, Mor-Avi, V., additional, Patel, A., additional, Gomberg-Maitland, M., additional, and Lang, R., additional
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- 2012
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10. Structure and function of Pet100p, a molecular chaperone required for the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Author
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Forsha, D., primary, Church, C., additional, Wazny, P., additional, and Poyton, R. O., additional
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- 2001
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11. Assembly of Cytochrome c Oxidase: Implications for Aging and Disease
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Poyton, R. O., primary, Church, C., additional, Forsha, D., additional, Wazny, P., additional, and Dagsgaard, C., additional
- Published
- 2001
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12. Researching COVID to enhance recovery (RECOVER) pediatric study protocol: Rationale, objectives and design.
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Gross RS, Thaweethai T, Rosenzweig EB, Chan J, Chibnik LB, Cicek MS, Elliott AJ, Flaherman VJ, Foulkes AS, Gage Witvliet M, Gallagher R, Gennaro ML, Jernigan TL, Karlson EW, Katz SD, Kinser PA, Kleinman LC, Lamendola-Essel MF, Milner JD, Mohandas S, Mudumbi PC, Newburger JW, Rhee KE, Salisbury AL, Snowden JN, Stein CR, Stockwell MS, Tantisira KG, Thomason ME, Truong DT, Warburton D, Wood JC, Ahmed S, Akerlundh A, Alshawabkeh AN, Anderson BR, Aschner JL, Atz AM, Aupperle RL, Baker FC, Balaraman V, Banerjee D, Barch DM, Baskin-Sommers A, Bhuiyan S, Bind MC, Bogie AL, Bradford T, Buchbinder NC, Bueler E, Bükülmez H, Casey BJ, Chang L, Chrisant M, Clark DB, Clifton RG, Clouser KN, Cottrell L, Cowan K, D'Sa V, Dapretto M, Dasgupta S, Dehority W, Dionne A, Dummer KB, Elias MD, Esquenazi-Karonika S, Evans DN, Faustino EVS, Fiks AG, Forsha D, Foxe JJ, Friedman NP, Fry G, Gaur S, Gee DG, Gray KM, Handler S, Harahsheh AS, Hasbani K, Heath AC, Hebson C, Heitzeg MM, Hester CM, Hill S, Hobart-Porter L, Hong TKF, Horowitz CR, Hsia DS, Huentelman M, Hummel KD, Irby K, Jacobus J, Jacoby VL, Jone PN, Kaelber DC, Kasmarcak TJ, Kluko MJ, Kosut JS, Laird AR, Landeo-Gutierrez J, Lang SM, Larson CL, Lim PPC, Lisdahl KM, McCrindle BW, McCulloh RJ, McHugh K, Mendelsohn AL, Metz TD, Miller J, Mitchell EC, Morgan LM, Müller-Oehring EM, Nahin ER, Neale MC, Ness-Cochinwala M, Nolan SM, Oliveira CR, Osakwe O, Oster ME, Payne RM, Portman MA, Raissy H, Randall IG, Rao S, Reeder HT, Rosas JM, Russell MW, Sabati AA, Sanil Y, Sato AI, Schechter MS, Selvarangan R, Sexson Tejtel SK, Shakti D, Sharma K, Squeglia LM, Srivastava S, Stevenson MD, Szmuszkovicz J, Talavera-Barber MM, Teufel RJ 2nd, Thacker D, Trachtenberg F, Udosen MM, Warner MR, Watson SE, Werzberger A, Weyer JC, Wood MJ, Yin HS, Zempsky WT, Zimmerman E, and Dreyer BP
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Male, Infant, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, Infant, Newborn, Prospective Studies, Research Design, Cohort Studies, Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 virology
- Abstract
Importance: The prevalence, pathophysiology, and long-term outcomes of COVID-19 (post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 [PASC] or "Long COVID") in children and young adults remain unknown. Studies must address the urgent need to define PASC, its mechanisms, and potential treatment targets in children and young adults., Observations: We describe the protocol for the Pediatric Observational Cohort Study of the NIH's REsearching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative. RECOVER-Pediatrics is an observational meta-cohort study of caregiver-child pairs (birth through 17 years) and young adults (18 through 25 years), recruited from more than 100 sites across the US. This report focuses on two of four cohorts that comprise RECOVER-Pediatrics: 1) a de novo RECOVER prospective cohort of children and young adults with and without previous or current infection; and 2) an extant cohort derived from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study (n = 10,000). The de novo cohort incorporates three tiers of data collection: 1) remote baseline assessments (Tier 1, n = 6000); 2) longitudinal follow-up for up to 4 years (Tier 2, n = 6000); and 3) a subset of participants, primarily the most severely affected by PASC, who will undergo deep phenotyping to explore PASC pathophysiology (Tier 3, n = 600). Youth enrolled in the ABCD study participate in Tier 1. The pediatric protocol was developed as a collaborative partnership of investigators, patients, researchers, clinicians, community partners, and federal partners, intentionally promoting inclusivity and diversity. The protocol is adaptive to facilitate responses to emerging science., Conclusions and Relevance: RECOVER-Pediatrics seeks to characterize the clinical course, underlying mechanisms, and long-term effects of PASC from birth through 25 years old. RECOVER-Pediatrics is designed to elucidate the epidemiology, four-year clinical course, and sociodemographic correlates of pediatric PASC. The data and biosamples will allow examination of mechanistic hypotheses and biomarkers, thus providing insights into potential therapeutic interventions., Clinical Trials.gov Identifier: Clinical Trial Registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT05172011., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: Brett Anderson reported receiving direct support for work not related to RECOVER work/publications from Genentech and the National Institute of Allergy and Immunology. Walter Dehority reported receiving grant support from Merck and participating in research for the Moderna COVID-19 pediatric vaccine trial and the Pfizer Paxlovid trial. Alex Fiks reported receiving support from NJM insurance and personal consulting fees not related to this paper from Rutgers University and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Ashraf Harahsheh reported serving as a scientific advisory board member unrelated to this paper for OP2 DRUGS. Lawrence Kleinman reported serving as an unpaid member of the Board of Directors for the DARTNet Institute, as a principle investigator at Quality Matters, Inc., and as the Vice Chair for the Borough of Metuchen Board of Health. Dr. Kleinman also reported grant support for work not related to RECOVER work/publications from NIH, HRSA, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Dr. Kleinman also reported minority individual stock ownership in Apple Computer, Sanofi SA, Experion, GlaxoSmithKline, Magyar Bank, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, JP Morgan Chase, and Amgen Inc. Torri Metz reported participating as a Principle Investigator in the medical advisory board for the planning of a Pfizer clinical trial of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination in pregnancy. She is also a principle investigator for a Pfizer study evaluating the pharmacokinetics of Paxlovid in pregnant people with COVID-19. Joshua Milner reported serving as a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for Blueprint Medicines, in a capacity unrelated to RECOVER work/publications. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials., (Copyright: © 2024 Gross et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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13. Echocardiographic findings in non-hospitalised children and adolescents following acute COVID-19.
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McIntosh AM, Goyal A, Moser-Dungan C, Harvey B, Heching HJ, Aly DG, Madan N, and Forsha D
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- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Retrospective Studies, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Echocardiography, Papillary Muscles, COVID-19
- Abstract
Background: Although COVID-19 is known to have cardiac effects in children, seen primarily in severe disease, more information is needed about the cardiac effects following COVID-19 in non-hospitalised children and adolescents during recovery. This study aims to compare echocardiographic markers of cardiac size and function of children following acute COVID-19 with those of healthy controls., Methods: This single-centre retrospective case-control study compared 71 cases seen in cardiology clinic following acute COVID-19 with 33 healthy controls. Apical left ventricle, apical right ventricle, and parasternal short axis at the level of the papillary muscles were analysed to measure ventricular size and systolic function. Strain was analysed on vendor-independent software. Statistical analysis was performed using t-test, chi-square, Wilcoxon rank sum, and regression modelling as appropriate (p < 0.05 significant)., Results: Compared to controls, COVID-19 cases had slightly higher left ventricular volumes and lower left ventricular ejection fraction and right ventricular fractional area change that remained within normal range. There were no differences in right or left ventricular longitudinal strain between the two groups. Neither initial severity nor persistence of symptoms after diagnosis predicted these differences., Conclusions: Echocardiographic findings in children and adolescents 6 weeks to 3 months following acute COVID-19 not requiring hospitalisation were overall reassuring. Compared to healthy controls, the COVID-19 group demonstrated mildly larger left ventricular size and lower conventional measures of biventricular systolic function that remained within the normal range, with no differences in biventricular longitudinal strain. Future studies focusing on longitudinal echocardiographic assessment of patients following acute COVID-19 are needed to better understand these subtle differences in ventricular size and function.
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- 2024
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14. Relationship Between Obesity and Global Longitudinal Strain in the Pediatric Single Ventricle Fontan Population Across Ventricular Morphologies.
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Madan N, Aly D, Kathol M, Buddhavarapu A, Rieth T, Sherman A, and Forsha D
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- Child, Young Adult, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Myocardial Contraction, Heart, Obesity complications, Heart Ventricles, Ventricular Function, Left, Global Longitudinal Strain, Univentricular Heart
- Abstract
Background: Obesity is associated with diminished myocardial function as measured by strain echocardiography in children and young adults with normal cardiac anatomy. Data are lacking about the effect of obesity on myocardial strain in patients with a single ventricle. In this study, the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and single ventricle myocardial strain in the Fontan population was assessed., Methods and Results: Thirty-eight abnormal BMI Fontan cases (21 overweight and 17 obese) and 30 normal BMI Fontan controls matched based on single ventricular morphology, age, and sex were included in the study. Ventricular morphology was categorized as single right ventricle, single left ventricle, or biventricular. Single ventricle global longitudinal peak systolic strain (GLS) and other echocardiographic measurements were performed and compared between groups, with a P ≤0.05 defined as significant. The abnormal BMI group demonstrated diminished GLS (-15.7±3.6% versus -17.2±3.2%, [ P =0.03]) and elevated systolic blood pressure ( P =0.04) compared with the normal BMI group. On subgroup analysis of those with single right ventricle morphology, the abnormal BMI group demonstrated diminished GLS compared with controls. There was no significant difference in GLS between the abnormal BMI and control groups in the single left ventricle and biventricular subgroups. Analyzed by ventricular morphology, no other variables were statistically different in the abnormal BMI group including systolic blood pressure. Inter-reader reproducibility for GLS and strain rate were excellent for both measures., Conclusions: Obesity has an adverse relationship with myocardial strain in the young Fontan population, with the most maladaptive response seen in the single right ventricle.
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- 2024
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15. Guidelines for Performing a Comprehensive Pediatric Transthoracic Echocardiogram: Recommendations From the American Society of Echocardiography.
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Lopez L, Saurers DL, Barker PCA, Cohen MS, Colan SD, Dwyer J, Forsha D, Friedberg MK, Lai WW, Printz BF, Sachdeva R, Soni-Patel NR, Truong DT, Young LT, and Altman CA
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- Child, Humans, United States, Echocardiography methods, Echocardiography, Doppler methods, Heart Diseases, Cardiology
- Abstract
Echocardiography is a fundamental component of pediatric cardiology, and appropriate indications have been established for its use in the setting of suspected, congenital, or acquired heart disease in children. Since the publication of guidelines for pediatric transthoracic echocardiography in 2006 and 2010, advances in knowledge and technology have expanded the scope of practice beyond the use of traditional modalities such as two-dimensional, M-mode, and Doppler echocardiography to evaluate the cardiac segmental structures and their function. Adjunct modalities such as contrast, three-dimensional, and speckle-tracking echocardiography are now used routinely at many pediatric centers. Guidelines and recommendations for the use of traditional and newer adjunct modalities in children are described in detail in this document. In addition, suggested protocols related to standard operations, infection control, sedation, and quality assurance and improvement are included to provide an organizational structure for centers performing pediatric transthoracic echocardiograms., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest The authors reported no actual or potential conflicts of interest in relation to this document., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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16. Moderators of peak respiratory exchange ratio during exercise testing in children and adolescents with Fontan physiology.
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Carey PM, Yeh HW, Krzywda K, Teson KM, Watson JS, Goudar S, Forsha D, and White DA
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- Humans, Male, Adolescent, Child, Female, Exercise Test methods, Cross-Sectional Studies, Exercise Tolerance physiology, Respiratory Function Tests, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Oxygen, Fontan Procedure methods, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: Many patients with Fontan physiology are unable to achieve the minimum criteria for peak effort during cardiopulmonary exercise testing. The purpose of this study is to determine the influence of physical activity and other clinical predictors related to achieving peak exercise criteria, signified by respiratory exchange ratio ≥ 1.1 in youth with Fontan physiology., Methods: Secondary analysis of a cross-sectional study of 8-18-year-olds with single ventricle post-Fontan palliation who underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing (James cycle protocol) and completed a past-year physical activity survey. Bivariate associations were assessed by Wilcoxon rank-sum test and simple regression. Conditional inference forest algorithm was used to classify participants achieving respiratory exchange ratio > 1.1 and to predict peak respiratory exchange ratio., Results: Of the n = 43 participants, 65% were male, mean age was 14.0 ± 2.4 years, and 67.4% (n = 29) achieved respiratory exchange ratio ≥ 1.1. Despite some cardiopulmonary exercise stress test variables achieving statistical significance in bivariate associations with participants achieving respiratory exchange ratio > 1.1, the classification accuracy had area under the precision recall curve of 0.55. All variables together explained 21.4% of the variance in respiratory exchange ratio, with peak oxygen pulse being the most informative., Conclusion: Demographic, physical activity, and cardiopulmonary exercise test measures could not classify meeting peak exercise criteria (respiratory exchange ratio ≥ 1.1) at a satisfactory accuracy. Correlations between respiratory exchange ratio and oxygen pulse suggest the augmentation of stroke volume with exercise may affect the Fontan patient's ability to sustain high-intensity exercise.
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- 2023
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17. Peak Oxygen Consumption (V̇O 2peak ) Recovery Delay in a Pediatric Fontan Population.
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Krzywda K, Teson KM, Watson JS, Goudar S, Forsha D, Wagner JB, and White DA
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Adult, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Heart Ventricles, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Exercise Test
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to identify predictors and correlates of VO2RD in youth with Fontan., Methods: Cardiopulmonary exercise test data was used from a single center, cross-sectional study of children and adolescents (age, 8-21 yr) with Fontan physiology. The VO2RD was determined using time (s) to <90% of V̇O 2peak and categorized as "low" (≤10 s) or "high" (≥10 s). t Tests and χ 2 analysis were used to compare continuous and categorical variables, respectively., Results: The analysis sample included 30 adolescents with Fontan physiology (age, 14.2 ± 2.4 yr; 67% male) with either right ventricular (RV) dominant (40%) or co/left ventricular (Co/LV) dominant (60%) systemic ventricular morphology. There were no differences in V̇O 2peak between the high and low VO2RD groups (high = 1.3 ± 0.4 L·min -1 ; low = 1.3 ± 0.3 L·min -1 ; P = 0.97). VO2RD in participants with RV dominance was significantly greater than in patients with Co/LV dominance (RV = 23.8 ± 15.8 s; Co/LV = 11.8 ± 16.1 s; P = 0.03)., Conclusions: V̇O 2peak was not correlated with VO2RD when analyzed as high/low VO2RD groups. However, morphology of the systemic single ventricle (RV vs Co/LV) may be related to rate of recovery in V̇O 2 after a peak cardiopulmonary exercise test., (Copyright © 2023 by the American College of Sports Medicine.)
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- 2023
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18. The Pivotal Role of ASE in Promoting Early Career Clinician Scientists.
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Forsha D and Eidem BW
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- Humans, Career Choice, Physicians, Biomedical Research
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- 2023
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19. Early cardiac dysfunction in obese adolescents with Down syndrome or autism.
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Haligheri G, Johnson T, Kathol M, Kuzava L, Goth N, Staggs VS, Donnelly JE, Ptomey LT, and Forsha D
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- Humans, Adolescent, Child, Young Adult, Adult, Body Mass Index, Pediatric Obesity complications, Autistic Disorder complications, Autism Spectrum Disorder complications, Down Syndrome complications, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left, Heart Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: Obesity in adolescents with intellectual and developmental disabilities) occurs at twice the frequency as their typically developing peers. Typically developing adolescents with obesity have abnormal cardiac function (as measured by strain echocardiography) and cardiac mass, but the effects of obesity on cardiac health in adolescents with Down syndrome or autism spectrum disorder are unknown. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of body mass index on cardiac function in adolescents with Down syndrome or autism., Methods: Adolescents (age 12-21 years) with Down syndrome (n = 28), autism (n = 33), and age-/sex-matched typically developing controls (n = 15) received an echocardiogram optimised for strain analysis at a single timepoint. Measures of ventricular function, mass, and size were collected. Regression modelling evaluated the impact of body mass index and intellectual and developmental disabilities diagnosis on these cardiac measures., Results: In regression modelling, an elevated body mass index z-score was associated with diminished systolic biventricular function by global strain (left ventricular longitudinal strain β 0.87, P < 0.001; left ventricular circumferential strain β 0.57, p 0.003; right ventricular longitudinal strain β 0.63, P < 0.001). Diminished left ventricular diastolic function by early diastolic strain rate was also associated with elevated body mass index (global longitudinal end-diastolic strain rate β -0.7, P < 0.001). No association was found between traditional (non-strain) measures of systolic and diastolic ventricular function and body mass index z-score., Conclusions: Obesity in adolescents with Down syndrome or autism negatively impacts cardiac function as measured by echocardiographic strain analysis that was not detected by traditional parameters.
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- 2023
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20. Single ventricular strain measures correlate with peak oxygen consumption in children and adolescents with Fontan circulation.
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Goudar S, Forsha D, White DA, Sherman A, and Shirali G
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- Young Adult, Humans, Child, Adolescent, Adult, Heart Ventricles, Echocardiography methods, Ventricular Function, Oxygen Consumption, Fontan Procedure adverse effects
- Abstract
Introduction: Children with a single ventricle post-Fontan palliation are at increased risk of poor outcomes with peak oxygen consumption acting as a surrogate outcome marker. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the relationship between peak oxygen consumption and echocardiographic measures of ventricular function and deformation, including ventricular global longitudinal strain and dyssynchrony, in children and adolescents following Fontan palliation., Methods: Patients (age 8-21 years) with single ventricle post-Fontan palliation were prospectively recruited and participated in an echocardiogram, including views optimised for two-dimensional speckle tracking, and a cardiopulmonary exercise test on a cycle ergometer to maximal volitional fatigue., Results: Thirty-eight patients (mean age 13.7 ± 2.3 years) post-Fontan palliation had either a single left ventricular (n = 20), single right ventricular (n = 14), or biventricular (n = 4) morphology. Peak oxygen consumption (24.9 ± 5.6 ml/kg/minute) was correlated with global longitudinal strain (r = -0.435, p = 0.007), a strain discoordination time to peak index (r = -0.48, p = 0.003), and the presence of an electro-mechanical dyssynchrony strain pattern (p = 0.008). On multivariate regression modelling, these three variables were associated with peak oxygen consumption independently of age and sex. The single right ventricular group had evidence of possible diastolic dysfunction by E/e' compared to the single left ventricular and biventricular groups (p = 0.001)., Conclusions: Strain analysis measures are correlated with peak oxygen consumption in this cohort of children, adolescents, and young adults following Fontan palliation, suggesting that ventricular mechanics may influence the efficiency of the Fontan circulation.
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- 2023
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21. Researching COVID to enhance recovery (RECOVER) pediatric study protocol: Rationale, objectives and design.
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Gross R, Thaweethai T, Rosenzweig EB, Chan J, Chibnik LB, Cicek MS, Elliott AJ, Flaherman VJ, Foulkes AS, Witvliet MG, Gallagher R, Gennaro ML, Jernigan TL, Karlson EW, Katz SD, Kinser PA, Kleinman LC, Lamendola-Essel MF, Milner JD, Mohandas S, Mudumbi PC, Newburger JW, Rhee KE, Salisbury AL, Snowden JN, Stein CR, Stockwell MS, Tantisira KG, Thomason ME, Truong DT, Warburton D, Wood JC, Ahmed S, Akerlundh A, Alshawabkeh AN, Anderson BR, Aschner JL, Atz AM, Aupperle RL, Baker FC, Balaraman V, Banerjee D, Barch DM, Baskin-Sommers A, Bhuiyan S, Bind MC, Bogie AL, Buchbinder NC, Bueler E, Bükülmez H, Casey BJ, Chang L, Clark DB, Clifton RG, Clouser KN, Cottrell L, Cowan K, D'Sa V, Dapretto M, Dasgupta S, Dehority W, Dummer KB, Elias MD, Esquenazi-Karonika S, Evans DN, Faustino EVS, Fiks AG, Forsha D, Foxe JJ, Friedman NP, Fry G, Gaur S, Gee DG, Gray KM, Harahsheh AS, Heath AC, Heitzeg MM, Hester CM, Hill S, Hobart-Porter L, Hong TKF, Horowitz CR, Hsia DS, Huentelman M, Hummel KD, Iacono WG, Irby K, Jacobus J, Jacoby VL, Jone PN, Kaelber DC, Kasmarcak TJ, Kluko MJ, Kosut JS, Laird AR, Landeo-Gutierrez J, Lang SM, Larson CL, Lim PPC, Lisdahl KM, McCrindle BW, McCulloh RJ, Mendelsohn AL, Metz TD, Morgan LM, Müller-Oehring EM, Nahin ER, Neale MC, Ness-Cochinwala M, Nolan SM, Oliveira CR, Oster ME, Payne RM, Raissy H, Randall IG, Rao S, Reeder HT, Rosas JM, Russell MW, Sabati AA, Sanil Y, Sato AI, Schechter MS, Selvarangan R, Shakti D, Sharma K, Squeglia LM, Stevenson MD, Szmuszkovicz J, Talavera-Barber MM, Teufel RJ 2nd, Thacker D, Udosen MM, Warner MR, Watson SE, Werzberger A, Weyer JC, Wood MJ, Yin HS, Zempsky WT, Zimmerman E, and Dreyer BP
- Abstract
Importance: The prevalence, pathophysiology, and long-term outcomes of COVID-19 (post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 [PASC] or "Long COVID") in children and young adults remain unknown. Studies must address the urgent need to define PASC, its mechanisms, and potential treatment targets in children and young adults., Observations: We describe the protocol for the Pediatric Observational Cohort Study of the NIH's RE searching COV ID to E nhance R ecovery (RECOVER) Initiative. RECOVER-Pediatrics is an observational meta-cohort study of caregiver-child pairs (birth through 17 years) and young adults (18 through 25 years), recruited from more than 100 sites across the US. This report focuses on two of five cohorts that comprise RECOVER-Pediatrics: 1) a de novo RECOVER prospective cohort of children and young adults with and without previous or current infection; and 2) an extant cohort derived from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study ( n =10,000). The de novo cohort incorporates three tiers of data collection: 1) remote baseline assessments (Tier 1, n=6000); 2) longitudinal follow-up for up to 4 years (Tier 2, n=6000); and 3) a subset of participants, primarily the most severely affected by PASC, who will undergo deep phenotyping to explore PASC pathophysiology (Tier 3, n=600). Youth enrolled in the ABCD study participate in Tier 1. The pediatric protocol was developed as a collaborative partnership of investigators, patients, researchers, clinicians, community partners, and federal partners, intentionally promoting inclusivity and diversity. The protocol is adaptive to facilitate responses to emerging science., Conclusions and Relevance: RECOVER-Pediatrics seeks to characterize the clinical course, underlying mechanisms, and long-term effects of PASC from birth through 25 years old. RECOVER-Pediatrics is designed to elucidate the epidemiology, four-year clinical course, and sociodemographic correlates of pediatric PASC. The data and biosamples will allow examination of mechanistic hypotheses and biomarkers, thus providing insights into potential therapeutic interventions., Clinical Trialsgov Identifier: Clinical Trial Registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT05172011.
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- 2023
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22. Examination of Adverse Reactions After COVID-19 Vaccination Among Patients With a History of Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children.
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Elias MD, Truong DT, Oster ME, Trachtenberg FL, Mu X, Jone PN, Mitchell EC, Dummer KB, Sexson Tejtel SK, Osakwe O, Thacker D, Su JA, Bradford TT, Burns KM, Campbell MJ, Connors TJ, D'Addese L, Forsha D, Frosch OH, Giglia TM, Goodell LR, Handler SS, Hasbani K, Hebson C, Krishnan A, Lang SM, McCrindle BW, McHugh KE, Morgan LM, Payne RM, Sabati A, Sagiv E, Sanil Y, Serrano F, Newburger JW, and Dionne A
- Subjects
- United States epidemiology, Child, Humans, Male, Child, Preschool, Female, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, BNT162 Vaccine, Cross-Sectional Studies, Vaccination adverse effects, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Connective Tissue Diseases
- Abstract
Importance: Data are limited regarding adverse reactions after COVID-19 vaccination in patients with a history of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). The lack of vaccine safety data in this unique population may cause hesitancy and concern for many families and health care professionals., Objective: To describe adverse reactions following COVID-19 vaccination in patients with a history of MIS-C., Design, Setting, and Participants: In this multicenter cross-sectional study including 22 North American centers participating in a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health-sponsored study, Long-Term Outcomes After the Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MUSIC), patients with a prior diagnosis of MIS-C who were eligible for COVID-19 vaccination (age ≥5 years; ≥90 days after MIS-C diagnosis) were surveyed between December 13, 2021, and February 18, 2022, regarding COVID-19 vaccination status and adverse reactions., Exposures: COVID-19 vaccination after MIS-C diagnosis., Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome was adverse reactions following COVID-19 vaccination. Comparisons were made using the Wilcoxon rank sum test for continuous variables and the χ2 or Fisher exact test for categorical variables., Results: Of 385 vaccine-eligible patients who were surveyed, 185 (48.1%) received at least 1 vaccine dose; 136 of the vaccinated patients (73.5%) were male, and the median age was 12.2 years (IQR, 9.5-14.7 years). Among vaccinated patients, 1 (0.5%) identified as American Indian/Alaska Native, non-Hispanic; 9 (4.9%) as Asian, non-Hispanic; 45 (24.3%) as Black, non-Hispanic; 59 (31.9%) as Hispanic or Latino; 53 (28.6%) as White, non-Hispanic; 2 (1.1%) as multiracial, non-Hispanic; and 2 (1.1%) as other, non-Hispanic; 14 (7.6%) had unknown or undeclared race and ethnicity. The median time from MIS-C diagnosis to first vaccine dose was 9.0 months (IQR, 5.1-11.9 months); 31 patients (16.8%) received 1 dose, 142 (76.8%) received 2 doses, and 12 (6.5%) received 3 doses. Almost all patients received the BNT162b2 vaccine (347 of 351 vaccine doses [98.9%]). Minor adverse reactions were observed in 90 patients (48.6%) and were most often arm soreness (62 patients [33.5%]) and/or fatigue (32 [17.3%]). In 32 patients (17.3%), adverse reactions were treated with medications, most commonly acetaminophen (21 patients [11.4%]) or ibuprofen (11 [5.9%]). Four patients (2.2%) sought medical evaluation, but none required testing or hospitalization. There were no patients with any serious adverse events, including myocarditis or recurrence of MIS-C., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study of patients with a history of MIS-C, no serious adverse events were reported after COVID-19 vaccination. These findings suggest that the safety profile of COVID-19 vaccination administered at least 90 days following MIS-C diagnosis appears to be similar to that in the general population.
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- 2023
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23. Electrocardiographic changes in non-hospitalised children with COVID-19.
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Heching HJ, Goyal A, Harvey B, Malloy-Walton L, Follansbee C, Mcintosh A, and Forsha D
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- Child, Humans, Male, Female, Stroke Volume, Retrospective Studies, Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome, Ventricular Function, Left, Electrocardiography, Arrhythmias, Cardiac diagnosis, COVID-19, Myocarditis diagnostic imaging
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Objectives: Many children diagnosed with COVID-19 infections did not require hospitalisation. Our objective was to analyse electrocardiographic changes in children with asymptomatic, mild or moderate COVID-19 who did not require hospitalisation., Methods: All children are seen in a paediatric cardiology clinic who had asymptomatic, mild or moderate COVID-19 that did not require hospitalisation and had at least one electrocardiogram after their diagnosis were included in this retrospective analysis. Records were reviewed to determine COVID-19 disease severity and presence of Long COVID. Rhythm assessment, atrial enlargement, ventricular hypertrophy, PR/QRS/QT interval duration and ST-T wave abnormalities were analysed by a paediatric electrophysiologist. Clinically ordered echocardiograms were reviewed for signs of myopericarditis (left ventricular ejection fraction and pericardial effusion) on any subject with an electrocardiographic abnormality., Results: Of the 82 children meeting inclusion criteria (14.4 years, range 1-18 years, 57% male), 17 patients (21%) demonstrated electrocardiographic changes. Ten patients (12%) had electrocardiogram of borderline significance, which included isolated mild PR prolongation or mild repolarisation abnormalities. The other seven patients (9%) had concerning electrocardiographic findings consisting of more significant repolarisation abnormalities. None of the patients with an abnormal electrocardiogram revealed any echocardiographic abnormality. All abnormal electrocardiograms normalised over time except in two cases. Across the entire cohort, greater COVID-19 disease severity and long COVID were not associated with electrocardiographic abnormalities., Conclusions: Electrocardiographic abnormalities are present in a minority of children with an asymptomatic, mild or moderate COVID-19 infection. Many of these changes resolved over time and no evidence of myopericarditis was present on echocardiography.
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- 2022
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24. Clinically Suspected Myocarditis Temporally Related to COVID-19 Vaccination in Adolescents and Young Adults: Suspected Myocarditis After COVID-19 Vaccination.
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Truong DT, Dionne A, Muniz JC, McHugh KE, Portman MA, Lambert LM, Thacker D, Elias MD, Li JS, Toro-Salazar OH, Anderson BR, Atz AM, Bohun CM, Campbell MJ, Chrisant M, D'Addese L, Dummer KB, Forsha D, Frank LH, Frosch OH, Gelehrter SK, Giglia TM, Hebson C, Jain SS, Johnston P, Krishnan A, Lombardi KC, McCrindle BW, Mitchell EC, Miyata K, Mizzi T, Parker RM, Patel JK, Ronai C, Sabati AA, Schauer J, Sexson Tejtel SK, Shea JR, Shekerdemian LS, Srivastava S, Votava-Smith JK, White S, and Newburger JW
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- Adolescent, Child, Electrocardiography methods, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Male, Myocarditis blood, Myocarditis etiology, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Young Adult, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, Myocarditis diagnostic imaging, Myocarditis physiopathology
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Background: Understanding the clinical course and short-term outcomes of suspected myocarditis after the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination has important public health implications in the decision to vaccinate youth., Methods: We retrospectively collected data on patients <21 years old presenting before July 4, 2021, with suspected myocarditis within 30 days of COVID-19 vaccination. Lake Louise criteria were used for cardiac MRI findings. Myocarditis cases were classified as confirmed or probable on the basis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention definitions., Results: We report on 139 adolescents and young adults with 140 episodes of suspected myocarditis (49 confirmed, 91 probable) at 26 centers. Most patients were male (n=126, 90.6%) and White (n=92, 66.2%); 29 (20.9%) were Hispanic; and the median age was 15.8 years (range, 12.1-20.3; interquartile range [IQR], 14.5-17.0). Suspected myocarditis occurred in 136 patients (97.8%) after the mRNA vaccine, with 131 (94.2%) after the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine; 128 (91.4%) occurred after the second dose. Symptoms started at a median of 2 days (range, 0-22; IQR, 1-3) after vaccination. The most common symptom was chest pain (99.3%). Patients were treated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (81.3%), intravenous immunoglobulin (21.6%), glucocorticoids (21.6%), colchicine (7.9%), or no anti-inflammatory therapies (8.6%). Twenty-six patients (18.7%) were in the intensive care unit, 2 were treated with inotropic/vasoactive support, and none required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or died. Median hospital stay was 2 days (range, 0-10; IQR, 2-3). All patients had elevated troponin I (n=111, 8.12 ng/mL; IQR, 3.50-15.90) or T (n=28, 0.61 ng/mL; IQR, 0.25-1.30); 69.8% had abnormal ECGs and arrhythmias (7 with nonsustained ventricular tachycardia); and 18.7% had left ventricular ejection fraction <55% on echocardiogram. Of 97 patients who underwent cardiac MRI at a median 5 days (range, 0-88; IQR, 3-17) from symptom onset, 75 (77.3%) had abnormal findings: 74 (76.3%) had late gadolinium enhancement, 54 (55.7%) had myocardial edema, and 49 (50.5%) met Lake Louise criteria. Among 26 patients with left ventricular ejection fraction <55% on echocardiogram, all with follow-up had normalized function (n=25)., Conclusions: Most cases of suspected COVID-19 vaccine myocarditis occurring in persons <21 years have a mild clinical course with rapid resolution of symptoms. Abnormal findings on cardiac MRI were frequent. Future studies should evaluate risk factors, mechanisms, and long-term outcomes.
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- 2022
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25. Intervendor Agreement for Right Ventricular Global Longitudinal Strain in Children.
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Aly D, Ramlogan S, France R, Schmidt S, Hinzman J, Sherman A, Goudar SP, and Forsha D
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- Child, Heart, Heart Rate, Humans, Infant, Reproducibility of Results, Echocardiography, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging
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Background: Right ventricular global longitudinal strain (RVGLS) has emerged as an important technique for clinical evaluation of (RV) function. The routine application of RVGLS in pediatrics remains limited by a lack of data on agreement between vendors. The aim of this study was to investigate intervendor agreement for RVGLS between the two commonly used analysis vendors in pediatrics, hypothesizing that RVGLS has good intervendor agreement, although it is likely lower than intravendor agreement (inter- and intraobserver reproducibility)., Methods: Seventy infants and children with normal cardiac anatomy and varying ventricular function were included after prospectively obtaining RV-focused four-chamber apical images on the GE Vivid E95. Images were analyzed for RVGLS at acquired frame rates in EchoPAC (GE) and TomTec (TT) and in the compressed Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine format in TT. Intraclass correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman plots were used to test intervendor agreement and intravendor reproducibility., Results: RVGLS measurements were equally feasible using TT and EchoPAC analysis (92%). There was good to excellent agreement for RVGLS between TT and EchoPAC analysis, with a relatively higher intraclass correlation coefficient between GE and TT at the acquired frame rate (0.85) than between GE and TT at the compressed frame rate (0.75) and significantly higher agreement in patients with abnormal RV function (0.7-0.9) than those with normal function (0.4-0.6). Intra- andinterobserver reproducibility for RVGLS was excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.74-0.96). Heart rate ≥ 100 beats/min and acquisition frame rate/heart rate ≤ 0.7 were associated with diminished agreement, especially when compressed data were involved., Conclusions: RVGLS analyzed using EchoPAC and TT show good agreement, especially when analyzed at acquisition frame rates and in the setting of abnormal RV function. Otherwise, RVGLS should ideally be analyzed using the same vendor, and intervendor comparisons should be undertaken with caution, particularly if data are in a compressed format., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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26. Reproducibility and Intervendor Agreement of Left Ventricular Global Systolic Strain in Children Using a Layer-Specific Analysis.
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Ramlogan S, Aly D, France R, Schmidt S, Hinzman J, Sherman A, Goudar SP, and Forsha D
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Systole, Echocardiography methods, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Ventricular Function, Left physiology
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Background: Speckle-tracking strain analysis provides additive data to the assessment of pediatric and congenital heart disease; however, the variety of strain analysis software platforms by different vendors and the lack of data on intervendor strain agreement in children have limited its utility. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the intervendor agreement of strain on two commonly used analysis platforms in pediatrics by layer of myocardium and data compression., Methods: This prospective study analyzed two-dimensional speckle-tracking strain on two software platforms in 53 children with normal cardiac segmental anatomy and varying function. Three standard apical views and one parasternal short-axis view were exported at their acquired frame rates to workstations with GE EchoPAC and TomTec software and then also to TomTec at compressed frame rates. Both software platforms had been updated with European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging/American Society of Echocardiography Task Force recommendations for left ventricular (LV) global strain. Intravendor and intervendor agreement between layer-specific comparisons were assessed using Bland-Altman analysis (limits of agreement and bias) and intraclass correlation coefficients., Results: This study included subjects with normal LV function (n = 38) and cardiomyopathy (n = 15) with an age range of 1 month to 18 years. Intertechnique agreement by default vendor myocardial layer (GE mid-TomTec endocardial layer) was robust for both global longitudinal (GLS) and circumferential strain (GCS; higher for GLS than GCS). Intravendor (inter- and interreader) agreement was slightly higher than intervendor. Only small differences in intraclass correlation coefficients were present between various myocardial layers and acquired versus compressed TomTec data with narrow limits of agreement and small bias except in certain subgroup comparisons., Conclusions: Comparison of LV GLS and GCS between two commonly used software platforms after European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging/American Society of Echocardiography Industry Task Force recommendations demonstrated good to excellent agreement in pediatrics, regardless of the layer of analysis or the image format, although some degree of variability remains between vendor platforms. Overall, GLS agreement was more robust than GCS, and this difference is exaggerated in specific subanalyses. These data suggest that comparisons of strain values obtained on these two vendors will be reasonable, but caution should be used when the indication is the detection of small differences between serial echocardiograms., (Copyright © 2019 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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27. Association of left ventricular size with regional right ventricular mechanics in Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome.
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Forsha D, Li L, Joseph N, Kutty S, and Friedberg MK
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- Cohort Studies, Echocardiography methods, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome diagnostic imaging, Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome physiopathology, Ventricular Function, Right physiology
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Background: In Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS), RV dysfunction is associated with poor outcomes. However, the effect of varying LV size on regional RV mechanics and outcome has not been studied., Methods: Twenty newborns (0-7 days) with HLHS had pre-stage 1 and pre-stage 2 echocardiograms prospectively protocoled for strain analysis of the apical 4-chamber view. RV longitudinal strain was analyzed, and LV size was classified as diminutive (no visible LV chamber) or moderate size (visible LV chamber). Clinical outcome was reported as alive vs death or transplant (D-TP) at final clinical follow-up (pre-stage 3). Groups were compared with t-test, Fisher's Exact, and ANOVA tests as appropriate., Results: At pre-stage 1, infants with a diminutive LV (7/20, 35%) vs a moderately hypoplastic LV (13/20, 65%) did not have significantly different global RV strain (-18.4 ± 2.6% vs -18.8 ± 3.2%; p = 0.83). However, basal septal strain was significantly diminished in the moderately hypoplastic LV group vs the diminutive LV group (-4.4 ± 6.0% vs -14.7 ± 3.3%; p < 0.005). There was severely diminished septal strain in nearly all (11/13) of the moderately hypoplastic group. At the pre-stage II echo, global RV strain between groups remained similar (p = 0.76) as did the diminished septal strain in the moderate LV group (p = 0.86). The moderately hypoplastic LV group had worse clinical outcomes (6/13 D-TP vs 0/7 D-TP; p = 0.05)., Conclusions: In this small HLHS cohort, diminished septal strain leading to asymmetric RV mechanics may be associated with poor outcomes in those with larger LV/septal size., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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28. Anomalous aortic origin of the right coronary artery from the non-coronary sinus of Valsalva.
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Doshi AR, Opfer EK, and Forsha D
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- Aorta diagnostic imaging, Child, Coronary Angiography, Echocardiography, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Sinus of Valsalva diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Aorta abnormalities, Coronary Vessel Anomalies diagnostic imaging, Sinus of Valsalva abnormalities
- Abstract
We report a rare case of anomalous aortic origin of the right coronary artery from the posterior/non-coronary sinus of Valsalva in a 9-year-old male diagnosed during the workup of premature ventricular contractions. The finding was initially noted on transthoracic echocardiogram and further confirmed with computed tomography. The anomalous coronary artery shows a wide ostium with no intramural or interarterial course.
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- 2019
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29. Once-Daily Oral Sarecycline 1.5 mg/kg/day Is Effective for Moderate to Severe Acne Vulgaris: Results from Two Identically Designed, Phase 3, Randomized, Double-Blind Clinical Trials.
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Moore A, Green LJ, Bruce S, Sadick N, Tschen E, Werschler P, Cook-Bolden FE, Dhawan SS, Forsha D, Gold MH, Guenthner S, Kempers SE, Kircik LH, Parish JL, Rendon MI, Rich P, Stein-Gold L, Tyring SK, Weiss RA, Nasir A, Schmitz C, Boodhoo TI, Kaoukhov A, and Berk DR
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- Acne Vulgaris pathology, Administration, Oral, Adolescent, Adult, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Child, Double-Blind Method, Drug Administration Schedule, Facial Dermatoses pathology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Severity of Illness Index, Tetracyclines administration & dosage, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Acne Vulgaris drug therapy, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Facial Dermatoses drug therapy, Tetracyclines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Side effects may limit the use of current tetracycline-class antibiotics for acne., Objective: Evaluate the efficacy and safety of once-daily sarecycline, a novel, narrow-spectrum tetracycline-class antibiotic, in moderate to severe acne., Methods: Patients 9-45 years with moderate to severe facial acne (Investigator's Global Assessment [IGA] score ≥ 3, 20-50 inflammatory and ≤ 100 noninflammatory lesions, and ≤ 2 nodules) were randomized 1:1 to sarecycline 1.5 mg/kg/day or placebo for 12 weeks in identically designed phase 3 studies (SC1401 and SC1402)., Results: In SC1401 (sarecycline n=483, placebo n=485) and SC1402 (sarecycline n=519, placebo n=515), at week 12, IGA success (≥ 2-grade improvement and score 0 [clear] or 1 [almost clear]) rates were 21.9% and 22.6% (sarecycline), respectively, versus 10.5% and 15.3% (placebo; P less than 0.0001 and P equals 0.0038). Onset of efficacy in inflammatory lesions occurred by the first visit (week 3), with mean percentage reduction in inflammatory lesions at week 12 in SC1401 and SC1402 of -51.8% and -49.9% (sarecycline), respectively, versus -35.1% and -35.4% (placebo; P less than 0.0001). Onset of efficacy for absolute reduction of noninflammatory lesion count occurred at week 6 in SC1401 (P less than 0.05) and week 9 in SC1402 (P less than 0.01). In SC1401, the most common TEAEs (in ≥ 2% of either sarecycline or placebo group) were nausea (4.6% [sarecycline]; 2.5% [placebo]), nasopharyngitis (3.1%; 1.7%), headache (2.7%; 2.7%), and vomiting (2.1%; 1.4%) and, in SC1402, nasopharyngitis (2.5%; 2.9%) and headache (2.9%; 4.9%). Most were not considered treatment-related. Vestibular (dizziness, tinnitus, vertigo) and phototoxic (sunburn, photosensitivity) TEAEs both occurred in ≤ 1% of sarecycline patients. Gastrointestinal TEAE rates for sarecycline were low. Among females, vulvovaginal candidiasis (SC1401: 1.1% [sarecycline] and 0 [placebo]; SC1402: 0.3% and 0) and mycotic infection (0.7% and 0; 1.0% and 0) rates were low., Conclusion: The narrow-spectrum antibiotic sarecycline was safe, well tolerated, and effective for moderate to severe acne, with low rates of side effects common with tetracycline antibiotics. J Drugs Dermatol. 2018;17(9):987-996.
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- 2018
30. Activation delay-induced mechanical dyssynchrony in single-ventricle heart disease.
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Forsha D, Risum N, and Barker P
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- Bundle-Branch Block etiology, Cardiac Pacing, Artificial, Echocardiography, Electrocardiography, Fatal Outcome, Female, Heart Failure etiology, Heart Failure therapy, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Humans, Infant, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left etiology, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left therapy, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnostic imaging, Heart Failure physiopathology, Heart Ventricles abnormalities, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology
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We present the case of an infant with a single functional ventricle who developed ventricular dysfunction and heart failure due to an electrical activation delay and dyssynchrony. Earlier recognition of this potentially reversible aetiology may have changed her poor outcome.
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- 2017
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31. Frequent Activation Delay-Induced Mechanical Dyssynchrony and Dysfunction in the Systemic Right Ventricle.
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Forsha D, Risum N, Smith PB, Kanter RJ, Samad Z, Barker P, and Kisslo J
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Transposition of Great Vessels complications, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right complications, Young Adult, Echocardiography methods, Elasticity Imaging Techniques methods, Stroke Volume, Transposition of Great Vessels diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right diagnostic imaging
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Background: Patients with systemic right ventricles frequently experience progressive heart failure and conduction abnormalities leading to abnormal ventricular activation. Activation delay-induced mechanical dyssynchrony can contribute to ventricular failure and is identified by a classic strain pattern of paradoxical opposing wall motion that is an excellent predictor of response to cardiac resynchronization therapy in adults with left bundle branch block. The specific aims of this study were to compare right ventricular (RV) mechanics in an adult systemic right ventricle population versus control subjects, evaluate the feasibility of this RV strain pattern analysis, and determine the frequency of the classic pattern., Methods: Young adults (n = 25) with d-transposition of the great arteries, status post Mustard or Senning palliation (TGA-MS), were ambispectively enrolled and compared with healthy young adults (n = 30) who were prospectively enrolled. All subjects were imaged using novel three-apical view (18-segment) RV longitudinal speckle-tracking strain analysis (EchoPAC) and electrocardiographic data., Results: Patients with TGA-MS had diminished RV global peak systolic strain compared with control subjects (-12.0 ± 4.0% vs -23.3 ± 2.3%, P < .001). Most patients with TGA-MS had intrinsic or left ventricular paced right bundle branch block. A classic pattern was present in 11 of 25 subjects (44%), but this pattern would have been missed in four of 11 based only on the RV four-chamber (six-segment) model. Only three subjects underwent cardiac resynchronization therapy. Both subjects who had the classic pattern responded to cardiac resynchronization therapy, whereas the one nonresponder did not have the classic pattern., Conclusion: Systemic right ventricles demonstrated decreased function and increased mechanical dyssynchrony. The classic pattern of activation delay-induced mechanical dyssynchrony was frequently seen in this TGA-MS population and associated with activation delays. This comprehensive RV approach demonstrated incremental value., (Copyright © 2016 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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32. Patterns of Mechanical Inefficiency in Pediatric Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Their Relation to Left Ventricular Function and Clinical Outcomes.
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Forsha D, Slorach C, Chen CK, Sherman A, Mertens L, Barker P, Kisslo J, and Friedberg MK
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- Adolescent, Causality, Child, Child, Preschool, Comorbidity, Elasticity Imaging Techniques statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Ontario epidemiology, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Survival Rate, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated mortality, Echocardiography statistics & numerical data, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left mortality
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is associated with death or transplantation and is typically considered a homogeneous process affecting global left ventricular (LV) function. However, assessment of regional abnormalities that contribute to pumping inefficiencies is lacking. The aim of this study was to define regional strain patterns of mechanical inefficiency in the broader context of LV discoordination (dysfunction and timing abnormalities) and to evaluate their associations with LV function and clinical outcomes., Methods: Multiplanar apical LV echocardiographic images from patients with pediatric DCM (n = 56) and control subjects (n = 20) were analyzed by two-dimensional longitudinal speckle-tracking strain analysis to identify segmental strain patterns and global contraction groups. Clinical outcome (death or transplantation vs transplantation-free survival) and echocardiographic data were evaluated. Outcome groups were compared using the Fisher exact test, the χ(2) test, or analysis of variance (with P values ≤ .05 considered to indicate statistical significance)., Results: Of 56 patients with DCM, 29 (52%) progressed to death or transplantation. Five segmental strain patterns were observed that were used to define seven contraction groups by regional contractility and/or timing discoordination. The group(s) with the most discoordination had the most LV dysfunction (P = .0004) and a trend toward the highest frequency of death or transplantation (P = .069). Interreader reproducibility of segmental strain patterns agreed in 165 or 180 (92%) segments tested (κ = 0.90). Control subjects had normal strain patterns., Conclusions: A heterogeneous mixture of abnormalities in the regional wall mechanics that lead to inefficient pump mechanics through functional and timing abnormalities were seen in this cohort and were categorized into natural subgroups. More severe LV discoordination was associated with increased LV dysfunction and a trend toward death or transplantation., (Copyright © 2016 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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33. The influence of angle of insonation and target depth on speckle-tracking strain.
- Author
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Forsha D, Risum N, Rajagopal S, Dolgner S, Hornik C, Barnhart H, Kisslo J, and Barker P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Reference Values, Reproducibility of Results, Echocardiography methods, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Ventricular Function physiology
- Abstract
Background: Speckle-tracking strain is almost universally cited as being independent of angle of insonation, but there are minimal confirmatory studies, and this claim may not be consistent with the known limitations of ultrasound axial and lateral spatial resolution. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of angle and depth on longitudinal peak systolic strain (LPS)., Methods: Thirty-four healthy pediatric subjects (age range, 6-18 years; 47% male) with normal cardiac anatomy and good image quality were prospectively imaged. Angular comparisons of LPS were investigated by examining interangle reproducibility on the basis of one standard and one alternative image acquisition relative to intraobserver reproducibility of two standard views of the same left ventricular segments. A single-window comparison was used to evaluated septal LPS: standard apical four-chamber versus right ventricular centered four-chamber. Two paired standard and alternative window comparisons were as follows: (1) four-chamber: standard apical versus subcostal; and (2) three-chamber: standard apical versus parasternal long-axis., Results: The global LPS intraobserver difference using the paired standard and alternative window comparisons was lower than the interangle difference in global LPS (-1.0 ± 0.1% vs -2.1 ± 2.4%). Intraobserver reproducibility was significantly higher than interangle reproducibility (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.9 vs 0.29, P < .001). Similar results were found in the segmental strain analysis. Interangle reproducibility was significantly decreased compared with intraobserver reproducibility in the septal single-window comparison. Target depth assessment demonstrated a systematic bias between the near-field and far-field segments., Conclusions: Echocardiographically derived LPS values were modestly dependent on angle of insonation and target depth in this pediatric population. Normal strain ranges derived from standard apical images should not be applied to strain derived from sub-costal images, off-axis apical imaging, or applications in which a standard window cannot be defined., (Copyright © 2015 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Classic-pattern dyssynchrony and electrical activation delays in pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy.
- Author
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Forsha D, Slorach C, Chen CK, Stephenson EA, Risum N, Hornik C, Wagner G, Mertens L, Barker P, Kisslo J, and Friedberg MK
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Diagnosis, Differential, Echocardiography methods, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Bundle-Branch Block diagnostic imaging, Bundle-Branch Block etiology, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated complications, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left etiology
- Abstract
Background: Progressive heart failure leading to transplantation or death is common in pediatric dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and treatment options are limited. Select children with DCM have improved after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), but predicting response is challenging. Nonetheless, considering the frequency of death or transplantation in this population, identifying any candidate would be valuable. Classic-pattern dyssynchrony (CPD) identifies mechanical dyssynchrony patterns consistent with underlying electrical activation delays and strongly predicts CRT response in adult DCM but has not been evaluated in pediatric DCM. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that CPD is present in a subgroup of patients with pediatric DCM and is associated with activation delays., Methods: Fifty-nine subjects with pediatric DCM (left ventricular end-diastolic diameter Z score > 2 and left ventricular ejection fraction < 40%) who underwent echocardiography with a functional protocol with apical images optimized for two-dimensional speckle-tracking strain analysis (EchoPAC) were retrospectively analyzed for CPD. Electrocardiograms were evaluated for activation delays (prolonged QRS duration and strict criteria for left bundle branch block [LBBB]). Forty control subjects with no cardiac disease and good imaging widows were also analyzed., Results: The mean age was 5.4 years (range, 1 day to 20 years); idiopathic DCM was most common (57%). Severe cardiomyopathy was present in 75% (end-diastolic diameter Z score > 4.6 and left ventricular ejection fraction < 32%). CPD was identified in seven subjects (12%), and prolonged QRS durations were present in 13 (22%), but only two subjects met strict criteria for LBBB. Six of seven subjects in the CPD group had prolonged QRS durations, and two of seven had LBBB. No control subjects had CPD. The CPD analysis was highly feasible and reproducible., Conclusions: In this severely affected cohort, the small CPD subgroup is potentially important because their progressive disease may respond to CRT. CPD is associated with activation delays, although not necessarily strict LBBB. This has important potential implications for prospective evaluation of CRT in this disease., (Copyright © 2014 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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35. Right ventricular mechanics using a novel comprehensive three-view echocardiographic strain analysis in a normal population.
- Author
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Forsha D, Risum N, Kropf PA, Rajagopal S, Smith PB, Kanter RJ, Samad Z, Sogaard P, Barker P, and Kisslo J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Elastic Modulus, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Image Enhancement methods, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Algorithms, Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional methods, Elasticity Imaging Techniques methods, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Ventricular Function, Right physiology
- Abstract
Background: Although quantitative right ventricular (RV) strain analysis may be useful in congenital and acquired heart disease populations with RV failure, a comprehensive, standardized approach is lacking. An 18-segment RV strain analysis obtained from three standardized RV apical echocardiographic images was used to determine the feasibility, normal values, and reproducibility of the method in normal adults., Methods: Forty healthy, prospectively enrolled volunteers with no cardiac histories and normal QRS durations underwent echocardiography optimized for strain analysis including three RV apical views. Two-dimensional speckle-tracking longitudinal strain analysis was performed using EchoPAC software. Eleven retrospectively identified subjects with RV disease were included as a pilot population. All had been imaged using the same protocol including the three RV apical views., Results: All control subjects had normal anatomic morphology and function by echocardiography. Feasibility of the RV strain analysis was good (adequate tracking in 696 of 720 segments [97%]). RV global peak systolic strain was -23 ± 2%. Peak strain was highest in the RV free wall and lowest in the septum. Dyssynchrony indices demonstrated no dyssynchrony using left ventricular criteria. Reproducibility of most strain measures was acceptable. This methodology identified important disease not seen in the four-chamber apical view alone in the pilot population of 11 patients with RV disease. Strain patterns and values were different from those in the control population, indicating that differences do exist from normal., Conclusions: Eighteen-segment RV strain analysis is feasible, with strain measures falling into discrete ranges in this normal population. Those with RV disease illustrate the potential utility of this approach. These data indicate that this model can be used for more detailed studies evaluating abnormal RV populations, in which its full potential can be assessed., (Crown Copyright © 2014. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A strategy for atrial septal defect closure in small children that eliminates long-term wall erosion risk.
- Author
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Hill KD, Lodge AJ, Forsha D, Fleming GA, Green AS, and Rhodes JF
- Subjects
- Body Weight, Cardiac Catheterization adverse effects, Cardiac Catheterization instrumentation, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Child, Preschool, Device Removal, Feasibility Studies, Foreign-Body Migration etiology, Foreign-Body Migration therapy, Heart Injuries etiology, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial diagnosis, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial surgery, Humans, Infant, Prosthesis Design, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Septal Occluder Device, Treatment Outcome, Cardiac Catheterization methods, Heart Injuries prevention & control, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate feasibility, efficacy, and safety of an approach to atrial septal defect (ASD) occlusion in children ≤20 kg that eliminates cardiac wall erosion risk., Background: Cardiac wall erosion is a potentially catastrophic complication of ASD device closure. The HELEX Septal Occluder (HSO) is a compliant device with no reports of erosion. The HSO is technically difficult to deploy in smaller children and cannot be used to close larger defects. To eliminate wall erosion risk, we use the HSO when feasible and surgery for larger defects., Methods: Retrospective review of ASD procedures performed in children ≤20 kg., Results: Between January 2006 and January 2011, 60 children underwent ASD closure. HSO placement was successful in 32 of 34 patients, and surgical closure was successful in all of 28 patients. Surgical patients were younger (35.1 ± 12.6 vs. 47.4 ± 15.3 months, P < 0.01) and smaller (15.3 ± 3.2 vs. 12.6 ± 4.3 kg; P < 0.01) with larger ASDs (15.8 ± 4.5 vs. 9.8 ± 3.0 mm; P < 0.01). No surgical patients demonstrated residual leak. Residual leak was seen in 14 of 32 (44%) HSO patients on postprocedure day #1 and in 1 of 26 (3.8%) with ≥6 months follow-up. Indications for surgery included: deficient inferior/superior rims (n = 17), provider preference (n = 2), and HSO device not feasible (n = 9). Serious adverse events included device embolization with percutaneous retrieval (n = 1) and postpericardiotomy syndrome without intervention (n = 1)., Conclusions: The HSO can be safely used in most children ≤20 kg. Our approach to ASD closure is associated with minimal morbidity and good short-term results. This approach requires no more than a 15% increase in surgical referrals and eliminates risk of cardiac wall erosion., (Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2013
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37. A rare coronary collateral in pulmonary atresia and intact septum with coronary sinusoids.
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Forsha D, Rhodes JF, Williams DA, Lodge AJ, and Li JS
- Abstract
A neonate with pulmonary atresia and intract ventricular septum, ventriculocoronary sinusoids, bilateral coronary ostial atresia, and a rare collateral vessel between the descending thoracic aorta and the coronary system is described. The clinical course in this infant included extracorporeal life support and coil occlusion of the collateral in order to manage multiple ischemic events.
- Published
- 2012
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38. Cardiovascular abnormalities in late-onset Pompe disease and response to enzyme replacement therapy.
- Author
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Forsha D, Li JS, Smith PB, van der Ploeg AT, Kishnani P, and Pasquali SK
- Subjects
- Adult, Age of Onset, Cardiovascular Abnormalities diagnosis, Cardiovascular Abnormalities physiopathology, Double-Blind Method, Echocardiography, Electrocardiography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glycogen Storage Disease Type II epidemiology, Glycogen Storage Disease Type II physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Cardiovascular Abnormalities drug therapy, Enzyme Replacement Therapy, Glycogen Storage Disease Type II drug therapy, alpha-Glucosidases therapeutic use
- Abstract
Purpose: We evaluated the prevalence of cardiovascular abnormalities and the efficacy and safety of enzyme replacement therapy in patients with late-onset Pompe disease., Methods: Ninety patients were randomized 2:1 to enzyme replacement therapy or placebo in a double-blinded protocol. Electrocardiograms and echocardiograms were obtained at baseline and scheduled intervals during the 78-week study period. Baseline cardiovascular abnormalities, and efficacy and safety of enzyme replacement therapy were described. Three pediatric patients were excluded., Results: Eighty-seven patients were included. Median age was 44 years; 51% were men. At baseline, a short PR interval was present in 10%, 7% had decreased left ventricular systolic function, and 5% had elevated left ventricular mass on echocardiogram (all in mild range). There was no change in cardiovascular status associated with enzyme replacement therapy. No significant safety concerns related to enzyme replacement therapy were identified., Conclusions: Although some patients with late-onset Pompe disease had abnormalities on baseline electrocardiogram or echocardiogram, those classically seen in infantile Pompe disease, such as significant ventricular hypertrophy, were not noted. Cardiovascular parameters were not impacted by enzyme replacement therapy, and there were no cardiovascular safety concerns. The cardiovascular abnormalities identified may be related to Pompe disease or other comorbid conditions.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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39. A role for Pet100p in the assembly of yeast cytochrome c oxidase: interaction with a subassembly that accumulates in a pet100 mutant.
- Author
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Church C, Goehring B, Forsha D, Wazny P, and Poyton RO
- Subjects
- Electron Transport Complex IV chemistry, Intracellular Membranes metabolism, Molecular Chaperones genetics, Molecular Chaperones metabolism, Nuclear Proteins genetics, Nuclear Proteins metabolism, Protein Binding, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism, Electron Transport Complex IV metabolism, Molecular Chaperones physiology, Nuclear Proteins physiology, Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzymology, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins physiology
- Abstract
The biogenesis of multimeric protein complexes of the inner mitochondrial membrane in yeast requires a number of nuclear-coded ancillary proteins. One of these, Pet100p, is required for cytochrome c oxidase. Previous studies have shown that Pet100p is not required for the synthesis, processing, or targeting of cytochrome c oxidase subunits to the mitochondrion nor for heme A biosynthesis. Here, we report that Pet100p does not affect the localization of cytochrome c oxidase subunit polypeptides to the inner mitochondrial membrane but instead functions after they have arrived at the inner membrane. We have also localized Pet100p to the inner mitochondrial membrane in wild type cells, where it is present in a subassembly (Complex A) with cytochrome c oxidase subunits VII, VIIa, and VIII. Pet100p does not interact with the same subunits after they have been assembled into the holoenzyme. In addition, we have identified two subassemblies that are present in pet100 null mutant cells: one subassembly (Complex A') is composed of subunits VII, VIIa, and VIII but not Pet100p, and another subassembly (Complex B) is composed of subunits Va and VI. Because pet100 null mutant cells lack assembled cytochrome c oxidase but accumulate Complexes A' and B it appears likely that these subassemblies of cytochrome c oxidase subunits are intermediates along an assembly pathway for holocytochrome c oxidase and that Pet100p functions in this pathway to facilitate the interaction(s) between Complex A' and other cytochrome c oxidase subassemblies and subunits.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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