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2. Worldwide Disparities in Recovery of Cardiac Testing 1 Year Into COVID-19
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Einstein, A, Hirschfeld, C, Williams, M, Vitola, J, Better, N, Villines, T, Cerci, R, Shaw, L, Choi, A, Dorbala, S, Karthikeyan, G, Lu, B, Sinitsyn, V, Ansheles, A, Kudo, T, Bucciarelli-Ducci, C, Norgaard, B, Maurovich-Horvat, P, Campisi, R, Milan, E, Louw, L, Allam, A, Bhatia, M, Sewanan, L, Malkovskiy, E, Cohen, Y, Randazzo, M, Narula, J, Morozova, O, Pascual, T, Pynda, Y, Dondi, M, Paez, D, Hinterleitner, G, Lu, Y, Xu, Z, Erinne, I, Shetty, M, Lopez-Mattei, J, Parwani, P, Goda, A, Shirka, E, Bouyoucef, S, Chelghoum, L, Mansouri, F, Medjahedi, A, Naili, Q, Ridouh, M, Alasia, D, Alberghina, L, Aramayo, N, Buchara, D, Busso, F, Bustos Rivadero, J, Camilletti, J, Campanelli, H, Castro, R, Daicz, M, del Riego, H, Dragonetti, L, Echazarreta, D, Erriest, J, Faccio, F, Facello, A, Gallegos, H, Geronazzo, R, Glait, H, Hasbani, V, Jager, V, Lewkowicz, J, Lotti, J, Maciel, N, Masoli, O, Mastrovito, E, Medus, M, Merani, M, Molteni, S, Montecinos, M, Parisi, G, Sueldo, C, Perez de Arenaza, D, Quintana, L, Radzinschi, A, Redruello, M, Rodriguez, M, Rojas, H, Acuna, A, Schere, D, Traverso, S, Vazquez, G, Zeffiro, S, Sakanyan, M, Beuzeville, S, Boktor, R, Crowley, M, Downie, D, Dwivedi, G, Elison, B, Farouque, O, Jasper, K, Joshi, S, Lee, J, Lee, K, Lui, E, Mcconachie, P, Meaker, J, Nandurkar, D, Neill, J, O'Rourke, E, O'Sullivan, P, Pandos, G, Premaratne, M, Prior, D, Rutherford, N, Saunders, C, Taubman, K, Tauro, A, Taylor, A, Theuerle, J, Thomas, P, Tow, J, Upton, A, Vamadevan, S, Wayne, V, Wegner, E, Wong, D, Younger, J, Beitzke, D, Feuchtner, G, Sommer, O, Weiss, K, Maroz-Vadalazhskaya, N, Tserakhau, U, Homans, F, Van De Heyning, C, Araujo, R, Soldat-Stankovic, V, Stankovic, S, Almeida, A, Anselmi, C, Azevedo, G, Bittencourt, M, Pianta, D, Cabeda, E, Carreira, L, Coelho, I, de Amorim Fernandes, F, de Lorenzo, A, Delgado, R, Erthal, F, Fernandes, F, Fernandes, J, Ferreira de Souza, T, Foppa, M, Matos Alves, W, Gontijo, C, Gottlieb, I, Grossman, G, Albernaz Siqueira, M, Nomura, C, Koga, K, Lima, R, Lopes, R, Marcal Filho, H, Masiero, P, Mastrocola, L, Menezes de Siqueira, M, Mesquita, C, Naves, D, Penna, F, Pinto, I, Rocha, T, Rocha, J, Rodrigues, A, Salioni, L, Sanches, A, Santos, M, Da Silva, L, Schvartzman, P, Matushita, C, Senra, T, Silva, M, Soares, C, Spiro, B, Suaide Silva, C, Torres, R, Monte, G, Vilela, A, Villa, A, Voss, T, Waltrick, R, Zapparoli, M, Naseer, H, Garcheva-Tsacheva, M, Ouattara, T, Thou, S, Varoeun, S, Abikhzer, G, Beanlands, R, Chetrit, M, Dabreo, D, Dennie, C, Friedrich, M, Hafez, M, Hanneman, K, Miller, R, Oikonomou, A, Roifman, I, Small, G, Tandon, V, Trivedi, A, White, J, Zukotynski, K, Alay, R, Concha, C, Massardo, T, Abad, P, Anzola, K, Arturo, H, Benitez, L, Cadena, A, Zamudio, C, Calderon, A, Gutierrez Villamil, C, Jaimes, C, Londono, J, Lopez, N, Merlano-Gaitan, S, Murgieitio-Cabrera, R, Valencia, M, Vergel, D, Santamaria, A, Solis, F, Batinic, T, Franceschi, M, Paar, M, Prpic, M, Felipe Batista, C, Cabrera, L, Peix, A, Pena, Y, Rochela Vazquez, L, Ntalas, I, Kaminek, M, Kincl, V, Lang, O, Abdulla, J, Bottcher, M, Busk, M, Geisler, U, Gormsen, L, Hansson, N, Hess, S, Hove, J, Jensen, L, Jensen, M, Kragholm, K, Ovrehus, K, Rasmussen, J, Ronnow Sand, N, Sondergaard, H, Zaremba, T, Speckter, H, Amores, N, Velez, M, Alrahman, T, Elsamad, S, Abdelfattah, A, Elkaffas, S, Hassan, M, Hussein, E, Ibrahim, A, Kandeel, A, Ali, M, Shaaban, M, Flores, C, Gomez Leiva, V, Liiver, A, Larikka, M, Uusitalo, V, Agostini, D, Berger, C, Dietz, M, Hyafil, F, Ohana, M, Prigent, K, Regaieg, H, Sarda-Mantel, L, H-Ici, D, Ayetey, H, Angelidis, G, Fragkaki, C, Fragkiadaki, C, Georgoulias, P, Koutelou, M, Kyrozi, E, Lama, N, Prassopoulos, V, Spartalis, M, Zaglavara, T, Gonzalez, C, Gutierrez, G, Maldonado, A, Martinez, Y, Kovacs, A, Szilveszter, B, Banthia, N, Bhat, V, Choudhury, P, Chowdekar, V, Christopher, J, Garg, T, Goyal, N, Gupta, R, Gupta, A, Hephzibah, J, Jain, S, Krupa, J, Kumar, P, Kumar, S, Lalchandani, A, Mishra, A, Mishra, V, Mohan, P, Ozair, A, Pandey, S, Parameswaran, R, Patel, C, Patel, T, Patel, S, Vimala, L, Kumar Sarangi, D, Sengupta, S, Sethi, A, Sharma, A, Sharma, P, Shrigiriwar, A, Singh, S, Singh, H, Sood, A, Verma, A, Vyas, A, Soeriadi, E, Bun, E, Hutomo, F, Syawaluddin, H, Yudistiro, R, Albadr, A, Assadi, M, Emami, F, Emami-Ardekani, A, Farzanehfar, S, Jafari, R, Manafi-Farid, R, Tajik, M, Arnson, Y, Fuchs, S, Goldkorn, R, Kennedy, J, Leitman, M, Shalev, A, Acampa, W, Albano, D, Alongi, P, Arnone, G, Assante, R, Baritussio, A, Bauckneht, M, Bianco, F, Bonfiglioli, R, Bovenzi, F, Bruno, I, Bruno, A, Busnardo, E, Califaretti, E, Casoni, R, Censullo, V, Chierichetti, F, Chiocchi, M, Cittanti, C, Clemente, A, Cuocolo, A, De Rimini, M, De Vincentis, G, Della Tommasina, V, Dellegrottaglie, S, Erba, P, Evangelista, L, Faggi, L, Faragasso, E, Florimonte, L, Frantellizzi, V, Gatti, M, Gaudiano, A, Gelardi, F, Gerali, A, Gimelli, A, Guglielmo, M, Leccisotti, L, Liga, R, Liguori, C, Longo, G, Maffione, M, Marcassa, C, Matassa, G, Mele, D, Mircoli, L, Paccagnella, A, Pacella, S, Padovano, F, Pellegrini, D, Pergola, V, Pugliese, L, Quartuccio, N, Rampin, L, Ricci, F, Rubini, G, Russo, V, Sambuceti, G, Scatteia, A, Sciagra, R, Spidalieri, G, Stefanelli, A, Tedeschi, C, Ventroni, G, Baugh, D, Madu, E, Aikawa, T, Asano, H, Fujimoto, S, Fujise, K, Fukushima, Y, Fukuyama, K, Ichikawa, Y, Ideguchi, R, Iguchi, N, Imai, M, Ishimura, H, Isobe, S, Ito, K, Izawa, Y, Kadokami, T, Kasai, T, Kato, T, Kawamoto, T, Kiryu, S, Kumita, S, Manabe, O, Maruno, H, Matsumoto, N, Miyagawa, M, Moroi, M, Nagamachi, S, Nakajima, K, Nakazato, R, Nanasato, M, Naya, M, Norikane, T, Ohta, Y, Otomi, Y, Otsuka, H, Oyama-Manabe, N, Saito, M, Sarai, M, Sato, J, Sato, D, Shiraishi, S, Takanami, K, Takehana, K, Taniguchi, Y, Teragawa, H, Tomizawa, N, Umeji, K, Wakabayashi, Y, Yamada, S, Yamazaki, S, Yoneyama, T, Rawashdeh, M, Dautov, T, Makhdomi, K, Abass, M, Garashi, M, Siraj, Q, Kalnina, M, Haidar, M, Komiagiene, R, Kviecinskiene, G, Vajauskas, D, Karim, N, Doucoure, M, Reichmuth, L, Samuel, A, Dieng, M, Naojee, A, Hernandez, E, Alducin Tellez, C, Alexanderson-Rosas, E, Barragan, E, Cabada, M, Calderon, D, Carvajal-Juarez, I, Esparza, J, Gama-Moreno, M, Quinto, V, Gonzalez, N, Herrera-Zarza, M, Meave, A, Medina Verdugo, J, Melendez, G, Morales Murguia, R, Navarro Quiroz, C, Ornelas, M, Preciado-Anaya, A, Preciado-Gutierrez, O, Puente, A, Salazar, A, Rosales Uvera, S, Rosales-Uvera, S, Serna Macias, J, Sierra-Galan, L, Tirado Alderete, J, Vallejo, E, Faraggi, M, Sereegotov, E, Ben Rais, N, Alaoui, N, Kyiphyu, T, Oo, S, Win, S, Zar, H, Ghimire, R, Neupane, M, Glaudemans, A, Slart, R, Verschure, D, Allen, B, Edmond, J, Mckenzie, C, Tie, S, Van Pelt, N, Worthington, K, Young, C, Soli, I, Kana, S, Onubogu, U, Sani, M, Braten, A, Jorgensen, A, Vassbotn, H, Al Dhuhli, H, Jawa, Z, Tag, N, Fatima, S, Imran, M, Younis, M, Saadullah, M, Malo, Y, Lenturut-Katal, D, Castillo, M, Ortellado, J, Akhter, A, Cader, F, Hussain, R, Khan, S, Mandal, T, Nasreen, F, An, Y, Cao, D, Gong, L, Hou, Y, Jia, C, Li, T, Li, C, Liu, H, Liu, W, Liu, J, Ng, M, Shi, H, Tang, C, Wang, X, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Wu, J, Yi, Y, Yuan, L, Zhang, T, Zhang, L, Chavez, E, Cruz, C, Llontop, C, Morales, R, Abrihan, P, Bustos-Barroso, A, Duldulao-Ogbac, M, Eduarte, C, Obaldo, J, Quinon, A, San Juan, B, San Juan, C, Sauler-Gomez, M, Uy, M, Kostkiewicz, M, Kunikowska, J, Teresinska, A, Urbanik, T, Bettencourt, N, Fontes-Carvalho, R, Gavina, C, Goncalves, L, Macedo, F, Moreno, N, Sousa, C, Timoteo, A, Vidigal, M, Al Heidous, M, Ramanathan, S, Arnous, S, Aytani, S, Byrne, A, Gleeson, T, Kerins, D, O'Brien, J, Bang, J, Bom, H, Cheon, M, Cheon, G, Cho, S, Hong, C, Jeong, Y, Kang, W, Kang, Y, Kim, J, Oh, S, So, Y, Song, H, Won, K, Yoo, S, Mitevska, I, Vavlukis, M, Salobir, B, Stalc, M, Benedek, T, Pop, M, Stan, C, Dariy, O, Gagarina, N, Itskovich, I, Karalkin, A, Kokov, A, Marina, G, Migunova, E, Pospelov, V, Ryzhkova, D, Sayfullina, G, Sergienko, V, Shurupova, I, Vakhromeeva, M, Valiullina, N, Zavadovsky, K, Zhuravlev, K, Abazid, R, Al Garni, T, Alasnag, M, Aljizeeri, A, Amer, H, Amro, A, Hamdy, H, Smettei, O, Saranovic, D, Vlajkovic, M, Keng, F, See, J, Berecova, Z, Mistinova, J, Evbuomwan, O, Govender, N, Hack, J, Hadebe, B, Hlongwa, K, Kaplan, M, Lakhi, H, Milos, K, Modiselle, M, More, S, Muambadzi, N, Scholtz, L, Barreiro-Perez, M, Blanco, I, Broncano, J, Camarero, A, Casans-Tormo, I, De Haro, J, Flotats, A, Garcia, E, Mendiguchia, C, Jimenez-Heffernan, A, Leta, R, Diaz, J, Vega, L, Manovel-Sanchez, A, Monzonis, A, Patrut, B, Pubul, V, Perez, R, Zeidan, N, Nanayakkara, D, Suliman, A, Engblom, H, Murtadha, M, Ostenfeld, E, Simonsson, M, Alkadhi, H, Buechel, R, Burger, P, Grani, C, Kamani, C, Kawel-Bohm, N, Klaeser, B, Manka, R, Prior, J, Kaewchur, T, Khiewvan, B, Kositwattanarerk, A, Namwongprom, S, Thientunyakit, T, Sayman, H, Yuksel, M, Sebikali, M, Okello, E, Korol, P, Noverko, I, Satyr, M, Ahmad, T, Alfakih, K, Andrade, I, Buckingham, S, Bularga, A, Carpenter, J, Cole, G, Cusack, D, David, S, Davis, P, Fairbairn, T, Ghosh, A, Ramkumar, P, Hamilton, M, Haque, F, Hudson, B, Johnstone, A, Karthikeyan, V, Kay, M, Khan, M, Kitt, J, Low, C, Mcalindon, E, Mccreavy, D, Morrissey, B, Motwani, M, Na, D, Nicol, E, Patel, D, Rodrigues, J, Rofe, C, Schofield, R, Semple, T, Sheikh, A, Sinha, A, Subedi, D, Topping, W, Tweed, K, Underwood, S, Weir-Mccall, J, Zuhairy, H, Abbasi, T, Abohashem, S, Abramson, S, Al-Mallah, M, Kumar, M, Balmer-Swain, M, Berman, D, Bernheim, A, Bhatti, S, Biederman, R, Bieging, E, Bingham, S, Bloom, S, Blue, S, Borges, A, Branch, K, Bravo, P, Buddhe, S, Budoff, M, Bullock-Palmer, R, Cahill, M, Candela, C, Cao, J, Chatterjee, S, Chatzizisis, Y, Chaudhuri, N, Cheezum, M, Chelliah, A, Chen, T, Chen, M, Chen, L, Chokshi, A, Chung, J, Danciu, S, Desisto, W, Dilorenzo, M, Doukky, R, Duvall, W, Ferencik, M, Foster, C, Fuisz, A, Gannon, M, German, D, Gerson, M, Geske, J, Hage, F, Haider, A, Haider, S, Hamirani, Y, Hassen, K, Hendel, R, Henkel, J, Horgan, S, Hyun, M, Janardhanan, R, Jerome, S, Kalra, D, Kassop, D, Kinkhabwala, M, Kinzfogl, G, Koch, B, Koweek, L, Krepp, J, Kwon, Y, Layer, J, Lesser, J, Leung, S, Lisske, B, Magurany, K, Markowitz, J, Mccullough, B, Moalemi, A, Moffitt, C, Montanez, J, Moore, W, Morayati, S, Mossa-Basha, M, Mrsic, Z, Murthy, V, Nagpal, P, Nelson, K, Nijjar, P, O'Quinn, R, Passen, E, Patil, P, Pursnani, A, Quachang, N, Rabbat, M, Ranjan, P, Lozano, P, Schemmer, M, Seifried, R, Shah, N, Shah, A, Shanbhag, S, Sharma, G, Skotnicki, R, Sobczak, M, Soman, P, Sorrell, V, Srichai, M, Streeter, J, Strickland, L, Suliman, S, Tebyanian, N, Thomas, D, Thompson, R, Uretsky, S, Vallurupalli, S, Vandyck-Acquah, M, Verma, V, Weinstein, J, Wolinsky, D, Zareba, K, Zgaljardic, M, Beretta, M, Ferrando, R, Kapitan, M, Mut, F, Djuraev, O, Rozikhodjaeva, G, Vera, L, Duc, B, Nguyen, X, Hiep Nguyen, P, Einstein A. J., Hirschfeld C., Williams M. C., Vitola J. V., Better N., Villines T. C., Cerci R., Shaw L. J., Choi A. D., Dorbala S., Karthikeyan G., Lu B., Sinitsyn V., Ansheles A. A., Kudo T., Bucciarelli-Ducci C., Norgaard B. L., Maurovich-Horvat P., Campisi R., Milan E., Louw L., Allam A. H., Bhatia M., Sewanan L., Malkovskiy E., Cohen Y., Randazzo M., Narula J., Morozova O., Pascual T. N. B., Pynda Y., Dondi M., Paez D., Hinterleitner G., Lu Y., Xu Z., Hirschfeld C. B., Erinne I., Shetty M., Choi A., Lopez-Mattei J., Parwani P., Goda A., Shirka E., Bouyoucef S., Chelghoum L., Mansouri F., Medjahedi A., Naili Q., Ridouh M., Alasia D., Alberghina L., Aramayo N., Buchara D., Busso F. G., Bustos Rivadero J. J., Camilletti J., Campanelli H., Castro R. B., Daicz M., del Riego H., Dragonetti L., Echazarreta D., Erriest J., Faccio F., Facello A., Gallegos H., Geronazzo R., Glait H., Hasbani V., Jager V., Lewkowicz J. M., Lotti J., Maciel N., Masoli O., Mastrovito E., Medus M., Merani M. F., Molteni S., Montecinos M., Parisi G., Sueldo C. P., Perez de Arenaza D., Quintana L., Radzinschi A., Redruello M., Rodriguez M., Rojas H., Acuna A. R., Schere D., Traverso S., Vazquez G., Zeffiro S., Sakanyan M., Beuzeville S., Boktor R., Crowley M., Downie D. A., Dwivedi G., Elison B., Farouque O., Jasper K., Joshi S., Lee J., Lee K., Lui E., Mcconachie P., Meaker J., Nandurkar D., Neill J., O'Rourke E., O'Sullivan P., Pandos G., Premaratne M., Prior D., Rutherford N., Saunders C., Taubman K., Tauro A., Taylor A., Theuerle J., Thomas P., Tow J., Upton A., Vamadevan S., Wayne V., Wegner E. A., Wong D., Younger J., Beitzke D., Feuchtner G., Sommer O., Weiss K., Maroz-Vadalazhskaya N., Tserakhau U., Homans F., Van De Heyning C. M., Araujo R., Soldat-Stankovic V., Stankovic S., Almeida A., Anselmi C., Azevedo G. S. A., Bittencourt M. S., Pianta D. B., Cabeda E., Carreira L., Coelho I., de Amorim Fernandes F., de Lorenzo A., Delgado R., Erthal F., Fernandes F., Fernandes J., Ferreira de Souza T., Foppa M., Matos Alves W. F., Gontijo C., Gottlieb I., Grossman G., Albernaz Siqueira M. H., Nomura C. H., Koga K. H., Lima R., Lopes R., Marcal Filho H. H., Masiero P., Mastrocola L., Menezes de Siqueira M. E., Mesquita C., Naves D., Penna F., Pinto I., Rocha T., Rocha J. L., Rodrigues A., Salioni L., Sanches A., Santos M., Da Silva L. S., Schvartzman P., Matushita C. S., Senra T., Silva M., Soares C. E., Spiro B., Suaide Silva C. E., Torres R., Monte G. U., Vilela A., Villa A. V., Vitola J., Voss T., Waltrick R., Zapparoli M., Naseer H., Garcheva-Tsacheva M., Ouattara T. F., Thou S., Varoeun S., Abikhzer G., Beanlands R., Chetrit M., Dabreo D., Dennie C., Friedrich M., Hafez M. N., Hanneman K., Miller R., Oikonomou A., Roifman I., Small G., Tandon V., Trivedi A., White J., Zukotynski K., Alay R., Concha C., Massardo T., Abad P., Anzola K., Arturo H., Benitez L., Cadena A., Zamudio C. C., Calderon A., Gutierrez Villamil C. T., Jaimes C., Londono J. L., Lopez N., Merlano-Gaitan S., Murgieitio-Cabrera R., Valencia M., Vergel D., Santamaria A. Z., Solis F., Batinic T., Franceschi M., Paar M. H., Prpic M., Felipe Batista C. J., Cabrera L. O., Peix A., Pena Y., Rochela Vazquez L. M., Ntalas I., Kaminek M., Kincl V., Lang O., Abdulla J., Bottcher M., Busk M., Geisler U., Gormsen L. C., Hansson N., Hess S., Hove J., Jensen L. T., Jensen M. T., Kragholm K. H., Ovrehus K., Rasmussen J., Ronnow Sand N. P., Sondergaard H., Zaremba T., Speckter H., Amores N., Velez M. S., Alrahman T. A., Elsamad S. A., Abdelfattah A., Allam A., Elkaffas S., Hassan M., Hussein E., Ibrahim A., Kandeel A., Ali M. M., Shaaban M., Flores C., Gomez Leiva V. V., Liiver A., Larikka M., Uusitalo V., Agostini D., Berger C., Dietz M., Hyafil F., Ohana M., Prigent K., Regaieg H., Sarda-Mantel L., H-Ici D. O., Ayetey H., Angelidis G., Fragkaki C., Fragkiadaki C., Georgoulias P., Koutelou M., Kyrozi E., Lama N., Prassopoulos V., Spartalis M., Zaglavara T., Gonzalez C., Gutierrez G., Maldonado A., Martinez Y., Kovacs A., Szilveszter B., Banthia N., Bhat V., Choudhury P., Chowdekar V. S., Christopher J., Garg T., Goyal N. K., Gupta R. K., Gupta A., Hephzibah J., Jain S., Krupa J., Kumar P., Kumar S., Lalchandani A., Mishra A., Mishra V. D., Mohan P., Ozair A., Pandey S., Parameswaran R., Patel C., Patel T., Patel S., Vimala L. R., Kumar Sarangi D. P., Sengupta S., Sethi A., Sharma A., Sharma A. K., Sharma P., Shrigiriwar A., Singh S., Singh H., Sood A., Verma A., Vyas A., Soeriadi E. A., Bun E., Hutomo F., Syawaluddin H., Yudistiro R., Albadr A., Assadi M., Emami F., Emami-Ardekani A., Farzanehfar S., Jafari R., Manafi-Farid R., Tajik M., Arnson Y., Fuchs S., Goldkorn R., Kennedy J., Leitman M., Shalev A., Acampa W., Albano D., Alongi P., Arnone G., Assante R., Baritussio A., Bauckneht M., Bianco F., Bonfiglioli R., Bovenzi F., Bruno I., Bruno A., Busnardo E., Califaretti E., Casoni R., Censullo V., Chierichetti F., Chiocchi M., Cittanti C., Clemente A., Cuocolo A., De Rimini M. L., De Vincentis G., Della Tommasina V., Dellegrottaglie S., Erba P. A., Evangelista L., Faggi L., Faragasso E., Florimonte L., Frantellizzi V., Gatti M., Gaudiano A., Gelardi F., Gerali A., Gimelli A., Guglielmo M., Leccisotti L., Liga R., Liguori C., Longo G., Maffione M., Marcassa C., Matassa G., Mele D., Mircoli L., Paccagnella A., Pacella S., Padovano F., Pellegrini D., Pergola V., Pugliese L., Quartuccio N., Rampin L., Ricci F., Rubini G., Russo V., Sambuceti G., Scatteia A., Sciagra R., Spidalieri G., Stefanelli A., Tedeschi C., Ventroni G., Baugh D., Madu E., Aikawa T., Asano H., Fujimoto S., Fujise K., Fukushima Y., Fukuyama K., Ichikawa Y., Ideguchi R., Iguchi N., Imai M., Ishimura H., Isobe S., Ito K., Izawa Y., Kadokami T., Kasai T., Kato T., Kawamoto T., Kiryu S., Kumita S., Manabe O., Maruno H., Matsumoto N., Miyagawa M., Moroi M., Nagamachi S., Nakajima K., Nakazato R., Nanasato M., Naya M., Norikane T., Ohta Y., Otomi Y., Otsuka H., Oyama-Manabe N., Saito M., Sarai M., Sato J., Sato D., Shiraishi S., Takanami K., Takehana K., Taniguchi Y., Teragawa H., Tomizawa N., Umeji K., Wakabayashi Y., Yamada S., Yamazaki S., Yoneyama T., Rawashdeh M., Dautov T., Makhdomi K., Abass M., Garashi M., Siraj Q., Kalnina M., Haidar M., Komiagiene R., Kviecinskiene G., Vajauskas D., Karim N. K. A., Doucoure M., Reichmuth L., Samuel A., Dieng M. L., Naojee A. S., Hernandez E. A., Alducin Tellez C. R., Alexanderson-Rosas E., Barragan E., Cabada M., Calderon D., Carvajal-Juarez I., Esparza J., Gama-Moreno M. G., Quinto V. G., Gonzalez N. C., Herrera-Zarza M. C., Meave A., Medina Verdugo J. G., Melendez G., Morales Murguia R. H., Navarro Quiroz C. S., Ornelas M., Preciado-Anaya A., Preciado-Gutierrez O. U., Puente A., Salazar A. R., Rosales Uvera S. G., Rosales-Uvera S., Serna Macias J. A., Sierra-Galan L., Sierra-Galan L. M., Tirado Alderete J. C., Vallejo E., Faraggi M., Sereegotov E., Ben Rais N., Alaoui N. I., Kyiphyu T., Oo S. T., Win S. M., Zar H., Ghimire R., Neupane M., Glaudemans A., Slart R., Verschure D., Allen B., Edmond J., Mckenzie C., Tie S., Van Pelt N., Worthington K., Young C., Soli I. A., Kana S., Onubogu U., Sani M., Braten A. T., Jorgensen A., Vassbotn H. -E., Al Dhuhli H., Jawa Z., Tag N., Fatima S., Imran M. B., Younis M. N., Saadullah M., Malo Y. H., Lenturut-Katal D., Castillo M., Ortellado J., Akhter A., Cader F. A., Hussain R., Khan S. R., Mandal T., Nasreen F., An Y., Cao D., Gong L., Hou Y., Jia C., Li T., Li C., Liu H., Liu W., Liu J., Ng M. -Y., Shi H., Tang C., Wang X., Wang Z., Wang Y., Wu J., Yi Y., Yuan L., Zhang T., Zhang L., Chavez E., Cruz C., Llontop C., Morales R., Abrihan P., Bustos-Barroso A., Duldulao-Ogbac M., Eduarte C., Obaldo J., Quinon A., San Juan B., San Juan C. J., Sauler-Gomez M. R., Uy M., Kostkiewicz M., Kunikowska J., Teresinska A., Urbanik T., Bettencourt N., Fontes-Carvalho R., Gavina C., Goncalves L., Macedo F., Moreno N., Sousa C., Timoteo A. T., Vidigal M. J., Al Heidous M., Ramanathan S., Arnous S., Aytani S., Byrne A., Gleeson T., Kerins D., O'Brien J., Bang J. -I., Bom H., Cheon M., Cheon G. J., Cho S. -G., Hong C. M., Jeong Y. H., Kang W. J., Kang Y. -K., Kim J. -Y., Oh S. W., So Y., Song H. -C., Won K. S., Yoo S. W., Mitevska I., Vavlukis M., Salobir B. G., Stalc M., Benedek T., Pop M., Stan C., Ansheles A., Dariy O., Gagarina N., Itskovich I., Karalkin A., Kokov A., Marina G., Migunova E., Pospelov V., Ryzhkova D., Sayfullina G., Sergienko V., Shurupova I., Vakhromeeva M., Valiullina N., Zavadovsky K., Zhuravlev K., Abazid R., Al Garni T., Alasnag M., Aljizeeri A., Amer H., Amro A., Hamdy H., Smettei O., Saranovic D. S., Vlajkovic M., Keng F., See J., Berecova Z., Mistinova J. P., Evbuomwan O., Govender N., Hack J., Hadebe B., Hlongwa K., Kaplan M., Lakhi H., Milos K., Modiselle M., More S., Muambadzi N., Scholtz L., Barreiro-Perez M., Blanco I., Broncano J., Camarero A., Casans-Tormo I., De Haro J., Flotats A., Garcia E., Mendiguchia C. G., Jimenez-Heffernan A., Leta R., Diaz J. L., Vega L. L., Manovel-Sanchez A., Monzonis A. M., Patrut B., Pubul V., Perez R. R., Zeidan N., Nanayakkara D., Suliman A., Engblom H., Murtadha M., Ostenfeld E., Simonsson M., Alkadhi H., Buechel R. R., Burger P., Grani C., Kamani C., Kawel-Bohm N., Klaeser B., Manka R., Prior J., Kaewchur T., Khiewvan B., Kositwattanarerk A., Namwongprom S., Thientunyakit T., Sayman H. B., Yuksel M., Sebikali M. J., Okello E., Korol P., Noverko I., Satyr M., Ahmad T., Alfakih K., Andrade I., Buckingham S., Bularga A., Carpenter J. -P., Cole G., Cusack D., David S., Davis P., Fairbairn T., Ghosh A., Ramkumar P. G., Hamilton M., Haque F., Hudson B., Johnstone A., Karthikeyan V. J., Kay M., Khan M. A., Kitt J., Low C. S., Mcalindon E., Mccreavy D., Morrissey B., Motwani M., Na D., Nicol E., Patel D., Rodrigues J., Rofe C., Schofield R., Semple T., Sheikh A., Sinha A., Subedi D., Topping W., Tweed K., Underwood S. R., Weir-Mccall J., Zuhairy H., Abbasi T., Abohashem S., Abramson S., Al-Mallah M., Kumar M. A., Balmer-Swain M., Berman D., Bernheim A., Bhatti S., Biederman R., Bieging E., Bingham S., Bloom S., Blue S., Borges A., Branch K., Bravo P., Buddhe S., Budoff M., Bullock-Palmer R., Cahill M., Candela C., Cao J., Chatterjee S., Chatzizisis Y., Chaudhuri N. R., Cheezum M., Chelliah A., Chen T., Chen M., Chen L., Chokshi A., Chung J., Danciu S., DeSisto W., Dilorenzo M., Doukky R., Duvall W., Ferencik M., Foster C., Fuisz A., Gannon M., German D., Gerson M., Geske J., Hage F., Haider A., Haider S., Hamirani Y., Hassen K., Hendel R., Henkel J., Horgan S., Hyun M., Janardhanan R., Jerome S., Kalra D., Kassop D., Kinkhabwala M., Kinzfogl G., Koch B., Koweek L., Krepp J., Kwon Y., Layer J., Lesser J., Leung S., Lisske B., Magurany K., Markowitz J., Mccullough B., Moalemi A., Moffitt C., Montanez J., Moore W., Morayati S., Mossa-Basha M., Mrsic Z., Murthy V., Nagpal P., Nelson K., Nijjar P., O'Quinn R., Passen E., Patil P., Pursnani A., Quachang N., Rabbat M., Ranjan P., Lozano P. R., Schemmer M., Seifried R., Shah N., Shah A., Shanbhag S., Sharma G., Skotnicki R., Sobczak M., Soman P., Sorrell V., Srichai M., Streeter J., Strickland L., Suliman S., Tebyanian N., Thomas D., Thompson R., Uretsky S., Vallurupalli S., Vandyck-Acquah M., Verma V., Villines T., Weinstein J., Wolinsky D., Zareba K., Zgaljardic M., Beretta M., Ferrando R., Kapitan M., Mut F., Djuraev O., Rozikhodjaeva G., Vera L., Duc B. D., Nguyen X. C., Hiep Nguyen P. 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J, Hage, F, Haider, A, Haider, S, Hamirani, Y, Hassen, K, Hendel, R, Henkel, J, Horgan, S, Hyun, M, Janardhanan, R, Jerome, S, Kalra, D, Kassop, D, Kinkhabwala, M, Kinzfogl, G, Koch, B, Koweek, L, Krepp, J, Kwon, Y, Layer, J, Lesser, J, Leung, S, Lisske, B, Magurany, K, Markowitz, J, Mccullough, B, Moalemi, A, Moffitt, C, Montanez, J, Moore, W, Morayati, S, Mossa-Basha, M, Mrsic, Z, Murthy, V, Nagpal, P, Nelson, K, Nijjar, P, O'Quinn, R, Passen, E, Patil, P, Pursnani, A, Quachang, N, Rabbat, M, Ranjan, P, Lozano, P, Schemmer, M, Seifried, R, Shah, N, Shah, A, Shanbhag, S, Sharma, G, Skotnicki, R, Sobczak, M, Soman, P, Sorrell, V, Srichai, M, Streeter, J, Strickland, L, Suliman, S, Tebyanian, N, Thomas, D, Thompson, R, Uretsky, S, Vallurupalli, S, Vandyck-Acquah, M, Verma, V, Weinstein, J, Wolinsky, D, Zareba, K, Zgaljardic, M, Beretta, M, Ferrando, R, Kapitan, M, Mut, F, Djuraev, O, Rozikhodjaeva, G, Vera, L, Duc, B, Nguyen, X, Hiep Nguyen, P, Einstein A. J., Hirschfeld C., Williams M. C., Vitola J. V., Better N., Villines T. C., Cerci R., Shaw L. J., Choi A. D., Dorbala S., Karthikeyan G., Lu B., Sinitsyn V., Ansheles A. A., Kudo T., Bucciarelli-Ducci C., Norgaard B. L., Maurovich-Horvat P., Campisi R., Milan E., Louw L., Allam A. H., Bhatia M., Sewanan L., Malkovskiy E., Cohen Y., Randazzo M., Narula J., Morozova O., Pascual T. N. B., Pynda Y., Dondi M., Paez D., Hinterleitner G., Lu Y., Xu Z., Hirschfeld C. B., Erinne I., Shetty M., Choi A., Lopez-Mattei J., Parwani P., Goda A., Shirka E., Bouyoucef S., Chelghoum L., Mansouri F., Medjahedi A., Naili Q., Ridouh M., Alasia D., Alberghina L., Aramayo N., Buchara D., Busso F. G., Bustos Rivadero J. J., Camilletti J., Campanelli H., Castro R. B., Daicz M., del Riego H., Dragonetti L., Echazarreta D., Erriest J., Faccio F., Facello A., Gallegos H., Geronazzo R., Glait H., Hasbani V., Jager V., Lewkowicz J. M., Lotti J., Maciel N., Masoli O., Mastrovito E., Medus M., Merani M. F., Molteni S., Montecinos M., Parisi G., Sueldo C. P., Perez de Arenaza D., Quintana L., Radzinschi A., Redruello M., Rodriguez M., Rojas H., Acuna A. R., Schere D., Traverso S., Vazquez G., Zeffiro S., Sakanyan M., Beuzeville S., Boktor R., Crowley M., Downie D. A., Dwivedi G., Elison B., Farouque O., Jasper K., Joshi S., Lee J., Lee K., Lui E., Mcconachie P., Meaker J., Nandurkar D., Neill J., O'Rourke E., O'Sullivan P., Pandos G., Premaratne M., Prior D., Rutherford N., Saunders C., Taubman K., Tauro A., Taylor A., Theuerle J., Thomas P., Tow J., Upton A., Vamadevan S., Wayne V., Wegner E. A., Wong D., Younger J., Beitzke D., Feuchtner G., Sommer O., Weiss K., Maroz-Vadalazhskaya N., Tserakhau U., Homans F., Van De Heyning C. M., Araujo R., Soldat-Stankovic V., Stankovic S., Almeida A., Anselmi C., Azevedo G. S. A., Bittencourt M. S., Pianta D. B., Cabeda E., Carreira L., Coelho I., de Amorim Fernandes F., de Lorenzo A., Delgado R., Erthal F., Fernandes F., Fernandes J., Ferreira de Souza T., Foppa M., Matos Alves W. F., Gontijo C., Gottlieb I., Grossman G., Albernaz Siqueira M. H., Nomura C. H., Koga K. H., Lima R., Lopes R., Marcal Filho H. H., Masiero P., Mastrocola L., Menezes de Siqueira M. E., Mesquita C., Naves D., Penna F., Pinto I., Rocha T., Rocha J. L., Rodrigues A., Salioni L., Sanches A., Santos M., Da Silva L. S., Schvartzman P., Matushita C. S., Senra T., Silva M., Soares C. E., Spiro B., Suaide Silva C. E., Torres R., Monte G. U., Vilela A., Villa A. V., Vitola J., Voss T., Waltrick R., Zapparoli M., Naseer H., Garcheva-Tsacheva M., Ouattara T. F., Thou S., Varoeun S., Abikhzer G., Beanlands R., Chetrit M., Dabreo D., Dennie C., Friedrich M., Hafez M. N., Hanneman K., Miller R., Oikonomou A., Roifman I., Small G., Tandon V., Trivedi A., White J., Zukotynski K., Alay R., Concha C., Massardo T., Abad P., Anzola K., Arturo H., Benitez L., Cadena A., Zamudio C. C., Calderon A., Gutierrez Villamil C. T., Jaimes C., Londono J. L., Lopez N., Merlano-Gaitan S., Murgieitio-Cabrera R., Valencia M., Vergel D., Santamaria A. Z., Solis F., Batinic T., Franceschi M., Paar M. H., Prpic M., Felipe Batista C. J., Cabrera L. O., Peix A., Pena Y., Rochela Vazquez L. M., Ntalas I., Kaminek M., Kincl V., Lang O., Abdulla J., Bottcher M., Busk M., Geisler U., Gormsen L. C., Hansson N., Hess S., Hove J., Jensen L. T., Jensen M. T., Kragholm K. H., Ovrehus K., Rasmussen J., Ronnow Sand N. P., Sondergaard H., Zaremba T., Speckter H., Amores N., Velez M. S., Alrahman T. A., Elsamad S. A., Abdelfattah A., Allam A., Elkaffas S., Hassan M., Hussein E., Ibrahim A., Kandeel A., Ali M. M., Shaaban M., Flores C., Gomez Leiva V. V., Liiver A., Larikka M., Uusitalo V., Agostini D., Berger C., Dietz M., Hyafil F., Ohana M., Prigent K., Regaieg H., Sarda-Mantel L., H-Ici D. O., Ayetey H., Angelidis G., Fragkaki C., Fragkiadaki C., Georgoulias P., Koutelou M., Kyrozi E., Lama N., Prassopoulos V., Spartalis M., Zaglavara T., Gonzalez C., Gutierrez G., Maldonado A., Martinez Y., Kovacs A., Szilveszter B., Banthia N., Bhat V., Choudhury P., Chowdekar V. S., Christopher J., Garg T., Goyal N. K., Gupta R. K., Gupta A., Hephzibah J., Jain S., Krupa J., Kumar P., Kumar S., Lalchandani A., Mishra A., Mishra V. D., Mohan P., Ozair A., Pandey S., Parameswaran R., Patel C., Patel T., Patel S., Vimala L. R., Kumar Sarangi D. P., Sengupta S., Sethi A., Sharma A., Sharma A. K., Sharma P., Shrigiriwar A., Singh S., Singh H., Sood A., Verma A., Vyas A., Soeriadi E. A., Bun E., Hutomo F., Syawaluddin H., Yudistiro R., Albadr A., Assadi M., Emami F., Emami-Ardekani A., Farzanehfar S., Jafari R., Manafi-Farid R., Tajik M., Arnson Y., Fuchs S., Goldkorn R., Kennedy J., Leitman M., Shalev A., Acampa W., Albano D., Alongi P., Arnone G., Assante R., Baritussio A., Bauckneht M., Bianco F., Bonfiglioli R., Bovenzi F., Bruno I., Bruno A., Busnardo E., Califaretti E., Casoni R., Censullo V., Chierichetti F., Chiocchi M., Cittanti C., Clemente A., Cuocolo A., De Rimini M. L., De Vincentis G., Della Tommasina V., Dellegrottaglie S., Erba P. A., Evangelista L., Faggi L., Faragasso E., Florimonte L., Frantellizzi V., Gatti M., Gaudiano A., Gelardi F., Gerali A., Gimelli A., Guglielmo M., Leccisotti L., Liga R., Liguori C., Longo G., Maffione M., Marcassa C., Matassa G., Mele D., Mircoli L., Paccagnella A., Pacella S., Padovano F., Pellegrini D., Pergola V., Pugliese L., Quartuccio N., Rampin L., Ricci F., Rubini G., Russo V., Sambuceti G., Scatteia A., Sciagra R., Spidalieri G., Stefanelli A., Tedeschi C., Ventroni G., Baugh D., Madu E., Aikawa T., Asano H., Fujimoto S., Fujise K., Fukushima Y., Fukuyama K., Ichikawa Y., Ideguchi R., Iguchi N., Imai M., Ishimura H., Isobe S., Ito K., Izawa Y., Kadokami T., Kasai T., Kato T., Kawamoto T., Kiryu S., Kumita S., Manabe O., Maruno H., Matsumoto N., Miyagawa M., Moroi M., Nagamachi S., Nakajima K., Nakazato R., Nanasato M., Naya M., Norikane T., Ohta Y., Otomi Y., Otsuka H., Oyama-Manabe N., Saito M., Sarai M., Sato J., Sato D., Shiraishi S., Takanami K., Takehana K., Taniguchi Y., Teragawa H., Tomizawa N., Umeji K., Wakabayashi Y., Yamada S., Yamazaki S., Yoneyama T., Rawashdeh M., Dautov T., Makhdomi K., Abass M., Garashi M., Siraj Q., Kalnina M., Haidar M., Komiagiene R., Kviecinskiene G., Vajauskas D., Karim N. K. A., Doucoure M., Reichmuth L., Samuel A., Dieng M. L., Naojee A. S., Hernandez E. A., Alducin Tellez C. R., Alexanderson-Rosas E., Barragan E., Cabada M., Calderon D., Carvajal-Juarez I., Esparza J., Gama-Moreno M. G., Quinto V. G., Gonzalez N. C., Herrera-Zarza M. C., Meave A., Medina Verdugo J. G., Melendez G., Morales Murguia R. H., Navarro Quiroz C. S., Ornelas M., Preciado-Anaya A., Preciado-Gutierrez O. U., Puente A., Salazar A. R., Rosales Uvera S. G., Rosales-Uvera S., Serna Macias J. A., Sierra-Galan L., Sierra-Galan L. M., Tirado Alderete J. C., Vallejo E., Faraggi M., Sereegotov E., Ben Rais N., Alaoui N. I., Kyiphyu T., Oo S. T., Win S. M., Zar H., Ghimire R., Neupane M., Glaudemans A., Slart R., Verschure D., Allen B., Edmond J., Mckenzie C., Tie S., Van Pelt N., Worthington K., Young C., Soli I. A., Kana S., Onubogu U., Sani M., Braten A. T., Jorgensen A., Vassbotn H. -E., Al Dhuhli H., Jawa Z., Tag N., Fatima S., Imran M. B., Younis M. N., Saadullah M., Malo Y. H., Lenturut-Katal D., Castillo M., Ortellado J., Akhter A., Cader F. A., Hussain R., Khan S. R., Mandal T., Nasreen F., An Y., Cao D., Gong L., Hou Y., Jia C., Li T., Li C., Liu H., Liu W., Liu J., Ng M. -Y., Shi H., Tang C., Wang X., Wang Z., Wang Y., Wu J., Yi Y., Yuan L., Zhang T., Zhang L., Chavez E., Cruz C., Llontop C., Morales R., Abrihan P., Bustos-Barroso A., Duldulao-Ogbac M., Eduarte C., Obaldo J., Quinon A., San Juan B., San Juan C. J., Sauler-Gomez M. R., Uy M., Kostkiewicz M., Kunikowska J., Teresinska A., Urbanik T., Bettencourt N., Fontes-Carvalho R., Gavina C., Goncalves L., Macedo F., Moreno N., Sousa C., Timoteo A. T., Vidigal M. J., Al Heidous M., Ramanathan S., Arnous S., Aytani S., Byrne A., Gleeson T., Kerins D., O'Brien J., Bang J. -I., Bom H., Cheon M., Cheon G. J., Cho S. -G., Hong C. M., Jeong Y. H., Kang W. J., Kang Y. -K., Kim J. -Y., Oh S. W., So Y., Song H. -C., Won K. S., Yoo S. W., Mitevska I., Vavlukis M., Salobir B. G., Stalc M., Benedek T., Pop M., Stan C., Ansheles A., Dariy O., Gagarina N., Itskovich I., Karalkin A., Kokov A., Marina G., Migunova E., Pospelov V., Ryzhkova D., Sayfullina G., Sergienko V., Shurupova I., Vakhromeeva M., Valiullina N., Zavadovsky K., Zhuravlev K., Abazid R., Al Garni T., Alasnag M., Aljizeeri A., Amer H., Amro A., Hamdy H., Smettei O., Saranovic D. S., Vlajkovic M., Keng F., See J., Berecova Z., Mistinova J. P., Evbuomwan O., Govender N., Hack J., Hadebe B., Hlongwa K., Kaplan M., Lakhi H., Milos K., Modiselle M., More S., Muambadzi N., Scholtz L., Barreiro-Perez M., Blanco I., Broncano J., Camarero A., Casans-Tormo I., De Haro J., Flotats A., Garcia E., Mendiguchia C. G., Jimenez-Heffernan A., Leta R., Diaz J. L., Vega L. L., Manovel-Sanchez A., Monzonis A. M., Patrut B., Pubul V., Perez R. R., Zeidan N., Nanayakkara D., Suliman A., Engblom H., Murtadha M., Ostenfeld E., Simonsson M., Alkadhi H., Buechel R. R., Burger P., Grani C., Kamani C., Kawel-Bohm N., Klaeser B., Manka R., Prior J., Kaewchur T., Khiewvan B., Kositwattanarerk A., Namwongprom S., Thientunyakit T., Sayman H. B., Yuksel M., Sebikali M. J., Okello E., Korol P., Noverko I., Satyr M., Ahmad T., Alfakih K., Andrade I., Buckingham S., Bularga A., Carpenter J. -P., Cole G., Cusack D., David S., Davis P., Fairbairn T., Ghosh A., Ramkumar P. G., Hamilton M., Haque F., Hudson B., Johnstone A., Karthikeyan V. J., Kay M., Khan M. A., Kitt J., Low C. S., Mcalindon E., Mccreavy D., Morrissey B., Motwani M., Na D., Nicol E., Patel D., Rodrigues J., Rofe C., Schofield R., Semple T., Sheikh A., Sinha A., Subedi D., Topping W., Tweed K., Underwood S. R., Weir-Mccall J., Zuhairy H., Abbasi T., Abohashem S., Abramson S., Al-Mallah M., Kumar M. A., Balmer-Swain M., Berman D., Bernheim A., Bhatti S., Biederman R., Bieging E., Bingham S., Bloom S., Blue S., Borges A., Branch K., Bravo P., Buddhe S., Budoff M., Bullock-Palmer R., Cahill M., Candela C., Cao J., Chatterjee S., Chatzizisis Y., Chaudhuri N. R., Cheezum M., Chelliah A., Chen T., Chen M., Chen L., Chokshi A., Chung J., Danciu S., DeSisto W., Dilorenzo M., Doukky R., Duvall W., Ferencik M., Foster C., Fuisz A., Gannon M., German D., Gerson M., Geske J., Hage F., Haider A., Haider S., Hamirani Y., Hassen K., Hendel R., Henkel J., Horgan S., Hyun M., Janardhanan R., Jerome S., Kalra D., Kassop D., Kinkhabwala M., Kinzfogl G., Koch B., Koweek L., Krepp J., Kwon Y., Layer J., Lesser J., Leung S., Lisske B., Magurany K., Markowitz J., Mccullough B., Moalemi A., Moffitt C., Montanez J., Moore W., Morayati S., Mossa-Basha M., Mrsic Z., Murthy V., Nagpal P., Nelson K., Nijjar P., O'Quinn R., Passen E., Patil P., Pursnani A., Quachang N., Rabbat M., Ranjan P., Lozano P. R., Schemmer M., Seifried R., Shah N., Shah A., Shanbhag S., Sharma G., Skotnicki R., Sobczak M., Soman P., Sorrell V., Srichai M., Streeter J., Strickland L., Suliman S., Tebyanian N., Thomas D., Thompson R., Uretsky S., Vallurupalli S., Vandyck-Acquah M., Verma V., Villines T., Weinstein J., Wolinsky D., Zareba K., Zgaljardic M., Beretta M., Ferrando R., Kapitan M., Mut F., Djuraev O., Rozikhodjaeva G., Vera L., Duc B. D., Nguyen X. C., and Hiep Nguyen P. M.
- Abstract
Background: The extent to which health care systems have adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic to provide necessary cardiac diagnostic services is unknown. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of the pandemic on cardiac testing practices, volumes and types of diagnostic services, and perceived psychological stress to health care providers worldwide. Methods: The International Atomic Energy Agency conducted a worldwide survey assessing alterations from baseline in cardiovascular diagnostic care at the pandemic's onset and 1 year later. Multivariable regression was used to determine factors associated with procedure volume recovery. Results: Surveys were submitted from 669 centers in 107 countries. Worldwide reduction in cardiac procedure volumes of 64% from March 2019 to April 2020 recovered by April 2021 in high- and upper middle-income countries (recovery rates of 108% and 99%) but remained depressed in lower middle- and low-income countries (46% and 30% recovery). Although stress testing was used 12% less frequently in 2021 than in 2019, coronary computed tomographic angiography was used 14% more, a trend also seen for other advanced cardiac imaging modalities (positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance; 22%-25% increases). Pandemic-related psychological stress was estimated to have affected nearly 40% of staff, impacting patient care at 78% of sites. In multivariable regression, only lower-income status and physicians’ psychological stress were significant in predicting recovery of cardiac testing. Conclusions: Cardiac diagnostic testing has yet to recover to prepandemic levels in lower-income countries. Worldwide, the decrease in standard stress testing is offset by greater use of advanced cardiac imaging modalities. Pandemic-related psychological stress among providers is widespread and associated with poor recovery of cardiac testing.
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- 2022
3. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance for evaluation of cardiac involvement in COVID-19: recommendations by the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
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Ferreira, V.M., Plein, S., Wong, T.C., Tao, Q., Raisi-Estabragh, Z., Jain, S.S., Han, Y., Ojha, V., Bluemke, D.A., Hanneman, K., Weinsaft, J., Vidula, M.K., Ntusi, N. A.B., Schulz-Menger, J., and Kim, J.
- Subjects
Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases - Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an ongoing global pandemic that has affected nearly 600 million people to date across the world. While COVID-19 is primarily a respiratory illness, cardiac injury is also known to occur. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is uniquely capable of characterizing myocardial tissue properties in-vivo, enabling insights into the pattern and degree of cardiac injury. The reported prevalence of myocardial involvement identified by CMR in the context of COVID-19 infection among previously hospitalized patients ranges from 26 to 60%. Variations in the reported prevalence of myocardial involvement may result from differing patient populations (e.g. differences in severity of illness) and the varying intervals between acute infection and CMR evaluation. Standardized methodologies in image acquisition, analysis, interpretation, and reporting of CMR abnormalities across would likely improve concordance between studies. This consensus document by the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR) provides recommendations on CMR imaging and reporting metrics towards the goal of improved standardization and uniform data acquisition and analytic approaches when performing CMR in patients with COVID-19 infection.
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- 2023
4. 420 Cardiac Investigation Trends Among Primary Care Physicians: A Paradigm Shift
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Ni, T., primary, Afgani, F., additional, Brenna, C., additional, Hanneman, K., additional, Patel, N., additional, and Nguyen, E., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. IMPACT OF CORONARY ARTERY CALCIUM SCORING ON DOWNSTREAM CARDIAC TESTING AND OUTCOMES
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Lin, E., Alonzo, R., Fang, J., Chu, A., Elhadad, L., Basque, S., Wijeysundera, H., Hanneman, K., Nguyen, E., Farkouh, M., Udell, J., and Roifman, I.
- Published
- 2023
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6. The protective role of sunscreen and antioxidants on ultraviolet-induced cutaneous immune suppression: 797
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Scull, H M, Hanneman, K, Hsia, A, Matsui, M, Maes, D, Cooper, K D, and Baron, E D
- Published
- 2005
7. Effect of topical vitamin D analog on contact hypersensitivity in vivo: 796
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Hanneman, K, Scull, H M, Cooper, K D, and Baron, E D
- Published
- 2005
8. Peritransplant use of NUVB phototherapy does not improve allogeneic stem cell transplantation outcome.: 255
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Camouse, M, Yuksel, M, Hsia, A, Casse, B K, Hanneman, K, Baron, E D, Cooper, B W, Lazarus, H, Gerson, S L, Laughlin, M J, Cooper, K D, Gilliam, A, and Koc, O N
- Published
- 2005
9. PROGRESSION OF LATE GADOLINIUM ENHANCEMENT IN HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY
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Habib, M., primary, Adler, A., additional, Hanneman, K., additional, Fardfini, K., additional, Rakowski, H., additional, and Chan, R., additional
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- 2018
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10. Congenital heart disease assessment with 4D flow MRI
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Vasanawala, SS, Hanneman, K, Alley, MT, and Hsiao, A
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Heart Defects, Congenital ,cardiac ,Cardiac-Gated Imaging Techniques ,4D flow ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,time-resolved ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,phase contrast ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Imaging ,Congenital ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Computer-Assisted ,Engineering ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Image Interpretation ,Heart Defects ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Image Enhancement ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Cine ,Three-Dimensional ,Physical Sciences ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Algorithms - Abstract
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. With improvements in surgical and medical management, patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) are often living well into adulthood. MRI provides critical data for diagnosis and monitoring of these patients, yielding information on cardiac anatomy, blood flow, and cardiac function. Though historically these exams have been complex and lengthy, four-dimensional (4D) flow is emerging as a single fast technique for comprehensive assessment of CHD. The 4D flow consists of a volumetric time-resolved acquisition that is gated to the cardiac cycle, providing a time-varying vector field of blood flow as well as registered anatomic images. In this article, we provide an overview of MRI evaluation of congenital heart disease by means of example of three relatively common representative conditions: tetralogy of Fallot, aortic coarctation, and anomalous pulmonary venous drainage. Then 4D flow data acquisition, data correction, and postprocessing techniques are reviewed. We conclude with several examples that highlight the comprehensive nature of the evaluation of congenital heart disease with 4D flow. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2015;42:870-886.
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- 2015
11. Reducing Over Investigation of Women with Stable Chest Pain at Low/Intermediate Risk for Coronary Artery Disease: The Rationale for the RESOLVE Trial
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Nguyen, E., Lemieux, V., Udell, J., Hanneman, K., Bhatia, S., Ivers, N., and Harvey, P.
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- 2018
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12. Experimental Investigation of Base Flow Buffeting on the ARIANE 5 Launcher Using High Speed PIV
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Schrijer, F., Andrea Sciacchitano, fulvio scarano, Hanneman, K., Pallegoix, J. F., Maseland, J., and Schwane, R.
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Transonic buffeting ,Unsteady flows ,Rocket base flow ,High-speed particle image velocimetry (PIV) - Published
- 2011
13. Errors, near misses and adverse events in the emergency department: what can patients tell us?
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Friedman SM, Provan D, Moore S, and Hanneman K
- Abstract
Objective: We sought to determine whether patients or their families could identify adverse events in the emergency department (ED), to characterize patient reports of errors and to compare patient reports to events recorded by health care providers.Methods: This was a prospective cohort study in a quaternary care inner city teaching hospital with approximately 40 000 annual visits. ED patients were recruited for participation in a standardized interview within 24 hours of ED discharge and a follow-up interview 3-7 days after discharge. Responses regarding events were tabulated and compared with physician and nurse notations in the medical record and hospital event reporting system.Results: Of 292 eligible patients, 201 (69%) were interviewed within 24 hours of ED discharge, and 143 (71% of interviewees) underwent a follow-up interview 3-7 days after discharge. Interviewees did not differ from the base ED population in terms of age, sex or language. Analysis of patient interviews identified 10 adverse events (5% incident rate; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.41%-8.96%), 8 near misses (4% incident rate; 95% CI 1.73%-7.69%) and no medical errors. Of the 10 adverse events, 6 (60%) were characterized as preventable (2 raters; kappa = 0.78, standard error [SE] 0.20; 95% CI 0.39-1.00; p = 0.01). Adverse events were primarily related to delayed or inadequate analgesia. Only 4 out of 8 (50%) near misses were intercepted by hospital personnel. The secondary interview elicited 2 out of 10 adverse events and 3 out of 8 near misses that had not been identified in the primary interview. No designation (0 out of 10) of an adverse event was recorded in the ED medical record or in the confidential hospital event reporting system.Conclusion: ED patients can identify adverse events affecting their care. Moreover, many of these events are not recorded in the medical record. Engaging patients and their family members in identification of errors may enhance patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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14. The impact of conjugated linoleic acid on immunity
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Ruth, M. R., Hanneman, K. A., and Catherine Field
15. Tertiary gold bearing gravel at Livengood, Alaska.
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Karl S.M., Ager T.A., Hanneman K., Teller S.D., Karl S.M., Ager T.A., Hanneman K., and Teller S.D.
- Abstract
Pollen analysis of a sample of organic-rich silt from gold-bearing gravel suggests a late Tertiary date as opposed to Quaternary as previously thought., Pollen analysis of a sample of organic-rich silt from gold-bearing gravel suggests a late Tertiary date as opposed to Quaternary as previously thought.
16. Predictive value of cardiac magnetic resonance for the diagnosis and surgical relief of pericardial constriction
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Hanneman Kate, Moshonov Hadas, Wald Rachel M, Nguyen Elsie T, Connelly Kim A, and Crean Andrew M
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2013
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17. Worldwide Disparities in Recovery of Cardiac Testing 1 Year Into COVID-19
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Andrew J. Einstein, Cole Hirschfeld, Michelle C. Williams, Joao V. Vitola, Nathan Better, Todd C. Villines, Rodrigo Cerci, Leslee J. Shaw, Andrew D. Choi, Sharmila Dorbala, Ganesan Karthikeyan, Bin Lu, Valentin Sinitsyn, Alexey A. Ansheles, Takashi Kudo, Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci, Bjarne Linde Nørgaard, Pál Maurovich-Horvat, Roxana Campisi, Elisa Milan, Lizette Louw, Adel H. Allam, Mona Bhatia, Lorenzo Sewanan, Eli Malkovskiy, Yosef Cohen, Michael Randazzo, Jagat Narula, Olga Morozova, Thomas N.B. Pascual, Yaroslav Pynda, Maurizio Dondi, Diana Paez, Gerd Hinterleitner, Yao Lu, Zhuoran Xu, Cole B. Hirschfeld, Ikenna Erinne, Mrinali Shetty, Andrew Choi, Juan Lopez-Mattei, Purvi Parwani, Artan Goda, Ervina Shirka, Salah Bouyoucef, Lydia Chelghoum, Farouk Mansouri, Abdelkader Medjahedi, Qais Naili, Mokhtar Ridouh, Diego Alasia, Lucia Alberghina, Natalia Aramayo, Diego Buchara, Franco Gabriel Busso, Jose Javier Bustos Rivadero, Jorge Camilletti, Hugo Campanelli, Ricardo Belisario Castro, Mariana Daicz, Horacio del Riego, Laura Dragonetti, Diego Echazarreta, Juan Erriest, Fernando Faccio, Adolfo Facello, Hugo Gallegos, Ricardo Geronazzo, Horacio Glait, Victor Hasbani, Victor Jäger, Julio Manuel Lewkowicz, Jose Lotti, Neiva Maciel, Osvaldo Masoli, Edgardo Mastrovito, Maria Medus, Maria Fernanda Merani, Susana Molteni, Marcos Montecinos, Gustavo Parisi, Claudio Pereyra Sueldo, Diego Perez de Arenaza, Luis Quintana, Alejandro Radzinschi, Marcela Redruello, Marina Rodríguez, Horacio Rojas, Arturo Romero Acuña, Daniel Schere, Sonia Traverso, Gustavo Vazquez, Susana Zeffiro, Mari Sakanyan, Scott Beuzeville, Raef Boktor, Michael Crowley, D'Arne Downie, Girish Dwivedi, Barry Elison, Omar Farouque, Kim Jasper, Subodh Joshi, Joseph Lee, Kenneth Lee, Elaine Lui, Peter Mcconachie, Joanne Meaker, Dee Nandurkar, Johanne Neill, Edward O'Rourke, Patricia O'Sullivan, George Pandos, Manuja Premaratne, David Prior, Natalie Rutherford, Connor Saunders, Kim Taubman, Andrew Tauro, Andrew Taylor, James Theuerle, Paul Thomas, Jonathan Tow, Anthony Upton, Shankar Vamadevan, Victor Wayne, Eva Alina Wegner, David Wong, John Younger, Dietrich Beitzke, Gudrun Feuchtner, Oliver Sommer, Konrad Weiss, Natallia Maroz-Vadalazhskaya, Uladzimir Tserakhau, Filip Homans, Caroline M. Van De Heyning, Raúl Araujo, Valentina Soldat-Stankovic, Sinisa Stankovic, Augusto Almeida, Carlos Anselmi, Guilherme S.A. Azevedo, Marcio Sommer Bittencourt, Diego Bromfman Pianta, Estevan Cabeda, Lara Carreira, Igor Coelho, Fernando de Amorim Fernandes, Andrea de Lorenzo, Roberta Delgado, Fernanda Erthal, Fabio Fernandes, Juliano Fernandes, Thiago Ferreira de Souza, Murilo Foppa, Wilson Furlan Matos Alves, Cibele Gontijo, Ilan Gottlieb, Gabriel Grossman, Maria Helena Albernaz Siqueira, Cesar Higa Nomura, Katia Hiromoto Koga, Ronaldo Lima, Rafael Lopes, Hugo Humberto Marçal Filho, Paulo Masiero, Luiz Mastrocola, Maria Eduarda Menezes de Siqueira, Claudio Mesquita, Danilo Naves, Filipe Penna, Ibraim Pinto, Thércio Rocha, Juliana Leal Rocha, Alfredo Rodrigues, Leila Salioni, Adelina Sanches, Marcelo Santos, Leonardo Sara Da Silva, Paulo Schvartzman, Cristina Sebastião Matushita, Tiago Senra, Marcelo Silva, Carlos Eduardo Soares, Bernardo Spiro, Carlos Eduardo Suaide Silva, Rafael Torres, Guilherme Urpia Monte, Andrea Vilela, Alexandre Volney Villa, Joao Vitola, Themissa Voss, Roberto Waltrick, Marcello Zapparoli, Hamid Naseer, Marina Garcheva-Tsacheva, Tiémégna Florence Ouattara, Sarameth Thou, Soley Varoeun, Gad Abikhzer, Rob Beanlands, Michael Chetrit, Dominique Dabreo, Carole Dennie, Matthias Friedrich, Mohmmed Nassoh Hafez, Kate Hanneman, Robert Miller, Anastasia Oikonomou, Idan Roifman, Gary Small, Vikas Tandon, Adwait Trivedi, James White, Katherine Zukotynski, Rita Alay, Carmen Concha, Teresa Massardo, Pedro Abad, Kelly Anzola, Harold Arturo, Luis Benitez, Alberto Cadena, Carlos Caicedo Zamudio, Antonio Calderón, Claudia T. Gutierrez Villamil, Claudia Jaimes, Juan L. Londono, Nelson Lopez, Sonia Merlano-Gaitan, Ramon Murgieitio-Cabrera, Manuel Valencia, Damiana Vergel, Alejandro Zuluaga Santamaria, Felix Solis, Tonci Batinic, Maja Franceschi, Maja Hrabak Paar, Marina Prpic, Cuba: Juan Felipe Batista, Lazaro Omar Cabrera, Amalia Peix, Yamilé Peña, Luis Manuel Rochela Vázquez, Ioannis Ntalas, Milan Kaminek, Vladimir Kincl, Otto Lang, Jawdat Abdulla, Morten Bøttcher, Martin Busk, Uka Geisler, Lars C. Gormsen, Nicolaj Hansson, Søren Hess, Jens Hove, Lars Thorbjoern Jensen, Magnus T. Jensen, Kristian Hay Kragholm, Bjarne L. Nørgaard, Kristian Øvrehus, Jan Rasmussen, Niels Peter Rønnow Sand, Hanne Sondergaard, Tomas Zaremba, Herwin Speckter, Nelson Amores, Mayra Sanchez Velez, Taghreed Abd Alrahman, Sherif Abd Elsamad, Alia Abdelfattah, Adel Allam, Sameh Elkaffas, Mona Hassan, Elshaymaa Hussein, Ahmed Ibrahim, Ahmed Kandeel, Mohamed Mandour Ali, Mahmoud Shaaban, Camila Flores, Verónica Vanesa Gómez Leiva, Anita Liiver, Martti Larikka, Valtteri Uusitalo, Denis Agostini, Clothilde Berger, Matthieu Dietz, Fabien Hyafil, Mickaël Ohana, Kevin Prigent, Hamza Regaieg, Laure Sarda-Mantel, Darach O. H-Ici, Harold Ayetey, George Angelidis, Christina Fragkaki, Chrysoula Fragkiadaki, Panagiotis Georgoulias, Maria Koutelou, Elena Kyrozi, Niki Lama, Vassilis Prassopoulos, Michael Spartalis, Theodora Zaglavara, Carla Gonzalez, Goleat Gutierrez, Alejandro Maldonado, Yassine Martinez, Attila Kovács, Bálint Szilveszter, Nilesh Banthia, Vivek Bhat, Partha Choudhury, Vijay Sai Chowdekar, Johann Christopher, Tushar Garg, Naresh Kumar Goyal, Ripen Kumar Gupta, Abhishek Gupta, Julie Hephzibah, Shashank Jain, Jesu Krupa, Parveen Kumar, Sukriti Kumar, Arati Lalchandani, Animesh Mishra, Vivaswan Dutt Mishra, Parul Mohan, Ahmad Ozair, Shivani Pandey, Ramanathapuram Parameswaran, Chetan Patel, Tapan Patel, Shivani Patel, Leena Robinson Vimala, Dr Pradosh Kumar Sarangi, Shantanu Sengupta, Arvind Sethi, Amit Sharma, Awadhesh Kumar Sharma, Punit Sharma, Apurva Shrigiriwar, Santosh Singh, Harpreet Singh, Ashwani Sood, Atul Verma, Ajay Vyas, Erwin Affandi Soeriadi, Edison Bun, Febby Hutomo, Hilman Syawaluddin, Ryan Yudistiro, Amjed Albadr, Majid Assadi, Farshad Emami, Alireza Emami-Ardekani, Saeed Farzanehfar, Ramezan Jafari, Reyhaneh Manafi-Farid, Maryam Tajik, Yoav Arnson, Shmuel Fuchs, Ronen Goldkorn, John Kennedy, Marina Leitman, Aryeh Shalev, Wanda Acampa, Domenico Albano, Pierpaolo Alongi, Gaspare Arnone, Roberta Assante, Anna Baritussio, Matteo Bauckneht, Francesco Bianco, Rachele Bonfiglioli, Francesco Bovenzi, Isabella Bruno, Andrea Bruno, Elena Busnardo, Elena Califaretti, Roberta Casoni, Vittorio Censullo, Franca Chierichetti, Marcello Chiocchi, Corrado Cittanti, Alberto Clemente, Alberto Cuocolo, Maria Luisa De Rimini, Giuseppe De Vincentis, Veronica Della Tommasina, Santo Dellegrottaglie, Paola Anna Erba, Laura Evangelista, Lara Faggi, Evelina Faragasso, Luigia Florimonte, Viviana Frantellizzi, Marco Gatti, Angela Gaudiano, Fabrizia Gelardi, Alberto Gerali, Alessia Gimelli, Marco Guglielmo, Lucia Leccisotti, Riccardo Liga, Carlo Liguori, Giampiero Longo, Margherita Maffione, Claudio Marcassa, Giovanni Matassa, Donato Mele, Luca Mircoli, Andrea Paccagnella, Sara Pacella, Federica Padovano, Dario Pellegrini, Valeria Pergola, Luca Pugliese, Natale Quartuccio, Lucia Rampin, Fabrizio Ricci, Giuseppe Rubini, Vincenzo Russo, Gianmario Sambuceti, Alessandra Scatteia, Roberto Sciagrà, Gianluca Spidalieri, Antonella Stefanelli, Carlo Tedeschi, Guido Ventroni, Dainia Baugh, Ernest Madu, Tadao Aikawa, Hiroshi Asano, Shinichiro Fujimoto, Koichiro Fujise, Yoshimitsu Fukushima, Kae Fukuyama, Yasutaka Ichikawa, Reiko Ideguchi, Nobuo Iguchi, Masamichi Imai, Hayato Ishimura, Satoshi Isobe, Kimiteru Ito, Yu Izawa, Toshiaki Kadokami, Tokuo Kasai, Takao Kato, Takashi Kawamoto, Shigeru Kiryu, Shinichiro Kumita, Osamu Manabe, Hirotaka Maruno, Naoya Matsumoto, Masao Miyagawa, Masao Moroi, Shigeki Nagamachi, Kenichi Nakajima, Ryo Nakazato, Mamoru Nanasato, Masanao Naya, Takashi Norikane, Yasutoshi Ohta, Yoichi Otomi, Hideki Otsuka, Noriko Oyama-Manabe, Masaki Saito, Masayoshi Sarai, Junichi Sato, Daisuke Sato, Shinya Shiraishi, Kentaro Takanami, Kazuya Takehana, Yasuyo Taniguchi, Hiroki Teragawa, Nobuo Tomizawa, Kyoko Umeji, Yasushi Wakabayashi, Shinichiro Yamada, Shinya Yamazaki, Tatsuya Yoneyama, Mohammad Rawashdeh, Tairkhan Dautov, Khalid Makhdomi, Mostafa Abass, Masoud Garashi, Qaisar Siraj, Marika Kalnina, Mohamad Haidar, Renata Komiagiene, Giedre Kviecinskiene, Donatas Vajauskas, Noor Khairiah A. Karim, Mady Doucoure, Luise Reichmuth, Anthony Samuel, Mohamed Lemine Dieng, Ambedhkar Shantaram Naojee, Estrella Aguilera Hernandez, Cesar Rene Alducin Tellez, Erick Alexánderson-Rosas, Erika Barragan, Manuel Cabada, Daniel Calderón, Isabel Carvajal-Juarez, José Esparza, Manlio Gerardo Gama-Moreno, Virginia Garcia Quinto, Nelsy Coromoto Gonzalez, Mary Carmen Herrera-Zarza, Aloha Meave, Jesus Gregorio Medina Verdugo, Gabriela Melendez, Rafael Humberto Morales Murguia, Carlos Salvador Navarro Quiroz, Mario Ornelas, Andres Preciado-Anaya, Oscar Ulises Preciado-Gutiérrez, Adriana Puente, Aristóteles Ramírez Salazar, Sandra Graciela Rosales Uvera, Sandra Rosales-Uvera, Jose Antonio Serna Macias, Lilia Sierra-Galan, Lilia M. Sierra-Galan, Juan Carlos Tirado Alderete, Enrique Vallejo, Marc Faraggi, Erdenechimeg Sereegotov, Nouzha Ben Rais, Nadia Ismaili Alaoui, Thiri Kyiphyu, Su Thet Oo, Soe Myat Win, Htin Zar, Ram Ghimire, Madhu Neupane, Andor Glaudemans, Riemer Slart, Derk Verschure, Berry Allen, John Edmond, Clare Mckenzie, Stuart Tie, Niels Van Pelt, Kirsten Worthington, Calum Young, Idrissa Adamou Soli, Shehu Kana, Uchenna Onubogu, Mahmoud Sani, Anders Tjellaug Bråten, Arve Jørgensen, Hanne-Elin Vassbotn, Humoud Al Dhuhli, Zabah Jawa, Naima Tag, Shazia Fatima, Muhammad Babar Imran, Muhammad Numair Younis, Mohammad Saadullah, Yariela Herrera Malo, Dora Lenturut-Katal, Manuel Castillo, José Ortellado, Afroza Akhter, F. Aaysha Cader, Raihan Hussain, Saidur Rahman Khan, Tapati Mandal, Faria Nasreen, Yunqiang An, Dianbo Cao, Lianggeng Gong, Yang Hou, Chongfu Jia, Tao Li, Caiying Li, Hui Liu, Wenya Liu, Jinkang Liu, Ming-Yen Ng, Heshui Shi, Chunxiang Tang, Ximing Wang, Zhaoqian Wang, Yining Wang, Jiang Wu, Yan Yi, Li Yuan, Tong Zhang, Longjiang Zhang, Edith Chavez, Carlos Cruz, Christian Llontop, Rosanna Morales, Paz Abrihan, Asela Bustos-Barroso, Michele Duldulao-Ogbac, Christopher Eduarte, Jerry Obaldo, Alvin Quinon, Belinda San Juan, Carlo Joe San Juan, Marie Rhiamar Sauler-Gomez, Mila Uy, Magdalena Kostkiewicz, Jolanta Kunikowska, Anna Teresinska, Tomasz Urbanik, Nuno Bettencourt, Ricardo Fontes-Carvalho, Cristina Gavina, Lino Gonçalves, Filipe Macedo, Nuno Moreno, Carla Sousa, Ana Teresa Timoteo, Maria João Vidigal, Mahmoud Al Heidous, Subramaniyan Ramanathan, Samer Arnous, Said Aytani, Angela Byrne, Tadhg Gleeson, David Kerins, Julie O'Brien, Ji-In Bang, Henry Bom, Miju Cheon, Gi Jeong Cheon, Sang-Geon Cho, Chae Moon Hong, Yong Hyu Jeong, Won Jun Kang, Yeon-Koo Kang, Ji-Young Kim, So Won Oh, Young So, Ho-Chun Song, Kyoung Sook Won, Soo Woong Yoo, Irena Mitevska, Marija Vavlukis, Barbara Gužic Salobir, Monika Štalc, Theodora Benedek, Marian Pop, Claudiu Stan, Alexey Ansheles, Olga Dariy, Nina Gagarina, Irina Itskovich, Anatoliy Karalkin, Alexander Kokov, Gulya Marina, Ekaterina Migunova, Viktor Pospelov, Daria Ryzhkova, Guzaliya Sayfullina, Vladimir Sergienko, Irina Shurupova, Margarita Vakhromeeva, Nailia Valiullina, Konstantin Zavadovsky, Kirill Zhuravlev, Rami Abazid, Turki Al Garni, Mirvat Alasnag, Ahmed Aljizeeri, Hamid Amer, Ahmad Amro, Hesham Hamdy, Osama Smettei, Dragana Sobic Saranovic, Marina Vlajkovic, Felix Keng, Jason See, Zuzana Berecova, Jana Polakova Mistinova, Osayande Evbuomwan, Nerisha Govender, Jonathan Hack, Bawinile Hadebe, Khanyisile Hlongwa, Mitchell Kaplan, Hoosen Lakhi, Katarina Milos, Moshe Modiselle, Stuart More, Ntanganedzeni Muambadzi, Leonie Scholtz, Manuel Barreiro-Perez, Isabel Blanco, Jordi Broncano, Alicia Camarero, Irene Casáns-Tormo, Javier De Haro, Albert Flotats, Elia García, Ceferino Gutierrez Mendiguchia, Amelia Jimenez-Heffernan, Ruben Leta, Javier Lopez Diaz, Luis Lumbreras Vega, Ana Manovel-Sánchez, Amparo Martinez Monzonis, Bianca Patrut, Virginia Pubul, Ricardo Ruano Perez, Nahla Zeidan, Damayanthi Nanayakkara, Ahmed Suliman, Henrik Engblom, Mustafa Murtadha, Ellen Ostenfeld, Magnus Simonsson, Hatem Alkadhi, Ronny Ralf Buechel, Peter Burger, Christoph Gräni, Christel Kamani, Nadine Kawel-Böhm, Bernd Klaeser, Robert Manka, John Prior, Tawika Kaewchur, Benjapa Khiewvan, Arpakorn Kositwattanarerk, Sirianong Namwongprom, Tanyaluck Thientunyakit, Haluk Burcak Sayman, Mahmut Yüksel, Mugisha Julius Sebikali, Emmy Okello, Pavlo Korol, Iryna Noverko, Maryna Satyr, Tahir Ahmad, Khaled Alfakih, Ivo Andrade, Susan Buckingham, Anda Bularga, John-Paul Carpenter, Graham Cole, David Cusack, Sarojini David, Patrick Davis, Timothy Fairbairn, Arjun Ghosh, Prasad Guntur Ramkumar, Mark Hamilton, Faisal Haque, Benjamin Hudson, Annette Johnstone, V.J. Karthikeyan, Mike Kay, Mohammad Ali Khan, Jamie Kitt, Chen Sheng Low, Elisa Mcalindon, David Mccreavy, Brian Morrissey, Manish Motwani, Dilip Na, Edward Nicol, Dilip Patel, Jonathan Rodrigues, Chris Rofe, Rebecca Schofield, Thomas Semple, Azeem Sheikh, Apurva Sinha, Deepak Subedi, William Topping, Katherine Tweed, Stephen Richard Underwood, Jonathan Weir-Mccall, Hamed Zuhairy, Taimur Abbasi, Shady Abohashem, Sandra Abramson, Mouaz Al-Mallah, Mohan Ashok Kumar, Mallory Balmer-Swain, Daniel Berman, Adam Bernheim, Sabha Bhatti, Robert Biederman, Erik Bieging, Scott Bingham, Stephen Bloom, Sean Blue, Andressa Borges, Kelley Branch, Paco Bravo, Sujatha Buddhe, Matthew Budoff, Renée Bullock-Palmer, Michael Cahill, Candace Candela, Jane Cao, Saurav Chatterjee, Yiannis Chatzizisis, Nita Ray Chaudhuri, Michael Cheezum, Anjali Chelliah, Tiffany Chen, Marcus Chen, Lu Chen, Aalap Chokshi, Jina Chung, Sorin Danciu, William DeSisto, Michael Dilorenzo, Rami Doukky, William Duvall, Maros Ferencik, Cameron Foster, Anthon Fuisz, Michael Gannon, David German, Myron Gerson, Jeffrey Geske, Fadi Hage, Agha Haider, Sofia Haider, Yasmin Hamirani, Karen Hassen, Robert Hendel, Jacqueline Henkel, Stephen Horgan, Mark Hyun, Rajesh Janardhanan, Scott Jerome, Dinesh Kalra, David Kassop, Mona Kinkhabwala, George Kinzfogl, Bernard Koch, Lynne Koweek, Joseph Krepp, Younghoon Kwon, Jay Layer, John Lesser, Steve Leung, Bernadette Lisske, Kathleen Magurany, Jeremy Markowitz, Brenda Mccullough, Azita Moalemi, Chanan Moffitt, Juan Montanez, Warren Moore, Shamil Morayati, Mahmud Mossa-Basha, Zorana Mrsic, Venkatesh Murthy, Prashant Nagpal, Katarina Nelson, Prabhjot Nijjar, Rupal O’Quinn, Edward Passen, Toral Patel, Pravin Patil, Amit Pursnani, Nancy Quachang, Mark Rabbat, Pragya Ranjan, Patricia Rodriguez Lozano, Mary Schemmer, Rebecca Seifried, Nishant Shah, Amee Shah, Sujata Shanbhag, Gaurav Sharma, Robert Skotnicki, Michael Sobczak, Prem Soman, Vincent Sorrell, Monvadi Srichai, Jim Streeter, Leah Strickland, Suliman Suliman, Naghmeh Tebyanian, Dustin Thomas, Randall Thompson, Seth Uretsky, Srikanth Vallurupalli, Marian Vandyck-Acquah, Vikas Verma, Todd Villines, Joseph Weinstein, David Wolinsky, Karolina Zareba, Michael Zgaljardic, Mario Beretta, Rodolfo Ferrando, Miguel Kapitan, Fernando Mut, Omoa Djuraev, Gulnora Rozikhodjaeva, Luisa Vera, Binh Duong Duc, Xuan Canh Nguyen, Phuoc Minh Hiep Nguyen, Translational Immunology Groningen (TRIGR), Cardiovascular Centre (CVC), Basic and Translational Research and Imaging Methodology Development in Groningen (BRIDGE), Molecular Pharmacology, Drug Design, Einstein, A, Hirschfeld, C, Williams, M, Vitola, J, Better, N, Villines, T, Cerci, R, Shaw, L, Choi, A, Dorbala, S, Karthikeyan, G, Lu, B, Sinitsyn, V, Ansheles, A, Kudo, T, Bucciarelli-Ducci, C, Norgaard, B, Maurovich-Horvat, P, Campisi, R, Milan, E, Louw, L, Allam, A, Bhatia, M, Sewanan, L, Malkovskiy, E, Cohen, Y, Randazzo, M, Narula, J, Morozova, O, Pascual, T, Pynda, Y, Dondi, M, Paez, D, Hinterleitner, G, Lu, Y, Xu, Z, Erinne, I, Shetty, M, Lopez-Mattei, J, Parwani, P, Goda, A, Shirka, E, Bouyoucef, S, Chelghoum, L, Mansouri, F, Medjahedi, A, Naili, Q, Ridouh, M, Alasia, D, Alberghina, L, Aramayo, N, Buchara, D, Busso, F, Bustos Rivadero, J, Camilletti, J, Campanelli, H, Castro, R, Daicz, M, del Riego, H, Dragonetti, L, Echazarreta, D, Erriest, J, Faccio, F, Facello, A, Gallegos, H, Geronazzo, R, Glait, H, Hasbani, V, Jager, V, Lewkowicz, J, Lotti, J, Maciel, N, Masoli, O, Mastrovito, E, Medus, M, Merani, M, Molteni, S, Montecinos, M, Parisi, G, Sueldo, C, Perez de Arenaza, D, Quintana, L, Radzinschi, A, Redruello, M, Rodriguez, M, Rojas, H, Acuna, A, Schere, D, Traverso, S, Vazquez, G, Zeffiro, S, Sakanyan, M, Beuzeville, S, Boktor, R, Crowley, M, Downie, D, Dwivedi, G, Elison, B, Farouque, O, Jasper, K, Joshi, S, Lee, J, Lee, K, Lui, E, Mcconachie, P, Meaker, J, Nandurkar, D, Neill, J, O'Rourke, E, O'Sullivan, P, Pandos, G, Premaratne, M, Prior, D, Rutherford, N, Saunders, C, Taubman, K, Tauro, A, Taylor, A, Theuerle, J, Thomas, P, Tow, J, Upton, A, Vamadevan, S, Wayne, V, Wegner, E, Wong, D, Younger, J, Beitzke, D, Feuchtner, G, Sommer, O, Weiss, K, Maroz-Vadalazhskaya, N, Tserakhau, U, Homans, F, Van De Heyning, C, Araujo, R, Soldat-Stankovic, V, Stankovic, S, Almeida, A, Anselmi, C, Azevedo, G, Bittencourt, M, Pianta, D, Cabeda, E, Carreira, L, Coelho, I, de Amorim Fernandes, F, de Lorenzo, A, Delgado, R, Erthal, F, Fernandes, F, Fernandes, J, Ferreira de Souza, T, Foppa, M, Matos Alves, W, Gontijo, C, Gottlieb, I, Grossman, G, Albernaz Siqueira, M, Nomura, C, Koga, K, Lima, R, Lopes, R, Marcal Filho, H, Masiero, P, Mastrocola, L, Menezes de Siqueira, M, Mesquita, C, Naves, D, Penna, F, Pinto, I, Rocha, T, Rocha, J, Rodrigues, A, Salioni, L, Sanches, A, Santos, M, Da Silva, L, Schvartzman, P, Matushita, C, Senra, T, Silva, M, Soares, C, Spiro, B, Suaide Silva, C, Torres, R, Monte, G, Vilela, A, Villa, A, Voss, T, Waltrick, R, Zapparoli, M, Naseer, H, Garcheva-Tsacheva, M, Ouattara, T, Thou, S, Varoeun, S, Abikhzer, G, Beanlands, R, Chetrit, M, Dabreo, D, Dennie, C, Friedrich, M, Hafez, M, Hanneman, K, Miller, R, Oikonomou, A, Roifman, I, Small, G, Tandon, V, Trivedi, A, White, J, Zukotynski, K, Alay, R, Concha, C, Massardo, T, Abad, P, Anzola, K, Arturo, H, Benitez, L, Cadena, A, Zamudio, C, Calderon, A, Gutierrez Villamil, C, Jaimes, C, Londono, J, Lopez, N, Merlano-Gaitan, S, Murgieitio-Cabrera, R, Valencia, M, Vergel, D, Santamaria, A, Solis, F, Batinic, T, Franceschi, M, Paar, M, Prpic, M, Felipe Batista, C, Cabrera, L, Peix, A, Pena, Y, Rochela Vazquez, L, Ntalas, I, Kaminek, M, Kincl, V, Lang, O, Abdulla, J, Bottcher, M, Busk, M, Geisler, U, Gormsen, L, Hansson, N, Hess, S, Hove, J, Jensen, L, Jensen, M, Kragholm, K, Ovrehus, K, Rasmussen, J, Ronnow Sand, N, Sondergaard, H, Zaremba, T, Speckter, H, Amores, N, Velez, M, Alrahman, T, Elsamad, S, Abdelfattah, A, Elkaffas, S, Hassan, M, Hussein, E, Ibrahim, A, Kandeel, A, Ali, M, Shaaban, M, Flores, C, Gomez Leiva, V, Liiver, A, Larikka, M, Uusitalo, V, Agostini, D, Berger, C, Dietz, M, Hyafil, F, Ohana, M, Prigent, K, Regaieg, H, Sarda-Mantel, L, H-Ici, D, Ayetey, H, Angelidis, G, Fragkaki, C, Fragkiadaki, C, Georgoulias, P, Koutelou, M, Kyrozi, E, Lama, N, Prassopoulos, V, Spartalis, M, Zaglavara, T, Gonzalez, C, Gutierrez, G, Maldonado, A, Martinez, Y, Kovacs, A, Szilveszter, B, Banthia, N, Bhat, V, Choudhury, P, Chowdekar, V, Christopher, J, Garg, T, Goyal, N, Gupta, R, Gupta, A, Hephzibah, J, Jain, S, Krupa, J, Kumar, P, Kumar, S, Lalchandani, A, Mishra, A, Mishra, V, Mohan, P, Ozair, A, Pandey, S, Parameswaran, R, Patel, C, Patel, T, Patel, S, Vimala, L, Kumar Sarangi, D, Sengupta, S, Sethi, A, Sharma, A, Sharma, P, Shrigiriwar, A, Singh, S, Singh, H, Sood, A, Verma, A, Vyas, A, Soeriadi, E, Bun, E, Hutomo, F, Syawaluddin, H, Yudistiro, R, Albadr, A, Assadi, M, Emami, F, Emami-Ardekani, A, Farzanehfar, S, Jafari, R, Manafi-Farid, R, Tajik, M, Arnson, Y, Fuchs, S, Goldkorn, R, Kennedy, J, Leitman, M, Shalev, A, Acampa, W, Albano, D, Alongi, P, Arnone, G, Assante, R, Baritussio, A, Bauckneht, M, Bianco, F, Bonfiglioli, R, Bovenzi, F, Bruno, I, Bruno, A, Busnardo, E, Califaretti, E, Casoni, R, Censullo, V, Chierichetti, F, Chiocchi, M, Cittanti, C, Clemente, A, Cuocolo, A, De Rimini, M, De Vincentis, G, Della Tommasina, V, Dellegrottaglie, S, Erba, P, Evangelista, L, Faggi, L, Faragasso, E, Florimonte, L, Frantellizzi, V, Gatti, M, Gaudiano, A, Gelardi, F, Gerali, A, Gimelli, A, Guglielmo, M, Leccisotti, L, Liga, R, Liguori, C, Longo, G, Maffione, M, Marcassa, C, Matassa, G, Mele, D, Mircoli, L, Paccagnella, A, Pacella, S, Padovano, F, Pellegrini, D, Pergola, V, Pugliese, L, Quartuccio, N, Rampin, L, Ricci, F, Rubini, G, Russo, V, Sambuceti, G, Scatteia, A, Sciagra, R, Spidalieri, G, Stefanelli, A, Tedeschi, C, Ventroni, G, Baugh, D, Madu, E, Aikawa, T, Asano, H, Fujimoto, S, Fujise, K, Fukushima, Y, Fukuyama, K, Ichikawa, Y, Ideguchi, R, Iguchi, N, Imai, M, Ishimura, H, Isobe, S, Ito, K, Izawa, Y, Kadokami, T, Kasai, T, Kato, T, Kawamoto, T, Kiryu, S, Kumita, S, Manabe, O, Maruno, H, Matsumoto, N, Miyagawa, M, Moroi, M, Nagamachi, S, Nakajima, K, Nakazato, R, Nanasato, M, Naya, M, Norikane, T, Ohta, Y, Otomi, Y, Otsuka, H, Oyama-Manabe, N, Saito, M, Sarai, M, Sato, J, Sato, D, Shiraishi, S, Takanami, K, Takehana, K, Taniguchi, Y, Teragawa, H, Tomizawa, N, Umeji, K, Wakabayashi, Y, Yamada, S, Yamazaki, S, Yoneyama, T, Rawashdeh, M, Dautov, T, Makhdomi, K, Abass, M, Garashi, M, Siraj, Q, Kalnina, M, Haidar, M, Komiagiene, R, Kviecinskiene, G, Vajauskas, D, Karim, N, Doucoure, M, Reichmuth, L, Samuel, A, Dieng, M, Naojee, A, Hernandez, E, Alducin Tellez, C, Alexanderson-Rosas, E, Barragan, E, Cabada, M, Calderon, D, Carvajal-Juarez, I, Esparza, J, Gama-Moreno, M, Quinto, V, Gonzalez, N, Herrera-Zarza, M, Meave, A, Medina Verdugo, J, Melendez, G, Morales Murguia, R, Navarro Quiroz, C, Ornelas, M, Preciado-Anaya, A, Preciado-Gutierrez, O, Puente, A, Salazar, A, Rosales Uvera, S, Rosales-Uvera, S, Serna Macias, J, Sierra-Galan, L, Tirado Alderete, J, Vallejo, E, Faraggi, M, Sereegotov, E, Ben Rais, N, Alaoui, N, Kyiphyu, T, Oo, S, Win, S, Zar, H, Ghimire, R, Neupane, M, Glaudemans, A, Slart, R, Verschure, D, Allen, B, Edmond, J, Mckenzie, C, Tie, S, Van Pelt, N, Worthington, K, Young, C, Soli, I, Kana, S, Onubogu, U, Sani, M, Braten, A, Jorgensen, A, Vassbotn, H, Al Dhuhli, H, Jawa, Z, Tag, N, Fatima, S, Imran, M, Younis, M, Saadullah, M, Malo, Y, Lenturut-Katal, D, Castillo, M, Ortellado, J, Akhter, A, Cader, F, Hussain, R, Khan, S, Mandal, T, Nasreen, F, An, Y, Cao, D, Gong, L, Hou, Y, Jia, C, Li, T, Li, C, Liu, H, Liu, W, Liu, J, Ng, M, Shi, H, Tang, C, Wang, X, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Wu, J, Yi, Y, Yuan, L, Zhang, T, Zhang, L, Chavez, E, Cruz, C, Llontop, C, Morales, R, Abrihan, P, Bustos-Barroso, A, Duldulao-Ogbac, M, Eduarte, C, Obaldo, J, Quinon, A, San Juan, B, San Juan, C, Sauler-Gomez, M, Uy, M, Kostkiewicz, M, Kunikowska, J, Teresinska, A, Urbanik, T, Bettencourt, N, Fontes-Carvalho, R, Gavina, C, Goncalves, L, Macedo, F, Moreno, N, Sousa, C, Timoteo, A, Vidigal, M, Al Heidous, M, Ramanathan, S, Arnous, S, Aytani, S, Byrne, A, Gleeson, T, Kerins, D, O'Brien, J, Bang, J, Bom, H, Cheon, M, Cheon, G, Cho, S, Hong, C, Jeong, Y, Kang, W, Kang, Y, Kim, J, Oh, S, So, Y, Song, H, Won, K, Yoo, S, Mitevska, I, Vavlukis, M, Salobir, B, Stalc, M, Benedek, T, Pop, M, Stan, C, Dariy, O, Gagarina, N, Itskovich, I, Karalkin, A, Kokov, A, Marina, G, Migunova, E, Pospelov, V, Ryzhkova, D, Sayfullina, G, Sergienko, V, Shurupova, I, Vakhromeeva, M, Valiullina, N, Zavadovsky, K, Zhuravlev, K, Abazid, R, Al Garni, T, Alasnag, M, Aljizeeri, A, Amer, H, Amro, A, Hamdy, H, Smettei, O, Saranovic, D, Vlajkovic, M, Keng, F, See, J, Berecova, Z, Mistinova, J, Evbuomwan, O, Govender, N, Hack, J, Hadebe, B, Hlongwa, K, Kaplan, M, Lakhi, H, Milos, K, Modiselle, M, More, S, Muambadzi, N, Scholtz, L, Barreiro-Perez, M, Blanco, I, Broncano, J, Camarero, A, Casans-Tormo, I, De Haro, J, Flotats, A, Garcia, E, Mendiguchia, C, Jimenez-Heffernan, A, Leta, R, Diaz, J, Vega, L, Manovel-Sanchez, A, Monzonis, A, Patrut, B, Pubul, V, Perez, R, Zeidan, N, Nanayakkara, D, Suliman, A, Engblom, H, Murtadha, M, Ostenfeld, E, Simonsson, M, Alkadhi, H, Buechel, R, Burger, P, Grani, C, Kamani, C, Kawel-Bohm, N, Klaeser, B, Manka, R, Prior, J, Kaewchur, T, Khiewvan, B, Kositwattanarerk, A, Namwongprom, S, Thientunyakit, T, Sayman, H, Yuksel, M, Sebikali, M, Okello, E, Korol, P, Noverko, I, Satyr, M, Ahmad, T, Alfakih, K, Andrade, I, Buckingham, S, Bularga, A, Carpenter, J, Cole, G, Cusack, D, David, S, Davis, P, Fairbairn, T, Ghosh, A, Ramkumar, P, Hamilton, M, Haque, F, Hudson, B, Johnstone, A, Karthikeyan, V, Kay, M, Khan, M, Kitt, J, Low, C, Mcalindon, E, Mccreavy, D, Morrissey, B, Motwani, M, Na, D, Nicol, E, Patel, D, Rodrigues, J, Rofe, C, Schofield, R, Semple, T, Sheikh, A, Sinha, A, Subedi, D, Topping, W, Tweed, K, Underwood, S, Weir-Mccall, J, Zuhairy, H, Abbasi, T, Abohashem, S, Abramson, S, Al-Mallah, M, Kumar, M, Balmer-Swain, M, Berman, D, Bernheim, A, Bhatti, S, Biederman, R, Bieging, E, Bingham, S, Bloom, S, Blue, S, Borges, A, Branch, K, Bravo, P, Buddhe, S, Budoff, M, Bullock-Palmer, R, Cahill, M, Candela, C, Cao, J, Chatterjee, S, Chatzizisis, Y, Chaudhuri, N, Cheezum, M, Chelliah, A, Chen, T, Chen, M, Chen, L, Chokshi, A, Chung, J, Danciu, S, Desisto, W, Dilorenzo, M, Doukky, R, Duvall, W, Ferencik, M, Foster, C, Fuisz, A, Gannon, M, German, D, Gerson, M, Geske, J, Hage, F, Haider, A, Haider, S, Hamirani, Y, Hassen, K, Hendel, R, Henkel, J, Horgan, S, Hyun, M, Janardhanan, R, Jerome, S, Kalra, D, Kassop, D, Kinkhabwala, M, Kinzfogl, G, Koch, B, Koweek, L, Krepp, J, Kwon, Y, Layer, J, Lesser, J, Leung, S, Lisske, B, Magurany, K, Markowitz, J, Mccullough, B, Moalemi, A, Moffitt, C, Montanez, J, Moore, W, Morayati, S, Mossa-Basha, M, Mrsic, Z, Murthy, V, Nagpal, P, Nelson, K, Nijjar, P, O'Quinn, R, Passen, E, Patil, P, Pursnani, A, Quachang, N, Rabbat, M, Ranjan, P, Lozano, P, Schemmer, M, Seifried, R, Shah, N, Shah, A, Shanbhag, S, Sharma, G, Skotnicki, R, Sobczak, M, Soman, P, Sorrell, V, Srichai, M, Streeter, J, Strickland, L, Suliman, S, Tebyanian, N, Thomas, D, Thompson, R, Uretsky, S, Vallurupalli, S, Vandyck-Acquah, M, Verma, V, Weinstein, J, Wolinsky, D, Zareba, K, Zgaljardic, M, Beretta, M, Ferrando, R, Kapitan, M, Mut, F, Djuraev, O, Rozikhodjaeva, G, Vera, L, Duc, B, Nguyen, X, Hiep Nguyen, P, Einstein, Andrew J, Hirschfeld, Cole, Williams, Michelle C, Vitola, Joao V, Better, Nathan, Villines, Todd C, Cerci, Rodrigo, Shaw, Leslee J, Choi, Andrew D, Dorbala, Sharmila, Karthikeyan, Ganesan, Lu, Bin, Sinitsyn, Valentin, Ansheles, Alexey A, Kudo, Takashi, Bucciarelli-Ducci, Chiara, Nørgaard, Bjarne Linde, Maurovich-Horvat, Pál, Campisi, Roxana, Milan, Elisa, Louw, Lizette, Allam, Adel H, Bhatia, Mona, Sewanan, Lorenzo, Malkovskiy, Eli, Cohen, Yosef, Randazzo, Michael, Narula, Jagat, Morozova, Olga, Pascual, Thomas N B, Pynda, Yaroslav, Dondi, Maurizio, Paez, Diana, and Cuocolo, Alberto
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cardiac testing ,Health Personnel ,delivery of health care ,coronavirus ,COVID-19 ,global health ,610 Medicine & health ,cardiovascular disease ,health personnel ,humans ,pandemics ,surveys and questionnaires ,coronaviru ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Delivery of Health Care ,Pandemics ,COVID-19/epidemiology - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The extent to which health care systems have adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic to provide necessary cardiac diagnostic services is unknown.OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of the pandemic on cardiac testing practices, volumes and types of diagnostic services, and perceived psychological stress to health care providers worldwide.METHODS: The International Atomic Energy Agency conducted a worldwide survey assessing alterations from baseline in cardiovascular diagnostic care at the pandemic's onset and 1 year later. Multivariable regression was used to determine factors associated with procedure volume recovery.RESULTS: Surveys were submitted from 669 centers in 107 countries. Worldwide reduction in cardiac procedure volumes of 64% from March 2019 to April 2020 recovered by April 2021 in high- and upper middle-income countries (recovery rates of 108% and 99%) but remained depressed in lower middle- and low-income countries (46% and 30% recovery). Although stress testing was used 12% less frequently in 2021 than in 2019, coronary computed tomographic angiography was used 14% more, a trend also seen for other advanced cardiac imaging modalities (positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance; 22%-25% increases). Pandemic-related psychological stress was estimated to have affected nearly 40% of staff, impacting patient care at 78% of sites. In multivariable regression, only lower-income status and physicians' psychological stress were significant in predicting recovery of cardiac testing.CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac diagnostic testing has yet to recover to prepandemic levels in lower-income countries. Worldwide, the decrease in standard stress testing is offset by greater use of advanced cardiac imaging modalities. Pandemic-related psychological stress among providers is widespread and associated with poor recovery of cardiac testing.
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- 2022
18. Increased Emergency Department Medical Imaging: Association with Short-Term Exposures to Ambient Heat and Particulate Air Pollution.
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Hanneman K, Taboun O, Kirpalani A, Ertl-Wagner B, Aguet J, Delaney S, Nethery RC, Choi J, Panet H, Brown MJ, Schmidt H, Kielar A, and Patlas M
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Over Studies, Diagnostic Imaging statistics & numerical data, Female, Climate Change, Male, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Particulate Matter adverse effects, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Environmental Exposure statistics & numerical data, Hot Temperature adverse effects, Air Pollution adverse effects, Air Pollution statistics & numerical data
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Background Climate change adversely affects human health, resulting in higher demand for health care services. However, the impact of climate-related environmental exposures on medical imaging utilization is currently unknown. Purpose To determine associations of short-term exposures to ambient heat and particulate air pollution with utilization of emergency department medical imaging. Materials and Methods In this retrospective time-stratified case-crossover study, daily imaging utilization counts from four emergency departments were linked to local daily environmental data-including fine particulate matter with 2.5-µm or smaller aerodynamic diameter (PM
2.5 ) and ambient temperature-over 10 years (January 2013 to December 2022). Conditional Poisson regression models were used to evaluate the associations between daily imaging utilization and environmental exposures on the same day and each of the 7 days preceding imaging, lag days 0-7, controlling for day of the week, month, and year. Moving averages of mean daily PM2.5 and temperature were calculated to account for lagged exposure effects. Imaging counts were also stratified by modality (CT, radiography, US, and MRI). Results In an analysis of 1 666 420 emergency department imaging studies, a rise of 10 °C in the 2-day moving average of mean daily temperature and a rise of 10 μg/m3 in the 3-day moving average of mean daily PM2.5 were associated with overall imaging utilization increases of 5.1% (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 1.051; 95% CI: 1.045, 1.056) and 4.0% (IRR, 1.040; 95% CI: 1.035, 1.046), respectively. Heat exposure days (mean temperature >20 °C) and air pollution exposure days (mean PM2.5 >12 μg/m3 ) were associated with same-day excess absolute risk of 5.5 and 6.4 imaging studies per 1 million people at risk per day, respectively. Heat exposure days and air pollution exposure days were associated with increased utilization of radiography (excess relative risk, 2.7% [ P < .001] and 2.1% [ P < .001], respectively) and CT (excess relative risk, 2.0% [ P = .001] and 2.7% [ P < .001]) but not US ( P = .14 and P = .14) or MRI ( P = .70 and P = .65). Conclusion Short-term exposures to ambient heat and particulate air pollution were associated with increased utilization of radiography and CT but not US or MRI. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Vosshenrich in this issue.- Published
- 2024
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19. Climate Change, Health Equity, and Environmentally Sustainable Radiology.
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Hanneman K, Nguyen ET, and Kielar A
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- Humans, Sustainable Development, Climate Change, Health Equity, Radiology
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: KH: Co-Chair Canadian Association of Radiologists Environmental Sustainability Working Group and Associate Editor Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal. AK: President Canadian Association of Radiologists.
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- 2024
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20. Current Applications of PET/MR: Part II: Clinical Applications II.
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Kohan A, Hanneman K, Mirshahvalad SA, Afaq A, Mallak N, Metser U, and Veit-Haibach P
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- Humans, Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Multimodal Imaging methods
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Due to the major improvements in the hardware and image reconstruction algorithms, positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MR) is now a reliable state-of-the-art hybrid modality in medical practice. Currently, it can provide a broad range of advantages in preclinical and clinical imaging compared to single-modality imaging. In the second part of this review, we discussed the further clinical applications of PET/MR. In the chest, PET/MR has particular potential in the oncology setting, especially when utilizing ultrashort/zero echo time MR sequences. Furthermore, cardiac PET/MR can provide reliable information in evaluating myocardial inflammation, cardiac amyloidosis, myocardial perfusion, myocardial viability, atherosclerotic plaque, and cardiac masses. In gastrointestinal and hepato-pancreato-biliary malignancies, PET/MR is able to precisely detect metastases to the liver, being superior over the other imaging modalities. In genitourinary and gynaecology applications, PET/MR is a comprehensive diagnostic method, especially in prostate, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Its simultaneous acquisition has been shown to outperform other imaging techniques for the detection of pelvic nodal metastases and is also a reliable modality in radiation planning. Lastly, in haematologic malignancies, PET/MR can significantly enhance lymphoma diagnosis, particularly in detecting extra-nodal involvement. It can also comprehensively assess treatment-induced changes. Furthermore, PET/MR may soon become a routine in multiple myeloma management, being a one-stop shop for evaluating bone, bone marrow, and soft tissues., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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21. Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Diagnostic Imaging Modality in a Hospital-Based Radiology Department.
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Hanneman K, McKee H, Nguyen ET, Panet H, and Kielar A
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- Humans, Radiology Department, Hospital organization & administration, Greenhouse Gases analysis, Diagnostic Imaging methods
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: KH: Co-Chair Canadian Association of Radiologists Environmental Sustainability Working Group and Associate Editor Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal. AK: President Canadian Association of Radiologists.
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- 2024
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22. Increasing Diversity in Canadian Radiology: From the Hiring Process to Needed Active Retention Efforts.
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Doria AS, Khosa F, Maiga S, Brown M, Momh B, Hanneman K, Zaki-Metias K, Glanc P, Miller E, Seely J, Cashin P, Yong-Hing CJ, and Hillier T
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- Humans, Canada, Radiologists, Societies, Medical, Minority Groups statistics & numerical data, Personnel Selection methods, Cultural Diversity, Radiology education
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The Canadian Association of Radiologists supports equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) in employment. It is imperative that institutions implement recruitment and retention practices to ensure a diverse workforce. This requires considerable attention to each step in the process, including the job posting, candidate search, hiring committee composition, interviews, hiring decision, and retention and promotion. Job postings must be widely distributed and visible to underrepresented groups. The candidate search should be completed by a diverse committee with expertise in EDI. All committee members must complete EDI and anti-bias training and conduct a broad search that ensures underrepresented groups are encouraged to apply. Interviews must be offered to all candidates. The hiring decision must avoid the use of subjective criteria. Recruitment of members of underrepresented groups ensures a diverse workforce, and organizations should commit resources to the retention and promotion of these members. Mentorship programs must be implemented and incentives provided to faculty members to serve as mentors. Transparent guidelines for promotion made universally available on department or institution websites. Recruiting a diverse workforce in Medical Imaging will only be achieved if EDI are central to the organization's goals and strategic plan. All organizational policies, practices, and procedures must be reviewed with an intersectional lens to identify potential gaps, areas for improvement, and areas of strength in the recruitment and retention of members of underrepresented groups., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Faisal Khosa is the recipient of the Michael Smith Health Research BC Award (2023-2028). No other disclosures. Andrea D. Doria has had, during the past 3 years, the following relationships unrelated to this work.
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- 2024
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23. Canadian radiology: 2024 update.
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Yao J, Ertl-Wagner BB, Dana J, Hanneman K, Kashif Al-Ghita M, Liu L, McInnes MDF, Nicolaou S, Reinhold C, and Patlas MN
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- Canada, Humans, Artificial Intelligence, Diagnostic Imaging, Radiology
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Radiology in Canada is advancing through innovations in clinical practices and research methodologies. Recent developments focus on refining evidence-based practice guidelines, exploring innovative imaging techniques and enhancing diagnostic processes through artificial intelligence. Within the global radiology community, Canadian institutions play an important role by engaging in international collaborations, such as with the American College of Radiology to refine implementation of the Ovarian-Adnexal Reporting and Data System for ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. Additionally, researchers have participated in multidisciplinary collaborations to evaluate the performance of artificial intelligence-driven diagnostic tools for chronic liver disease and pediatric brain tumors. Beyond clinical radiology, efforts extend to addressing gender disparities in the field, improving educational practices, and enhancing the environmental sustainability of radiology departments. These advancements highlight Canada's role in the global radiology community, showcasing a commitment to improving patient outcomes and advancing the field through research and innovation. This update underscores the importance of continued collaboration and innovation to address emerging challenges and further enhance the quality and efficacy of radiology practices worldwide., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Dr. McInnes received support from the Ottawa Department of Radiology Research Stipend Program. Dr. Patlas received royalties from Springer and Elsevier., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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24. Environmentally Sustainable Radiology: Redefining Value and Quality.
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Hanneman K
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: KH: Co-Chair Canadian Association of Radiologists Environmental Sustainability Working Group and Associate Editor Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal.
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- 2024
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25. The environmental effects of non-invasive cardiac imaging.
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Gardiner K, Hanneman K, and Kozor R
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The healthcare sector is a major contributor to the universal climate footprint, of this a significant proportion is attributable to medical imaging and further to dedicated cardiac imaging. The increasing availability and utility of cardiac imaging techniques for prognosis, diagnosis and management raises concerns for the impact of these investigations on the environment. Our objective was to review the published literature assessing the environmental impact of non-invasive imaging modalities within cardiology, subsequently helping guide physicians toward a more sustainable approach to cardiac imaging and improved awareness of the environmental impact of healthcare within this field. We conducted a systematic review of studies measuring the environmental impact of non-invasive cardiac imaging. A total of 8 studies were included in the final analysis. Cardiac imaging has a significant environmental impact, which varies by modality: lowest for echocardiography and highest for MRI. As a whole this field represents a significant contributor to climate-related threats to human health, which we should strive toward harm minimisation. This may be mitigated through the conscious utilisation of energy consumption and contrast media, as well as healthcare worker education and quality improvement to guide imaging choice based on environmental impact alongside conventional determinants such as patient characteristics, clinical guidelines and cost (visual abstract)., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Crown Copyright © 2024 Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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26. Canadian Association of Radiologists Statement on Planetary Health Education in Radiology.
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Brown MJ, Forster BB, McInnes MDF, Komar MA, Amin P, Atwal S, Chen S, Hamwi M, Ladak R, Malik A, McKee H, Wang M, Yang J, Hamel C, and Hanneman K
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The health of Canadians is already impacted by climate change due to wildfire smoke, heat domes, floods, droughts, and the changing distribution of vector borne disease. The healthcare sector contributes to climate change, accounting for approximately 4.6% of annual greenhouse gas emissions in Canada. Healthcare teams have a responsibility and opportunity to reduce harm by limiting emissions and waste, and engaging the public in understanding the planetary health links between clean air and water, a stable climate, a healthy planet and human health. Transformation of Canadian healthcare to a low carbon, climate resilient system will be enhanced by physician engagement and leadership. Cornerstones to physician participation include knowledge of the anthropogenic etiology of the climate crisis, the human health impacts, and the contribution providing healthcare makes to the climate crisis. Integration of climate change knowledge into the Canadian Radiology educational curricula is essential to position radiologists to lead transformative change in mitigation and adaptation of the healthcare system to the climate crisis. This statement is intended to provide guidelines to optimize education and research for current and future Canadian radiologists, and builds on existing planetary healthcare education publications and the Canadian Association of Radiologists Statement on Environmental Sustainability in Medical Imaging., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: MJB: Co-Chair CAR Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Co-Chair BC Cancer Planetary Health Unit; Member, AUR Sustainability Committee; Member, Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment. KH: Co-Chair CAR Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Chair, ISMRM Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Deputy Lead Sustainability Joint Department of Medical Imaging.
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- 2024
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27. Peripartum Cardiomyopathy is Associated With Abnormalities of Myocardial Deformation and Late Gadolinium Enhancement.
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Du Plessis J, Gujrathi R, Hassanin M, McKee H, Hanneman K, Karur GR, Chan V, Warnica W, Wald RM, and Nguyen ET
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Purpose: Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) affects women in late pregnancy and postpartum. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can contribute to PPCM diagnosis and management. We explored CMR findings in PPCM, including myocardial strain and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) patterns. Materials and Methods: This retrospective single-centre study included patients with PPCM who underwent CMR from 2010 to 2018. Exclusions were other cardiomyopathy causes. CMR parameters, including ventricular function, LGE, and myocardial strain, were compared between the PPCM group and healthy controls. Transthoracic echocardiographic data were reviewed to assess functional improvement in PPCM patients. Results: Thirty-two women with PPCM (mean age 42 ± 6 years) and 26 controls (mean age 43 ± 14 years) were included. PPCM patients had significantly lower left ventricular (LV) ejection fractions (median 37.5% vs 60.5%, P < .001), higher LV end-diastolic volumes (median 108 ml/m² vs 76 ml/m², P < .001), and reduced global LV strain compared to controls. Eighteen PPCM patients (58%) had non-ischaemic pattern LGE, with no LGE in controls besides hingepoint LGE (23%). LGE was most prevalent in the basal and mid anteroseptum. LGE patterns included linear mid-wall, subepicardial, and right ventricular side of the septum. Twenty-four patients (92%) showed improvement in LVEF at follow-up echocardiogram (mean LVEF 28% ± 1.9% at diagnosis and 45% ± 3% at follow-up, P < .001). Conclusion: We identified a non-ischaemic pattern LGE that is nonspecific in isolation but could suggest PPCM in the correct clinical context along with abnormal CMR strain values. Future studies should evaluate the clinical application of these findings to facilitate earlier diagnosis and enhance management., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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28. Association Between Cardiac Size, Systolic Function, and Complications in Vascular Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome.
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Fawzy A, Warnica W, Hanneman K, Wald RM, Oechslin E, Thavendiranathan P, and Karur GR
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Purpose: Vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS) is a rare and aggressive heritable aortic disease caused by pathogenic variants in COL3A1 gene, characterized by spontaneous arterial dissection and organ rupture. The purpose of this study is to evaluate ventricular size and function and to explore their associations with complications in vEDS. Methods: Adults with genetically confirmed vEDS who underwent clinical cardiac MRI were retrospectively compared with controls matched for age and sex. Cardiac MRI analysis included assessment of ventricular volumetry and arterial vasculature. vEDS-related complications were evaluated including dissection, aneurysm, and pneumothorax. Multivariable logistic regression was performed. Results: We studied 26 individuals with vEDS (38.6 ± 15.6 years, 50.0% female) and 26 healthy controls. Median clinical follow-up was 2.4 (1.1-3.6) years. Left and right ventricular ejection fractions were lower in vEDS compared with controls (LVEF 58 ± 6% vs 61 ± 4%, P = .03; RVEF 54 ± 5% vs 58 ± 4%, P = .03). After controlling for age, sex, and antihypertensive medication, LV end-diastolic volume indexed to body surface area (LVEDVi) predicted dissections (OR 1.1, 95% CI 1.01-1.2, P = .04) and aneurysms (OR 1.1, 95% CI 1.01-1.3, P = .03). Indexed LV end systolic volume (LVESVi) also predicted aneurysms (OR 1.2, 95% CI 1.03-1.5, P = .02). LVEF predicted the presence of any complication (OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.52-0.99, P = .04). Pneumothorax occurred exclusively in vEDS group among those with LVEF <58% (below the mean), 50.0% versus 0.0%, P = .02. Those with LVEF <58% had more frequent dissection and/or aneurysm (75.0% vs 12.5%, P = .04). Conclusion: Lower LVEF and larger cardiac size are associated with complications in vEDS., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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29. Radiology's Role in the Climate Crisis: Why It Matters- AJR Podcast Series on Sustainability, Episode 1.
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Woolen S and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Periodicals as Topic, Webcasts as Topic, Radiology, Climate Change
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- 2024
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30. CAR and CSTR Cardiac Computed Tomography (CT) Practice Guidelines: Part 2-Non-Coronary Imaging.
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Nguyen ET, Green CR, Adams SJ, Bishop H, Gleeton G, Hague CJ, Hanneman K, Harris S, Strzelczyk J, and Dennie C
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- Humans, Canada, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging, Societies, Medical, Heart diagnostic imaging, Coronary Angiography methods, Computed Tomography Angiography methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
The cardiac computed tomography (CT) practice guidelines provide an updated review of the technological improvements since the publication of the first Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR) cardiac CT practice guidelines in 2009. An overview of the current evidence supporting the use of cardiac CT in the most common clinical scenarios, standards of practice to optimize patient preparation and safety as well as image quality are described. Coronary CT angiography (CCTA) is the focus of Part I. In Part II, an overview of cardiac CT for non-coronary indications that include valvular and pericardial imaging, tumour and mass evaluation, pulmonary vein imaging, and imaging of congenital heart disease for diagnosis and treatment monitoring are discussed. The guidelines are intended to be relevant for community hospitals and large academic centres with established cardiac CT imaging programs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Dr. Carole Dennie reported receiving payments for consultant fees from AstraZeneca and speaker honorarium from Boehringer-Ingelheim. Dr. Kate Hanneman reported receiving honorarium from Sanofi. No other authors declared potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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31. CAR and CSTR Cardiac Computed Tomography (CT) Practice Guidelines: Part 1 Coronary CT Angiography (CCTA).
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Nguyen ET, Green CR, Adams SJ, Bishop H, Gleeton G, Hague CJ, Hanneman K, Harris S, Strzelczyk J, and Dennie C
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- Humans, Canada, Societies, Medical, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Computed Tomography Angiography methods, Computed Tomography Angiography standards, Coronary Angiography methods
- Abstract
Imaging the heart is one of the most technically challenging applications of Computed Tomography (CT) due to the presence of cardiac motion limiting optimal visualization of small structures such as the coronary arteries. Electrocardiographic gating during CT data acquisition facilitates motion free imaging of the coronary arteries. Since publishing the first version of the Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR) cardiac CT guidelines, many technological advances in CT hardware and software have emerged necessitating an update. The goal of these cardiac CT practice guidelines is to present an overview of the current evidence supporting the use of cardiac CT in various clinical scenarios and to outline standards of practice for patient safety and quality of care when establishing a cardiac CT program in Canada., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Dr. Carole Dennie reported receiving payments for consultant fees from AstraZeneca and speaker honorarium from Boehringer-Ingelheim. Dr. Kate Hanneman reported receiving honorarium from Sanofi. No other authors declared potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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32. Canadian Association of Radiologists Statement on Environmental Sustainability in Medical Imaging.
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Hanneman K, Szava-Kovats A, Burbridge B, Leswick D, Nadeau B, Islam O, Lee EJY, Harris A, Hamel C, and Brown MJ
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Immediate and strategic action is needed to improve environmental sustainability and reduce the detrimental effects of climate change. Climate change is already adversely affecting the health of Canadians related to worsening air pollution and wildfire smoke, increasing frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, and expansion of vector-borne and infectious illnesses. On one hand, radiology contributes to the climate crisis by generating greenhouse gas emissions and waste during the production, manufacture, transportation, and use of medical imaging equipment and supplies. On the other hand, radiology departments are also susceptible to equipment and infrastructure damage from flooding, extreme temperatures, and power failures, as well as workforce shortages due to injury and illness, potentially disrupting radiology services and increasing costs. The Canadian Association of Radiologists' (CAR) advocacy for environmentally sustainable radiology in Canada encompasses both minimizing the detrimental effects that delivery of radiology services has on the environment and optimizing the resilience of radiology departments to increasing health needs and changing patterns of disease on imaging related to climate change. This statement provides specific recommendations and pathways to help guide radiologists, medical imaging leadership teams, industry partners, governments, and other key stakeholders to transition to environmentally sustainable, net-zero, and climate-resilient radiology organizations. Specific consideration is given to unique aspects of medical imaging in Canada. Finally, environmentally sustainable radiology programs, policies, and achievements in Canada are highlighted., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: KH: Co-Chair CAR Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Deputy Lead Sustainability, JDMI; Chair, ISMRM Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Member, RSNA Sustainability Task Force; Member, AUR Sustainability Committee; Associate Editor, Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal. AH: Regional Department Head, Medical Imaging VCH and PHC; Vice-President, Canadian Association of Radiologists. MJB: Co-Chair CAR Environmental Sustainability Working Group; Co-Chair BC Cancer Planetary Health Unit; Member, AUR Sustainability Committee; Member, Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment.
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- 2024
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33. CTP for the Screening of Vasospasm and Delayed Cerebral Ischemia in Aneurysmal SAH: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Mitchelle A, Gorolay VV, Aitken M, Hanneman K, Huo YR, Manning N, Tan I, and Chan MV
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- Humans, Sensitivity and Specificity, Cerebral Angiography methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Perfusion Imaging methods, Vasospasm, Intracranial diagnostic imaging, Vasospasm, Intracranial etiology, Brain Ischemia diagnostic imaging, Brain Ischemia complications, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnostic imaging, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage complications
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Background: Delayed cerebral ischemia and vasospasm are the most common causes of late morbidity following aneurysmal SAH, but their diagnosis remains challenging., Purpose: This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the diagnostic performance of CTP for detection of delayed cerebral ischemia and vasospasm in the setting of aneurysmal SAH., Data Sources: Studies evaluating the diagnostic performance of CTP in the setting of aneurysmal SAH were searched on the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane Clinical Answers, Cochrane Methodology Register, Ovid MEDLINE, EMBASE, American College of Physicians Journal Club, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, Health Technology Assessment, National Health Service Economic Evaluation Database, PubMed, and Google Scholar from their inception to September 2023., Study Selection: Thirty studies were included, encompassing 1786 patients with aneurysmal SAH and 2302 CTP studies. Studies were included if they compared the diagnostic accuracy of CTP with a reference standard (clinical or radiologic delayed cerebral ischemia, angiographic spasm) for the detection of delayed cerebral ischemia or vasospasm in patients with aneurysmal SAH. The primary outcome was accuracy for the detection of delayed cerebral ischemia or vasospasm., Data Analysis: Bivariate random effects models were used to pool outcomes for sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio, and negative likelihood ratio. Subgroup analyses for individual CTP parameters and early-versus-late study timing were performed. Bias and applicability were assessed using the modified QUADAS-2 tool., Data Synthesis: For assessment of delayed cerebral ischemia, CTP demonstrated a pooled sensitivity of 82.1% (95% CI, 74.5%-87.8%), specificity of 79.6% (95% CI, 73.0%-84.9%), positive likelihood ratio of 4.01 (95% CI, 2.94-5.47), and negative likelihood ratio of 0.23 (95% CI, 0.12-0.33). For assessment of vasospasm, CTP showed a pooled sensitivity of 85.6% (95% CI, 74.2%-92.5%), specificity of 87.9% (95% CI, 79.2%-93.3%), positive likelihood ratio of 7.10 (95% CI, 3.87-13.04), and negative likelihood ratio of 0.16 (95% CI, 0.09-0.31)., Limitations: QUADAS-2 assessment identified 12 articles with low risk, 11 with moderate risk, and 7 with a high risk of bias., Conclusions: For delayed cerebral ischemia, CTP had a sensitivity of >80%, specificity of >75%, and a low negative likelihood ratio of 0.23. CTP had better performance for the detection of vasospasm, with sensitivity and specificity of >85% and a low negative likelihood ratio of 0.16. Although the accuracy offers the potential for CTP to be used in limited clinical contexts, standardization of CTP techniques and high-quality randomized trials evaluating its impact are required., (© 2024 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)
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- 2024
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34. Prognostic value of myocardial deformation parameters for outcome prediction in tetralogy of Fallot.
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Thomas SK, DSouza R, Hanneman K, Karur GR, Houbois C, Ishikita A, D'Errico L, Begun I, Ng MY, and Wald RM
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Background: The prognostic value of myocardial deformation parameters in adults with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) has not been well-elucidated. We therefore aimed to explore myocardial deformation parameters for outcome prediction in adults with rTOF using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR)., Methods: Adults with rTOF and at least moderate pulmonary regurgitation were identified from an institutional prospective CMR registry. Left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) global strains were recorded in longitudinal (GLS), circumferential (GCS), and radial (GRS) directions. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) were defined as a composite of mortality, resuscitated sudden death, sustained ventricular tachycardia (>30 seconds), or heart failure (hospital admission >24 hours). In patients with pulmonary valve replacement (PVR), pre- and post-PVR CMR studies were analyzed to assess for predictors of complete RV reverse remodeling, defined as indexed RV end-diastolic volume (RVEDVi) <110 mL/m
2 . Logistic regression models were used to estimate the odds ratio (OR) per unit change in absolute strain value associated with clinical outcomes and receiver operator characteristic curves were constructed with area under the curve (AUC) for select CMR variables., Results: We included 307 patients (age 35 ± 13 years, 59% (180/307) male). During 6.1 years (3.3-8.8) of follow-up, PVR was performed in 142 (46%) and MACE occurred in 31 (10%). On univariate analysis, baseline biventricular ejection fraction (EF), mass, and all strain parameters were associated with MACE. After adjustment for LVEF, only LV-GLS remained independently predictive of MACE (OR 0.822 [0.693-0.976] p = 0.025). Receiver operator curves identified an absolute LV-GLS value less than 15 and LVEF less than 51% as thresholds for MACE prediction (AUC 0.759 [0.655-0.840] and 0.720 [0.608-0.810]). After adjusting for baseline RVEDVi, RV-GCS (OR 1.323 [1.094-1.600] p = 0.004), LV-GCS (OR 1.276 [1.029-1.582] p = 0.027) and LV-GRS (OR 1.101 [1.0210-1.200], p = 0.028) were independent predictors of complete remodeling post-PVR remodeling., Conclusion: Biventricular strain parameters predict clinical outcomes and post-PVR remodeling in rTOF. Further study will be necessary to establish the role of myocardial deformation parameters in clinical practice., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interests The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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35. Myocardial Extracellular Volume Fraction Varies With Hemodynamic Load and After Pulmonary Valve Replacement in TOF.
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Ishikita A, Karur GR, Hanneman K, Yuen DA, Chaturvedi RR, Friedberg MK, Epelman S, He X, Roche SL, and Wald RM
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- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Time Factors, Female, Male, Myocardium pathology, Myocardium metabolism, Adult, Young Adult, Recovery of Function, Heart Defects, Congenital surgery, Heart Defects, Congenital physiopathology, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Function, Left, Hemodynamics, Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation instrumentation, Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Pulmonary Valve diagnostic imaging, Pulmonary Valve physiopathology, Pulmonary Valve surgery
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- 2024
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36. Imaging Genomics and Multiomics: A Guide for Beginners Starting Radiomics-Based Research.
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Singh S, Mohajer B, Wells SA, Garg T, Hanneman K, Takahashi T, AlDandan O, McBee MP, and Jawahar A
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- Humans, Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Neoplasms genetics, Algorithms, Diagnostic Imaging methods, Genomics, Biomedical Research, Multiomics, Radiomics, Imaging Genomics methods
- Abstract
Radiomics uses advanced mathematical analysis of pixel-level information from radiologic images to extract existing information in traditional imaging algorithms. It is intended to find imaging biomarkers related to the genomics of tumors or disease patterns that improve medical care by advanced detection of tumor response patterns in tumors and to assess prognosis. Radiomics expands the paradigm of medical imaging to help with diagnosis, management of diseases and prognostication, leveraging image features by extracting information that can be used as imaging biomarkers to predict prognosis and response to treatment. Radiogenomics is an emerging area in radiomics that investigates the association between imaging characteristics and gene expression profiles. There are an increasing number of research publications using different radiomics approaches without a clear consensus on which method works best. We aim to describe the workflow of radiomics along with a guide of what to expect when starting a radiomics-based research project., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Association of University Radiologists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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37. SCMR expert consensus statement for cardiovascular magnetic resonance of patients with a cardiac implantable electronic device.
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Kim D, Collins JD, White JA, Hanneman K, Lee DC, Patel AR, Hu P, Litt H, Weinsaft JW, Davids R, Mukai K, Ng MY, Luetkens JA, Roguin A, Rochitte CE, Woodard PK, Manisty C, Zareba KM, Mont L, Bogun F, Ennis DB, Nazarian S, Webster G, and Stojanovska J
- Subjects
- Humans, Risk Factors, Risk Assessment, Clinical Decision-Making, Arrhythmias, Cardiac therapy, Arrhythmias, Cardiac diagnosis, Arrhythmias, Cardiac diagnostic imaging, Arrhythmias, Cardiac physiopathology, Electric Countershock instrumentation, Electric Countershock adverse effects, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging, Heart Diseases therapy, Consensus, Defibrillators, Implantable, Predictive Value of Tests, Pacemaker, Artificial, Magnetic Resonance Imaging standards, Magnetic Resonance Imaging adverse effects
- Abstract
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is a proven imaging modality for informing diagnosis and prognosis, guiding therapeutic decisions, and risk stratifying surgical intervention. Patients with a cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED) would be expected to derive particular benefit from CMR given high prevalence of cardiomyopathy and arrhythmia. While several guidelines have been published over the last 16 years, it is important to recognize that both the CIED and CMR technologies, as well as our knowledge in MR safety, have evolved rapidly during that period. Given increasing utilization of CIED over the past decades, there is an unmet need to establish a consensus statement that integrates latest evidence concerning MR safety and CIED and CMR technologies. While experienced centers currently perform CMR in CIED patients, broad availability of CMR in this population is lacking, partially due to limited availability of resources for programming devices and appropriate monitoring, but also related to knowledge gaps regarding the risk-benefit ratio of CMR in this growing population. To address the knowledge gaps, this SCMR Expert Consensus Statement integrates consensus guidelines, primary data, and opinions from experts across disparate fields towards the shared goal of informing evidenced-based decision-making regarding the risk-benefit ratio of CMR for patients with CIEDs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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38. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging and clinical follow-up in patients with clinically suspected myocarditis after COVID-19 vaccination.
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Talib N, Fronza M, Marschner CA, Thavendiranathan P, Karur GR, and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Vaccination adverse effects, Young Adult, Time Factors, SARS-CoV-2, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Follow-Up Studies, Ventricular Function, Left, Myocarditis diagnostic imaging, Myocarditis etiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 complications, 2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 administration & dosage, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Predictive Value of Tests, BNT162 Vaccine adverse effects, BNT162 Vaccine administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) findings and their relationship to longer-term clinical outcomes in patients with suspected myocarditis following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination., Methods: Consecutive adult patients who underwent clinically indicated CMR for evaluation of suspected myocarditis following messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)-based COVID-19 vaccination at a single center between 2021 and 2022 were retrospectively evaluated. Patients were classified based on the revised Lake Louise criteria for T1-based abnormalities (late gadolinium enhancement [LGE] or high T1 values) and T2-based abnormalities (regional T2-hyperintensity or high T2 values)., Results: Eighty-nine patients were included (64% [57/89] male, mean age 34 ± 13 years, 38% [32/89] mRNA-1273, and 62% [52/89] BNT162b2). On baseline CMR, 42 (47%) had at least one abnormality; 25 (28%) met both T1- and T2-criteria; 17 (19%) met T1-criteria but not T2-criteria; and 47 (53%) did not meet either. The interval between vaccination and CMR was shorter in those who met T1- and T2-criteria (28 days, IQR 8-69) compared to those who met T1-criteria only (110 days, IQR 66-255, p < 0.001) and those who did not meet either (120 days, interquartile range (IQR) 80-252, p < 0.001). In the subset of 21 patients who met both T1- and T2-criteria at baseline and had follow-up CMR, myocardial edema had resolved and left ventricular ejection fraction had normalized in all at median imaging follow-up of 214 days (IQR 132-304). However, minimal LGE persisted in 10 (48%). At median clinical follow-up of 232 days (IQR 156-405, n = 60), there were no adverse cardiac events. However, mild cardiac symptoms persisted in 7 (12%)., Conclusion: In a cohort of patients who underwent clinically indicated CMR for suspected myocarditis following COVID-19 vaccination, 47% had at least one abnormality at baseline CMR. Detection of myocardial edema was associated with the timing of CMR after vaccination. There were no adverse cardiac events. However, minimal LGE persisted in 48% at follow-up., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interests The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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39. Imaging of Cardiac Fibrosis: An Update, From the AJR Special Series on Imaging of Fibrosis.
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Karur GR, Aneja A, Stojanovska J, Hanneman K, Latchamsetty R, Kersting D, and Rajiah PS
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- Humans, Myocardium pathology, Contrast Media, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Gadolinium, Fibrosis diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathies diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Myocardial fibrosis (MF) is defined as excessive production and deposition of extra-cellular matrix proteins that result in pathologic myocardial remodeling. Three types of MF have been identified: replacement fibrosis from tissue necrosis, reactive fibrosis from myocardial stress, and infiltrative interstitial fibrosis from progressive deposition of nondegradable material such as amyloid. Although echocardiography, nuclear medicine, and CT play important roles in the assessment of MF, MRI is pivotal in the evaluation of MF, with the late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) technique used as a primary end point. The LGE technique focuses on the pattern and distribution of gadolinium accumulation in the myocardium and assists in the diagnosis and establishment of the cause of both ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathy. LGE MRI also aids prognostication and risk stratification. In addition, LGE MRI is used to guide the management of patients considered for ablation for arrhythmias. Parametric mapping techniques, including T1 mapping and extracellular volume measurement, allow detection and quantification of diffuse fibrosis, which may not be detected by LGE MRI. These techniques also allow monitoring of disease progression and therapy response. This review provides an update on the imaging of MF, including prognostication and risk stratification tools, electrophysiologic considerations, and disease monitoring.
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- 2024
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40. Maximizing the Prognostic Utility of 13 N-Ammonia PET: Featuring Right Ventricular Strain.
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Gulsin GS and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Prognosis, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right diagnostic imaging, Male, Ammonia, Positron-Emission Tomography, Nitrogen Radioisotopes
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- 2024
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41. Cardiovascular Imaging, Climate Change, and Environmental Sustainability.
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Gunasekaran S, Szava-Kovats A, Battey T, Gross J, Picano E, Raman SV, Lee E, Bissell MM, Alasnag M, Campbell-Washburn AE, and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Greenhouse Gases, Cardiac Imaging Techniques methods, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Environmental Exposure analysis, Climate Change, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Environmental exposures including poor air quality and extreme temperatures are exacerbated by climate change and are associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Concomitantly, the delivery of health care generates substantial atmospheric greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions contributing to the climate crisis. Therefore, cardiac imaging teams must be aware not only of the adverse cardiovascular health effects of climate change, but also the downstream environmental ramifications of cardiovascular imaging. The purpose of this review is to highlight the impact of climate change on cardiovascular health, discuss the environmental impact of cardiovascular imaging, and describe opportunities to improve environmental sustainability of cardiac MRI, cardiac CT, echocardiography, cardiac nuclear imaging, and invasive cardiovascular imaging. Overarching strategies to improve environmental sustainability in cardiovascular imaging include prioritizing imaging tests with lower GHG emissions when more than one test is appropriate, reducing low-value imaging, and turning equipment off when not in use. Modality-specific opportunities include focused MRI protocols and low-field-strength applications, iodine contrast media recycling programs in cardiac CT, judicious use of US-enhancing agents in echocardiography, improved radiopharmaceutical procurement and waste management in nuclear cardiology, and use of reusable supplies in interventional suites. Finally, future directions and research are highlighted, including life cycle assessments over the lifespan of cardiac imaging equipment and the impact of artificial intelligence tools. Keywords: Heart, Safety, Sustainability, Cardiovascular Imaging Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2024.
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- 2024
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42. Noninvasive Pressure-Volume Loops: Can Cardiac MRI Obviate the Need for Invasive Catheter Hemodynamic Measurements?
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Hanneman K and Gulsin GS
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
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- 2024
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43. Cardiac Computed Tomography of Native Cardiac Valves.
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Broncano J, Hanneman K, Ghoshhajra B, and Rajiah PS
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- Humans, Aortic Valve, Radiography, Tomography adverse effects, Heart Valve Diseases diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis complications
- Abstract
Valvular heart disease (VHD) is a significant clinical problem associated with high morbidity and mortality. Although not being the primary imaging modality in VHD, cardiac computed tomography (CCT) provides relevant information about its morphology, function, severity grading, and adverse cardiac remodeling assessment. Aortic valve calcification quantification is necessary for grading severity in cases of low-flow/low-gradient aortic stenosis. Moreover, CCT details significant information necessary for adequate percutaneous treatment planning. CCT may help to detail the etiology of VHD as well as to depict other less frequent causes of valvular disease, such as infective endocarditis, valvular neoplasms, or other cardiac pseudomasses., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors do not have any relevant disclosures., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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44. The Landscape of Rural and Remote Radiology in Canada: Opportunities and Challenges.
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Davidson M, Kielar A, Tonseth RP, Seland K, Harvie S, and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Canada, Teleradiology, Radiologists supply & distribution, Radiology, Radiology, Interventional, Rural Health Services
- Abstract
Diagnostic and interventional radiology play a crucial role in healthcare, facilitating diagnosis of disease, treatment planning, interventional therapies, and assessment for response to treatment. However, many rural and remote regions are disproportionately limited in accessing high-quality radiological services. Challenges include limited imaging infrastructure in these communities, geographic isolation, and workforce shortages impacting provision of interventional image-guided procedures and subspecialty imaging in particular. However, a career in rural or remote radiology also presents unique opportunities including a deep sense of community, broad scope of practice, and immense benefit to patient care. This review aims to explore the landscape of rural and remote radiology with a focus on Canada, including opportunities, challenges, and potential strategies. Some of the challenges are shared by both rural and remote communities while others are distinct. Factors that have contributed to challenges in recruitment and retention of rural and remote radiologists include workload burden, inadequate or suboptimal imaging and interventional equipment, and limited exposure during training. Additionally, strategies to improve the provision of radiology services in rural and remote communities are highlighted, addressing both the workforce shortage and the lack of essential equipment and other resources., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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45. Planetary Health and Radiology: Why We Should Care and What We Can Do.
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McKee H, Brown MJ, Kim HHR, Doo FX, Panet H, Rockall AG, Omary RA, and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Greenhouse Gases, Radiology, Radiology Department, Hospital organization & administration, Climate Change, Global Health
- Abstract
Climate change adversely affects the well-being of humans and the entire planet. A planetary health framework recognizes that sustaining a healthy planet is essential to achieving individual, community, and global health. Radiology contributes to the climate crisis by generating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during the production and use of medical imaging equipment and supplies. To promote planetary health, strategies that mitigate and adapt to climate change in radiology are needed. Mitigation strategies to reduce GHG emissions include switching to renewable energy sources, refurbishing rather than replacing imaging scanners, and powering down unused scanners. Radiology departments must also build resiliency to the now unavoidable impacts of the climate crisis. Adaptation strategies include education, upgrading building infrastructure, and developing departmental sustainability dashboards to track progress in achieving sustainability goals. Shifting practices to catalyze these necessary changes in radiology requires a coordinated approach. This includes partnering with key stakeholders, providing effective communication, and prioritizing high-impact interventions. This article reviews the intersection of planetary health and radiology. Its goals are to emphasize why we should care about sustainability, showcase actions we can take to mitigate our impact, and prepare us to adapt to the effects of climate change. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the article by Ibrahim et al in this issue. See also the article by Lenkinski and Rofsky in this issue.
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- 2024
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46. Environmental Sustainability and MRI: Challenges, Opportunities, and a Call for Action.
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Chaban YV, Vosshenrich J, McKee H, Gunasekaran S, Brown MJ, Atalay MK, Heye T, Markl M, Woolen SA, Simonetti OP, and Hanneman K
- Subjects
- Humans, Greenhouse Effect, Environment
- Abstract
The environmental impact of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has recently come into focus. This includes its enormous demand for electricity compared to other imaging modalities and contamination of water bodies with anthropogenic gadolinium related to contrast administration. Given the pressing threat of climate change, addressing these challenges to improve the environmental sustainability of MRI is imperative. The purpose of this review is to discuss the challenges, opportunities, and the need for action to reduce the environmental impact of MRI and prepare for the effects of climate change. The approaches outlined are categorized as strategies to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from MRI during production and use phases, approaches to reduce the environmental impact of MRI including the preservation of finite resources, and development of adaption plans to prepare for the impact of climate change. Co-benefits of these strategies are emphasized including lower GHG emission and reduced cost along with improved heath and patient satisfaction. Although MRI is energy-intensive, there are many steps that can be taken now to improve the environmental sustainability of MRI and prepare for the effects of climate change. On-going research, technical development, and collaboration with industry partners are needed to achieve further reductions in MRI-related GHG emissions and to decrease the reliance on finite resources. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 5 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 6., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
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- 2024
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47. Energy and Greenhouse Gas Emission Savings Associated with Implementation of an Abbreviated Cardiac MRI Protocol.
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Ibrahim F, Cadour F, Campbell-Washburn AE, Allen BD, Vosshenrich J, Brown MJ, Thavendiranathan P, and Hanneman K
- Subjects
- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging economics, Greenhouse Gases
- Abstract
Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the article by Lenkinski and Rofsky in this issue. See also the article by McKee et al in this issue.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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48. Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging Highlights 2023.
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Aquino GJ, Mastrodicasa D, Alabed S, Abohashem S, Wen L, Gill RR, Bardo DME, Abbara S, and Hanneman K
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- Humans, Contrast Media, Artificial Intelligence, Gadolinium, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Radiology, Atrial Appendage, Heart Defects, Congenital
- Abstract
Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging publishes novel research and technical developments in cardiac, thoracic, and vascular imaging. The journal published many innovative studies during 2023 and achieved an impact factor for the first time since its inaugural issue in 2019, with an impact factor of 7.0. The current review article, led by the Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging trainee editorial board, highlights the most impactful articles published in the journal between November 2022 and October 2023. The review encompasses various aspects of coronary CT, photon-counting detector CT, PET/MRI, cardiac MRI, congenital heart disease, vascular imaging, thoracic imaging, artificial intelligence, and health services research. Key highlights include the potential for photon-counting detector CT to reduce contrast media volumes, utility of combined PET/MRI in the evaluation of cardiac sarcoidosis, the prognostic value of left atrial late gadolinium enhancement at MRI in predicting incident atrial fibrillation, the utility of an artificial intelligence tool to optimize detection of incidental pulmonary embolism, and standardization of medical terminology for cardiac CT. Ongoing research and future directions include evaluation of novel PET tracers for assessment of myocardial fibrosis, deployment of AI tools in clinical cardiovascular imaging workflows, and growing awareness of the need to improve environmental sustainability in imaging. Keywords: Coronary CT, Photon-counting Detector CT, PET/MRI, Cardiac MRI, Congenital Heart Disease, Vascular Imaging, Thoracic Imaging, Artificial Intelligence, Health Services Research © RSNA, 2024.
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- 2024
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49. Incremental value of machine learning for risk prediction in tetralogy of Fallot.
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Ishikita A, McIntosh C, Roche SL, Barron DJ, Oechslin E, Benson L, Nair K, Lee MM, Gritti MN, Hanneman K, Karur GR, and Wald RM
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Child, Heart, Machine Learning, Tetralogy of Fallot diagnosis, Tetralogy of Fallot surgery, Heart Defects, Congenital, Tachycardia, Ventricular diagnosis, Tachycardia, Ventricular etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Machine learning (ML) can facilitate prediction of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) in repaired tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF). We sought to determine the incremental value of ML above expert clinical judgement for risk prediction in rTOF., Methods: Adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) clinicians (≥10 years of experience) participated (one cardiac surgeon and four cardiologists (two paediatric and two adult cardiology trained) with expertise in heart failure (HF), electrophysiology, imaging and intervention). Clinicians identified 10 high-yield variables for 5-year MACE prediction (defined as a composite of mortality, resuscitated sudden death, sustained ventricular tachycardia and HF). Risk for MACE (low, moderate or high) was assigned by clinicians blinded to outcome for adults with rTOF identified from an institutional database (n=25 patient reviews conducted by five independent observers). A validated ML model identified 10 variables for risk prediction in the same population., Results: Prediction by ML was similar to the aggregate score of all experts (area under the curve (AUC) 0.85 (95% CI 0.58 to 0.96) vs 0.92 (0.72 to 0.98), p=0.315). Experts with ≥20 years of experience had superior discriminative capacity compared with <20 years (AUC 0.98 (95% CI 0.86 to 0.99) vs 0.80 (0.56 to 0.93), p=0.027). In those with <20 years of experience, ML provided incremental value such that the combined (clinical+ML) AUC approached ≥20 years (AUC 0.85 (95% CI 0.61 to 0.95), p=0.055)., Conclusions: Robust prediction of 5-year MACE in rTOF was achieved using either ML or a multidisciplinary team of ACHD experts. Risk prediction of some clinicians was enhanced by incorporation of ML suggesting that there may be incremental value for ML in select circumstances., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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50. Significance of a Coronary Artery Calcium Score of 0 in Stable Chest Pain.
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Hanneman K and Gulsin GS
- Subjects
- Humans, Calcium, Coronary Vessels
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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