8 results on '"Matthew G D Bates"'
Search Results
2. Risk of cardiac manifestations in adult mitochondrial disease caused by nuclear genetic defects
- Author
-
John P Bourke, Robert McFarland, John O'Sullivan, Yi Shiau Ng, Doug M Turnbull, Albert Zishen Lim, Daniel M Jones, Matthew G D Bates, Andrew M Schaefer, Catherine Feeney, Maria E Farrugia, and Gráinne S Gorman
- Subjects
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Objective Regular cardiac surveillance is advocated for patients with primary mitochondrial DNA disease. However, there is limited information to guide clinical practice in mitochondrial conditions caused by nuclear DNA defects. We sought to determine the frequency and spectrum of cardiac abnormalities identified in adult mitochondrial disease originated from the nuclear genome.Methods Adult patients with a genetically confirmed mitochondrial disease were identified and followed up at the national clinical service for mitochondrial disease in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK (January 2009 to December 2018). Case notes, molecular genetics reports, laboratory data and cardiac investigations, including serial electrocardiograms and echocardiograms, were reviewed.Results In this cohort-based observational study, we included 146 adult patients (92 women) (mean age 53.6±18.7 years, 95% CI 50.6 to 56.7) with a mean follow-up duration of 7.9±5.1 years (95% CI 7.0 to 8.8). Eleven different nuclear genotypes were identified: TWNK, POLG, RRM2B, OPA1, GFER, YARS2, TYMP, ETFDH, SDHA, TRIT1 and AGK. Cardiac abnormalities were detected in 14 patients (9.6%). Seven of these patients (4.8%) had early-onset cardiac manifestations: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy required cardiac transplantation (AGK; n=2/2), left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and bifascicular heart block (GFER; n=2/3) and mild LV dysfunction (GFER; n=1/3, YARS2; n=1/2, TWNK; n=1/41). The remaining seven patients had acquired heart disease most likely related to conventional cardiovascular risk factors and presented later in life (14.6±12.8 vs 55.1±8.9 years, p
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Network analysis reveals distinct clinical syndromes underlying acute mountain sickness.
- Author
-
David P Hall, Ian J C MacCormick, Alex T Phythian-Adams, Nina M Rzechorzek, David Hope-Jones, Sorrel Cosens, Stewart Jackson, Matthew G D Bates, David J Collier, David A Hume, Thomas Freeman, A A Roger Thompson, and John Kenneth Baillie
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Acute mountain sickness (AMS) is a common problem among visitors at high altitude, and may progress to life-threatening pulmonary and cerebral oedema in a minority of cases. International consensus defines AMS as a constellation of subjective, non-specific symptoms. Specifically, headache, sleep disturbance, fatigue and dizziness are given equal diagnostic weighting. Different pathophysiological mechanisms are now thought to underlie headache and sleep disturbance during acute exposure to high altitude. Hence, these symptoms may not belong together as a single syndrome. Using a novel visual analogue scale (VAS), we sought to undertake a systematic exploration of the symptomatology of AMS using an unbiased, data-driven approach originally designed for analysis of gene expression. Symptom scores were collected from 292 subjects during 1110 subject-days at altitudes between 3650 m and 5200 m on Apex expeditions to Bolivia and Kilimanjaro. Three distinct patterns of symptoms were consistently identified. Although fatigue is a ubiquitous finding, sleep disturbance and headache are each commonly reported without the other. The commonest pattern of symptoms was sleep disturbance and fatigue, with little or no headache. In subjects reporting severe headache, 40% did not report sleep disturbance. Sleep disturbance correlates poorly with other symptoms of AMS (Mean Spearman correlation 0.25). These results challenge the accepted paradigm that AMS is a single disease process and describe at least two distinct syndromes following acute ascent to high altitude. This approach to analysing symptom patterns has potential utility in other clinical syndromes.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Arrhythmia prevalence and sudden death risk in adults with the m.3243AG mitochondrial disorder
- Author
-
John P Bourke, Yi Shiau Ng, Margaret Tynan, Matthew G D Bates, Saidi Mohiddin, Doug Turnbull, and Grainne S Gorman
- Subjects
Male ,Death, Sudden ,Mitochondrial Diseases ,Adrenergic beta-Antagonists ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,cardiovascular diseases ,Hypertrophy ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
AimsTo define the prevalence of non-sustained tachyarrhythmias and bradyarrhythmias in patients with the m.3243A>G mitochondrial genotype and a previously defined, profile, associated with ‘high sudden-death risk’.Methods and resultsPatients at high risk of sudden death because of combinations of ventricular hypertrophy, mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes family phenotype, epilepsy or high mutation load, due to the m.3243A>G mutation, were identified from a mitochondrial cohort of 209 patients. All recruited had serial ECG and echo assessments previously according to schedule, had an ECG-loop recorder implanted and were followed for as long as the device allowed. Devices were programmed to detect non-sustained brady- or tachy-arrhythmias. This provided comprehensive rhythm surveillance and automatic downloads of all detections to a monitoring station for cardiology interpretation. Those with sinus tachycardia were treated with beta-blockers and those with ventricular hypertrophy received a beta-blocker and ACE-inhibitor combination.Nine consecutive patients, approached (37.2±3.9 years, seven males) and consented, were recruited. None died and no arrhythmias longer than 30s duration occurred during 3-year follow-up. Three patients reported palpitations but ECGs correlated with sinus rhythm. One manifest physiological, sinus pauses >3.5 s during sleep and another had one asymptomatic episode of non-sustained ventricular tachycardia.ConclusionsDespite ‘high-risk’ features for sudden death, those studied had negligible prevalence of arrhythmias over prolonged follow-up. By implication, the myocardium in this genotype is not primarily arrhythmogenic. Arrhythmias may not explain sudden death in patients without Wolff-Parkinson-White or abnormal atrioventricular conduction or, it must require a confluence of other, dynamic, proarrhythmic factors to trigger them.
- Published
- 2021
5. Prediction of incident atrial fibrillation in community-based electronic health records: a systematic review with meta-analysis
- Author
-
Chris P Gale, Jianhua Wu, David C. Hogg, Eman S Alsaeed, Suleman Aktaa, Matthew G D Bates, Ramesh Nadarajah, Campbel Cowan, and Ben Hurdus
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Stroke ,Aged ,Heart Failure ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Prediction interval ,Atrial fibrillation ,Bayes Theorem ,medicine.disease ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,Meta-analysis ,Heart failure ,Hypertension ,Model risk ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
ObjectiveAtrial fibrillation (AF) is common and is associated with an increased risk of stroke. We aimed to systematically review and meta-analyse multivariable prediction models derived and/or validated in electronic health records (EHRs) and/or administrative claims databases for the prediction of incident AF in the community.MethodsOvid Medline and Ovid Embase were searched for records from inception to 23 March 2021. Measures of discrimination were extracted and pooled by Bayesian meta-analysis, with heterogeneity assessed through a 95% prediction interval (PI). Risk of bias was assessed using Prediction model Risk Of Bias ASsessment Tool and certainty in effect estimates by Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation.ResultsEleven studies met inclusion criteria, describing nine prediction models, with four eligible for meta-analysis including 9 289 959 patients. The CHADS (Congestive heart failure, Hypertension, Age>75, Diabetes mellitus, prior Stroke or transient ischemic attack) (summary c-statistic 0.674; 95% CI 0.610 to 0.732; 95% PI 0.526–0.815), CHA2DS2-VASc (Congestive heart failure, Hypertension, Age>75 (2 points), Stroke/transient ischemic attack/thromboembolism (2 points), Vascular disease, Age 65–74, Sex category) (summary c-statistic 0.679; 95% CI 0.620 to 0.736; 95% PI 0.531–0.811) and HATCH (Hypertension, Age, stroke or Transient ischemic attack, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Heart failure) (summary c-statistic 0.669; 95% CI 0.600 to 0.732; 95% PI 0.513–0.803) models resulted in a c-statistic with a statistically significant 95% PI and moderate discriminative performance. No model met eligibility for inclusion in meta-analysis if studies at high risk of bias were excluded and certainty of effect estimates was ‘low’. Models derived by machine learning demonstrated strong discriminative performance, but lacked rigorous external validation.ConclusionsModels externally validated for prediction of incident AF in community-based EHR demonstrate moderate predictive ability and high risk of bias. Novel methods may provide stronger discriminative performance.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42021245093.
- Published
- 2021
6. Cryoballoon pulmonary vein isolation as first line treatment for typical atrial flutter (CRAFT): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- Author
-
Tobias Reichlin, Moloy Das, Claire A. Martin, Kim Rajappan, Guy Haywood, Dhiraj Gupta, Muzahir H. Tayebjee, Nichola Clarkson, Christian Sticherling, Christina Ronayne, Wern Yew Ding, Zhong Chen, Ian P. Temple, Richard Balasubramaniam, Emmanuel Williams, Saagar Mahida, Matthew G D Bates, and Lilith Tovmassian
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cavo-tricuspid isthmus ,medicine.medical_treatment ,610 Medicine & health ,Atrial flutter ,Ablation ,Cryoballoon ,Pulmonary vein ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Typical atrial flutter ,medicine ,Implantable loop recorder ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Stroke ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,First episode ,business.industry ,Atrial fibrillation ,Multimedia Report ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Pulmonary Veins ,Radiofrequency ,Cardiology ,Catheter Ablation ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Purpose Treatment of typical atrial flutter (AFL) with cavo-tricuspid isthmus (CTI) ablation is associated with a high occurrence rate of new onset atrial fibrillation (AF) during follow-up. There are data to support the addition of pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) to CTI ablation in patients with both AF and AFL, but the role of cryoballoon PVI only, with no CTI ablation, in AFL patients with no prior documentation of AF has not been studied. Methods CRAFT is an international, prospective, randomised, open with blinded assessment, multicentre superiority study comparing radiofrequency CTI ablation and cryoballoon PVI in patients with typical AFL. Participants with typical AFL are randomised in a 1:1 ratio to either treatment arm, with patients randomised to PVI not receiving CTI ablation. Post-procedural cardiac monitoring is performed using an implantable loop recorder. The primary endpoint is time to first recurrence of sustained symptomatic atrial arrhythmia. Key secondary endpoints include (1) total arrhythmia burden at 12 months, (2) time to first episode of AF lasting ≥ 2 min, (3) time to recurrence of AFL or AT and (4) procedural and fluoroscopy times. The primary safety endpoint is the composite of death, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, cardiac tamponade requiring drainage, atrio-oesophageal fistula, requirement for a permanent pacemaker, serious vascular complications requiring intervention or delaying discharge and persistent phrenic nerve palsy lasting > 24 h. Conclusion This study compares the outcomes of 2 different approaches to typical AFL—the conventional ‘substrate’-based strategy of radiofrequency CTI ablation versus a novel ‘trigger’-based strategy of cryoballoon PVI. Trial registration (ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT03401099)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Novel Quadripolar Active Fixation Left-Ventricular Pacing Lead for Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy: Initial United Kingdom Experience
- Author
-
Michael, Chapman, Matthew G D, Bates, Jonathan M, Behar, Ian, Williams, Matthew, Dewhurst, Christopher, Monkhouse, Carl, Hayward, Amal, Muthumala, Anthony, Chow, Nicholas J, Linker, Andrew R, Thornley, and Andrew J, Turley
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy ,Male ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Humans ,Equipment Failure ,Female ,Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Devices ,Middle Aged ,Prosthesis Design ,United Kingdom ,Aged - Abstract
This study sought to assess immediate and short-term performance of the Medtronic Attain Stability Quadripolar 4798 lead (Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland).Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is an established treatment for appropriately selected patients with left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction. The most common reason for failure to implant a lead is the lack of a suitable epicardial vein, due either to an absent vessel in the target site, an unacceptably high threshold, lead instability, phrenic nerve stimulation, or a combination of reasons. In August 2017, a novel quadripolar active fixation LV lead (Medtronic) was released. This paper reports the initial clinical experience with lead implantation and specifically immediate and short-term pacing parameters across 3 United Kingdom centers.Consecutive patients eligible for CRT were deemed suitable for this lead. Immediate and short-term lead performance data regarding LV threshold, impedance, and displacement rates were collected at standard pacing checks (1 day, 5 weeks, 3 months, and 9 months post-implantation).CRT using this lead was attempted in 82 cases and was successful in 81 cases (98.8%). LV thresholds and impedance levels were 1.22 ± 0.75 V and 737 ± 319 Ω at implantation; 1.16 ± 0.71 V and 597 ± 218 Ω at day 1; 1.02 ± 0.48 V and 579 ± 148 Ω at week 6; 0.98 ± 0.49 V and 569 ± 133 Ω at 3 months; and 1.06 ± 0.48 V and 570 ± 140 Ω at 9 months. As of the publication of this paper, no LV lead has been displaced.CRT using the Medtronic lead was successful in more than 98% of the patients. Short-to-medium-term data regarding lead performance and stability were excellent, with zero displacements as of the publication of this paper.
- Published
- 2019
8. Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors in the treatment and prevention of high altitude pulmonary edema
- Author
-
Matthew G D, Bates, A A Roger, Thompson, and J Kenneth, Baillie
- Subjects
Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterases, Type 5 ,Treatment Outcome ,Molecular Structure ,3',5'-Cyclic-GMP Phosphodiesterases ,Animals ,Humans ,Pulmonary Edema ,Altitude Sickness ,Enzyme Inhibitors - Abstract
The combination of a tendency to affect otherwise fit and healthy individuals, and a characteristically rapid progression to death within hours of the first symptoms, renders high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) a particularly devastating illness in travelers to high altitudes. The alveolar edema and ventilation:perfusion mismatch initiate a catastrophic downward spiral of worsening alveolar hypoxia. This reviewo discusses the rationale for the use of phosphodiesterase (PDE)5 inhibitors in HAPE, compares the pharmacokinetic properties of the available agents, and appraises the relevant experimental evidence. Although this class of drugs shows promise in high altitude medicine, further research is necessary to determine the efficacy and safety of PDE5 inhibitors as a treatment for established
- Published
- 2007
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.