40 results on '"Salvatore P Costa"'
Search Results
2. Lateral annular systolic excursion ratio: A novel measurement of right ventricular systolic function by two-dimensional echocardiography
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Jonathan D. Stock, Eric S. Rothstein, Scott E. Friedman, Anthony S. Gemignani, Salvatore P. Costa, Andrew J. Milbridge, Rui Zhang, Cynthia C. Taub, Daniel J. O'Rourke, and Robert T. Palac
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right ventricle (RV) ,right ventricular systolic function ,RV function ,cardiac magnetic resonance imaging ,two-dimensional echocardiography ,TAPSE ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
IntroductionAccurate assessment of right ventricular (RV) systolic function has prognostic and therapeutic implications in many disease states. Echocardiography remains the most frequently deployed imaging modality for this purpose, but estimation of RV systolic function remains challenging. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of a novel measurement of RV systolic function called lateral annular systolic excursion ratio (LASER), which is the fractional shortening of the lateral tricuspid annulus to apex distance, compared to right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) derived by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR).MethodsA retrospective cohort of 78 consecutive patients who underwent clinically indicated CMR and transthoracic echocardiography within 30 days were identified from a database. Parameters of RV function measured included: tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) by M-mode, tissue Doppler S', fractional area change (FAC) and LASER. These measurements were compared to RVEF derived by CMR using Pearson's correlation coefficients and receiver operating characteristic curves.ResultsLASER was measurable in 75 (96%) of patients within the cohort. Right ventricular systolic dysfunction, by CMR measurement, was present in 37% (n = 29) of the population. LASER has moderate positive correlation with RVEF (r = 0.54) which was similar to FAC (r = 0.56), S' (r = 0.49) and TAPSE (r = 0.37). Receiver operating characteristic curves demonstrated that LASER (AUC = 0.865) outperformed fractional area change (AUC = 0.767), tissue Doppler S' (AUC = 0.744) and TAPSE (AUC = 0.645). A cohort derived dichotomous cutoff of 0.2 for LASER was shown to provide optimal diagnostic characteristics (sensitivity of 75%, specificity of 87% and accuracy of 83%) for identifying abnormal RV function. LASER had the highest sensitivity, accuracy, positive and negative predictive values among the parameters studied in the cohort.ConclusionsWithin the study cohort, LASER was shown to have moderate positive correlation with RVEF derived by CMR and more favorable diagnostic performance for detecting RV systolic dysfunction compared to conventional echocardiographic parameters while being simple to obtain and less dependent on image quality than FAC and emerging techniques.
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- 2022
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3. Emerging Evidence on Coronary Heart Disease Screening in Kidney and Liver Transplantation Candidates: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association: Endorsed by the American Society of Transplantation
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Xingxing S, Cheng, Lisa B, VanWagner, Salvatore P, Costa, David A, Axelrod, Sripal, Bangalore, Silas P, Norman, Charles A, Herzog, and Krista L, Lentine
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Clinical Trials as Topic ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,American Heart Association ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,United States ,Liver Transplantation - Abstract
Coronary heart disease is an important source of mortality and morbidity among kidney transplantation and liver transplantation candidates and recipients and is driven by traditional and nontraditional risk factors related to end-stage organ disease. In this scientific statement, we review evidence from the past decade related to coronary heart disease screening and management for kidney and liver transplantation candidates. Coronary heart disease screening in asymptomatic kidney and liver transplantation candidates has not been demonstrated to improve outcomes but is common in practice. Risk stratification algorithms based on the presence or absence of clinical risk factors and physical performance have been proposed, but a high proportion of candidates still meet criteria for screening tests. We suggest new approaches to pretransplantation evaluation grounded on the presence or absence of known coronary heart disease and cardiac symptoms and emphasize multidisciplinary engagement, including involvement of a dedicated cardiologist. Noninvasive functional screening methods such as stress echocardiography and myocardial perfusion scintigraphy have limited accuracy, and newer noninvasive modalities, especially cardiac computed tomography-based tests, are promising alternatives. Emerging evidence such as results of the 2020 International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness With Medical and Invasive Approaches-Chronic Kidney Disease trial emphasizes the vital importance of guideline-directed medical therapy in managing diagnosed coronary heart disease and further questions the value of revascularization among asymptomatic kidney transplantation candidates. Optimizing strategies to disseminate and implement best practices for medical management in the broader end-stage organ disease population should be prioritized to improve cardiovascular outcomes in these populations.
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- 2022
4. Concepts and Controversies: Lipid Management in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease
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Salvatore P. Costa, Mandeep S. Sidhu, Robert S. Rosenson, Sripal Bangalore, Roy O. Mathew, Radmila Lyubarova, and Rafia I Chaudhry
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Hyperlipidemias ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Niacin ,End stage renal disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ezetimibe ,Renal Dialysis ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Hyperlipidemia ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,education ,Dialysis ,Hypolipidemic Agents ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,PCSK9 Inhibitors ,Fibric Acids ,Patient Acuity ,General Medicine ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Clinical trial ,030104 developmental biology ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Dyslipidemia ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Kidney disease ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) remains an important contributor of morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). CKD is recognized as an important risk enhancer that identifies patients as candidates for more intensive low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol lowering. However, there is controversy regarding the efficacy of lipid-lowering therapy, especially in patients on dialysis. Among patients with CKD, not yet on dialysis, there is clinical trial evidence for the use of statins with or without ezetimibe to reduce ASCVD events. Newer cholesterol lowering agents have been introduced for the management of hyperlipidemia to reduce ASCVD, but these therapies have not been tested in the CKD population except in secondary analyses of patients with primarily CKD stage 3. This review summarizes the role of hyperlipidemia in ASCVD and treatment strategies for hyperlipidemia in the CKD population.
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- 2020
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5. SUCCESSFUL USE OF BIVENTRICULAR ASSIST DEVICES IN FULMINANT MYOCARDITIS
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Rajan Ganesh, Hanyuan Shi, Max Biondi, Thomas Truglio, Eric Rothstein, and Salvatore P. Costa
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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6. Kidney Transplant List Status and Outcomes in the ISCHEMIA-CKD Trial
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Rebecca Anthopolos, Yifan Xu, David J. Maron, Judith S. Hochman, Rafael A. Maldonado, Charles A. Herzog, Jerome L. Fleg, Gregg W. Stone, Sripal Bangalore, Sanjeev Gulati, Mandeep S. Sidhu, Magdelena Madero, Mengistu Simegn, Mohammad El-Hajjar, Eric Daugas, Salvatore P. Costa, and Roy O. Mathew
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Waiting Lists ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Comorbidity ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Revascularization ,Conservative Treatment ,Article ,Coronary artery disease ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Myocardial Revascularization ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Kidney transplantation ,Dialysis ,Aged ,Unstable angina ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,United States ,Survival Rate ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and coronary artery disease frequently undergo preemptive revascularization before kidney transplant listing. Objectives In this post hoc analysis from ISCHEMIA-CKD (International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness of Medical and Invasive Approaches–Chronic Kidney Disease), we compared outcomes of patients not listed versus those listed according to management strategy. Methods In the ISCHEMIA-CKD trial (n = 777), 194 patients (25%) with chronic coronary syndromes and at least moderate ischemia were listed for transplant. The primary (all-cause mortality or nonfatal myocardial infarction) and secondary (death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, hospitalization for unstable angina, heart failure, resuscitated cardiac arrest, or stroke) outcomes were analyzed using Cox multivariable modeling. Heterogeneity of randomized treatment effect between listed versus not listed groups was assessed. Results Compared with those not listed, listed patients were younger (60 years vs 65 years), were less likely to be of Asian race (15% vs 29%), were more likely to be on dialysis (83% vs 44%), had fewer anginal symptoms, and were more likely to have coronary angiography and coronary revascularization irrespective of treatment assignment. Among patients assigned to an invasive strategy versus conservative strategy, the adjusted hazard ratios for the primary outcome were 0.91 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.54–1.54) and 1.03 (95% CI: 0.78–1.37) for those listed and not listed, respectively (pinteraction= 0.68). Adjusted hazard ratios for secondary outcomes were 0.89 (95% CI: 0.55–1.46) in listed and 1.17 (95% CI: 0.89–1.53) in those not listed (pinteraction = 0.35). Conclusions In ISCHEMIA-CKD, an invasive strategy in kidney transplant candidates did not improve outcomes compared with conservative management. These data do not support routine coronary angiography or revascularization in patients with advanced CKD and chronic coronary syndromes listed for transplant. (ISCHEMIA-Chronic Kidney Disease Trial [ISCHEMIA-CKD]; NCT01985360 )
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- 2021
7. Health status after invasive or conservative care in coronary and advanced kidney disease
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Spertus J. A., Jones P. G., Maron D. J., Mark D. B., O'Brien S. M., Fleg J. L., Reynolds H. R., Stone G. W., Sidhu M. S., Chaitman B. R., Chertow G. M., Hochman J. S., Bangalore S, ISCHEMIA-CKD Research Group: Abdallah M Abdallah, Abel E Moreyra, Abhay A Laddu, Abhishek Dubey, Abhishek Goyal, Abigail Knighton, Adedayo Adeboye, Agne Juceviciene, Agne Urboniene, Agnieszka Szramowska, Ahmed Abdel-Latif, Ahmed Ayoub, Ahmed Elghamaz, Ahmed Kamal, Ahmed Talaat, Ajay Sharma, Ajit Singh Narula, Akshay Bagai, Akvile Smigelskaite, Alain Raymond, Alain Rheault, Alaine Melanie Loehr, Albert Varga, Aldo P Maggioni, Alec Moorman, Alejandro Chevaile Ramos, Alejandro Gisbert, Aleksandra Fratczak, Aleksandras Laucevicius, Alexander M Chernyavskiy, Alexander Sergeevich Borisov, Alexandra Craft, Alexandra Hunter, Alexandre Ciappina Hueb, Alexandre Schaan de Quadros, Alice Manica Muller, Aline Peixoto Deiro, Allegra Stone, Almudena Castro, Amar Uxa, Amaryllis Van Craenenbroeck, Ambuj Roy, Amit Kakkar, Amy Flowers, Amy Iskandrian, Ana D Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana Gomes Almeida, Ana Rita Francisco, Ana S Mladenovic, Ana Santana, Anandaroop Lahiri, Anastasia M Kuzmina-Krutetskaya, Anastasia Vamvakidou, Andras Vertes, Andre Gabriel, Andrea Bartykowszki, Andrea Lorimer, Andrea Pascual, Andreia Coelho, Andreia Rocha, Andrés García-Rincón, Andrew Starovoytov, Andrzej Łabyk, Anelise Kawakami, Angela Hoye, Angelo Nobre, Anjali Acharya, Anjali Anand, Anjana Rishmawi, Ann Banfield, Ann Luyten, Anna Cichocka-Radwan, Anna Fojt, Anna Plachcinska, Anna Teresinska, Anne Marie Webb, Anne Heath, Anoop Mathew, Antonia Vega, Antonio Carvalho, Antonio Colombo, Antonio Fiarresga, Anu Tharini, Anupama Rao, Aquiles Valdespino-Estrada, Ariel Diaz, Arif Asif, Arnold H Seto, Arturo S Campos-Santaolalla, Asim N Cheema, Asker Ahmed, Atul Mathur, Audrey W Leong, Axel Åkerblom, Axelle Fuentes, Aynun Naher, Badhma Valaiyapathi, Balaji Srinivasan, Baljeet Kaur, Balram Bhargava, Bandula Guruge, Barbara Wicklund, Bartosz Czarniak, Bebek Singh, Begoña Igual, Bela Merkely, Benoy N Shah, Bernard de Bruyne, Beth Abramson, Beth Stefanchik, Bethany Harvey, Bharati Shivalkar, Bilal Malik, Binoy Mannekkattukudy Kurian, Bougrida Hammouche, Branko D Beleslin, Bruce Ferguson, Bruce McManus, Bruna Maria Ascoli, Bryn Smith, Byron J Allen, C Michael Gibson, C Noel Bairey Merz, Calin Pop, Carl-Éric Gagné, Carly Ohmart, Carol M Kartje, Caroline Alsweiler, Caroline Rodgers, Caroline Spindler, Carolyn J Gruber, Catherine Albert, Catherine Bone, Catherine Lemay, Cezary Kepka, Chandini Suvarna, Chantale Mercure, Charlene Wiyarand, Chetan Patel, Chiara Attanasio, Chi-Ming Chow, Ching Min Er, Ching-Ching Ong, Cholenahally Nanjappa Manjunath, Chris Buller, Christel Vassaliere, Christiaan Vrints, Christian Witzke, Christie Ballantyne, Christina Björklund, Christine Roraff, Christophe Laure, Christophe Thuaire, Christopher Chan, Christopher Fordyce, Christopher Kinsey, Chunli Xia, Cidney Schultz, Claes Held, Claudia Cortés, Claudia Escobar, Cláudia Freixo, Clemens T Kadalie, Corine Thobois, Courtney Page, Cristina Bare, Dalisa Espinosa, Dan Gao, Dana Rizk, Daniela Puzhevsky, Data Analyst, David M Charytan, David O Williams, David Booth, David Charytan, David Cohen, David DeMets, David Foo, David Goldfarb, David Schlichting, David Sisson, David Taggart, David Waters, David Wheeler, David Williams, Davis Vo, Dawid Teodorczyk, Dawn D Shelstad, Dean Kereiakes, Deborah Yip, Deepa Ramaswamy, Deirdre Mattina, Deirdre Murphy, Dengke Jiang, Derek Cyr, Diana Cukali, Diane Camara, Dimitrios Stournaras, Dipti Patel, Dongze Li, Donna Exley, Doreen Reimann, Doron Schwartz, Duarte Cacela, Dwayne S G Conway, Eapen Punnoose, Edgar L Tay, Edgar Karanjah, Eduardo Gomes Lima, Eduardo Hernandez-Rangel, Edward D Nicol, Edyta Kaczmarska, Elena Refoyo Salicio, Eli Feen, Elihú Durán-Cortés, Elisabeth M Janzen, Elise van Dongen, Elissa Restelli Piloto, Elizabeta Srbinovska Kostovska, Elizabeth Capasso-Gulve, Elizaveta V Zbyshevskaya, Ellie Fridell, Ellis W Lader, Elvira Gosmanova, Emilie Tachot, Emma Howard, Emmanuel Sorbets, Encarnación Alonso-Álvarez, Eric Daugas, Erick Alexánderson Rosas, Estelle Montpetit, Eugene Passamani, Evgeny Shutov, Ewa Szczerba, Ewelina Wojtala, Expedito Eustáquio Ribeiro Silva, Fabio Fimiani, Fadi Hage, Fahim Haider Jafary, Fang Feng, Fatima Ranjbaran, Fausto J Pinto, Fernando Caeiro, Fernando Nolasco, Filipa Silva, Filippo Ottani, Firas Al Solaiman, Flávia Egydio, Florina Chereches, Francesca De Micco, Francesca Bianchini, Francesca Pietrucci, Francesco Orso, Francesco Pisano, Francisca Patuleia Figueiras, François Madore, Frank Harrell, Frank Rockhold, Frans Van de Werf, Franziska Guenther, Fred Mohr, G Karthikeyan, Gabriel Galeote, Gabriel Grossmann, Gabriel Steg, Gabriela Guzman, Gabriele Gabrielli, Gang Chen, Gautam Sharma, Gaylin Petty, Gelmina Mikolaitiene, Gennie Yee, Gerard Patrick Devlin, Gerard Esposito, Gergely Ágoston, Gervasio Lamas, Gia Cobb, Gian Piero Perna, Gianpiero Leone, Girish Mishra, Gonzalo Barge-Caballero, Grace M Young, Graciela Scaro, Graham Wong, Gregg Pressman, Gregor Simonis, Gudrun Steinmaurer, Guilherme Portugal, Guilhermina Cantinho Lopes, Guillermo Garcia-Garcia, Guoqin Wang, Gurpreet S Wander, Gurpreet Gulati, Haibo Zhang, Halina Marciniak, Hao Dai, Haojian Dong, Harold Franch, Harvey White, Hatem Elabd, Hayley Pomeroy, Heather Golden, Heidi Wilson, Helene Abergel, Hemalata Siddaram, Hemant Shakhar Mahapatra, Henry C Stokes, Hermine Osseni, Herwig Schuchlenz, Hicham Skali, Holly Mattix-Kramer, Hong Cheng, Hossam Mahrous, Hristo Pejkov, Hugo Marques, Hui Zhong, Hussien El Fishawy, Ian Webb, Iftikhar Kullo, Igor O Grazhdankin, Ikraam Hassan, Ileana L Pina, Ilona Tamasauskiene, Inês Zimbarra Cabrita, Ines Rodrigues, Inga Soveri, Irena Peovska Mitevska, Irene Marthe Lang, Irina Subbotina, Irma Kalibataite-Rutkauskiene, Isabelle Roy, Ishita Tejani, Ivan A Naryshkin, Ivana Jankovic, Iwona Niedzwiecka, Jacek Kusmierek, Jackie Chow, Jaekyeong Heo, Jakub Maksym, James E Davies, James J Jang, James Hirsch, James Tatoulis, Jan Henzel, Janaina Oliveira, Janani Rangaswami, Jane Eckstein, Janitha Raj, Jaqueline Pozzibon, Jaroslaw Drozdz, Jason Loh Kwok Kong, Jason T Call, Jason Linefsky, Javier J Garcia, Jay Meisner, Jayne Scales, Jean Michel Juliard, Jean Diodati, Jean-Michel Juliard, Jeanne Russo, Jeannette J M Schoep, Jeff Leimberger, Jeffrey C Milliken, Jeffrey Anderson, Jeffrey Kanters, Jeffrey Lorin, Jeffrey Moses, Jelena J Stepanovic, Jelena Celutkiene, Jelena Stojkovic, Jenne M Jose, Jennifer L Stanford, Jennifer Hogan, Jennifer Horst, Jennifer Isaacs, Jennifer Thomson, Jennifer Tomfohr, Jennifer White, Jerry Yee, Jessica Berg, Jesus Peteiro, Jesús Peteiro, Jia Li, Jiamin Liu, Jianxin Zhang, Jill Marcus, Jim Blankenship, Jing Dong, Jiyan Chen, Jo Evans, Joaquín V Peñafiel, Joe Sabik, Johann Christopher, John B Kostis, John Joseph Graham, John Doan, John Jose, John Kotter, John Lehman, John Middleton, John Pownall, Jonathan M Gleadle, Jonathan S Chavez-Iñiguez, Jonathan Byrne, Jonathan Himmelfarb, Jonathan Lebowitz, Jonean Thorsen, Jorge Carrillo Calvillo, Jorge Escobedo, José A Ortega-Ramírez, José J Cuenca-Castillo, Jose L Diez, José Luis Narro Villanueva, José Luiz da Costa Vieira, José M Flores-Palacios, Jose Fragata, Jose Lopes, Jose Lopez-Sendon, José Lopez-Sendon, Jose Rueda, Joseph B Selvanayagam, Joseph Sacco, Joshua P Loh, Joy Burkhardt, Juan Manuel López Quijano, Juan Gaztanaga, Judit Sebo, Judith Wright, Juergen Stumpf, Julia de Aveiro Morata, Julio César Figal, Julio Hernandez Jaras, Junqing Yang, Jyotsna Garg, K Manjula Rani, K Preethi, Kaatje Goetschalckx, Karen Calfas, Karen Petrosyan, Karen Servilla, Karen Swan, Karin Ploetze, Karolina Kryczka, Karolina Wojtczak-Soska, Karolina Wojtera, Karthik Ramasamy, Katarzyna Łuczak, Katarzyna Malinowska, Katharina Knaut, Katherine Martin, Kathleen Claes, Kathryn Mason, Ken Mahaffey, Kenneth Gin, Kerry Lee, Kerstin Bonin, Kerstin Mikes, Kevin R Bainey, Kevin T Harley, Kevin Marzo, Kevin McMahon, Khaled Abdul-Nour, Khaled Alfakih, Khaled Dajani, Khrystyna Kushniriuk, Kian-Keong Poh, Kim Holland, Kimberly E Halverson, Kinnari Murphy, Kiran Reddy, Kirsten J Quiles, Kirsty Abercrombie, Klaus Matschke, Konrad Szymczyk, Koo Hui Chan, Kreton Mavromatis, Krishnakumar Hongalgi, Kristian Thygesen, Kristin M Salmi, Kristin Newby, Kristine Arges, Kristine Teoh, Krzysztof Drzymalski, Lalathaksha Kumbar, Laszlone Matics, LaTonya J Hickson, Laura Keinaite, Laura Sarti, Laura True, Lawrence M Phillips, Lawrence Friedman, Leandro C Maranan, Leda Lotaif, Lekshmi Dharmarajan, Leo A Bockeria, Leonardo Pizzol Caetano, Leonardo Bridi, Leonid L Bershtein, Li Hai Yan, Li Li, Lidia Sousa, Lihong Xu, Lihua Zhang, Lili Zhang, Lilian Mazza Barbosa, Liljana Tozija, Linda Arcand, Lino Patricio, Liping Zhang, Lisa Hatch, Lixin Jiang, Liz Low, Loay Salman, Lorena Lopez, Lori Pritchard, Luis Bernanrdes, Luis Guzman, Lynette L Teo, M Sowjanya Reddy, Maarten Simoons, Maayan Konigstein, Mafalda Selas, Magdalena Madero, Magdalena Miller, Magdalena Misztal-Teodorczyk, Magdy Abdelhamid, Magid Fahim, Mahevamma Mylarappa, Majo X Joseph, Malgorzata Frach, Manjula Rani, Marcello Galvani, Marcin Demkow, Marcin Szkopiak, Marco De Fabritis, Marco Magnoni, Marco Marini, Marco Sicuro, Marek Roik, Maria A Alfonso, Maria Antonieta Pereira de Moraes, María Dolores Martínez-Ruíz, Maria Eugenia Canziani, Maria Eugenia Martin, Maria Inês Caetano, Maria P Corral, Maria Pérez García, Maria Andreasson, Maria Posada, Marianna D A Dracoulakis, Mariano Rubio, Marija T Petrovic, Marina Vieira, Mario J Garcia, Mario D'arezzo, Maris Orgera, Marius Miglinas, Mark Garand, Mark Peterson, Mark Xavier, Marlowe Mosley, Marta Capinha, Marta Swiderek, Martha Meyer, Martina Ceseri, Martinia Tricoli, Mary Wiilliams, Mary Ann Champagne, Mary Streif, Massoud Leesar, Matei Claudia, Mateusz Solecki, Matías Nicolás Mungo, Matthew Shinseki, Matthew Weir, Maura Carina Nédio, Max-Paul Winter, Mayil S Krishnam, Meenakshi Mishra, Mei Hwang, Melemadathil Srilatha, Melissa LeFevre, Mengistu Simegn, Michael A Gibson, Michael B Rubens, Michael D Shapiro, Michael Chobanian, Michael Davidson, Michael Farkouh, Michael Mack, Michal Wlodarczyk, Michel G Khouri, Michelle Crowder, Michelle Ratliff, Miguel Borges Santos, Miguel Nobre Menezes, Miguel Perez Fontan, Miguel Barrero, Mihaly Tapolyai, Mikhail T Torosoff, Milan R Dobric, Milind Avdhoot Gadkari, Min Tun Kyaw, Miri Revivo, Mitchel B Lustre, Mohamed Adel, Mohamed Hassan, Mohammad El-Hajjar, Mohammed Hussain, Mohammed Saleem, Moisés Blanco-Calvo, Moisés Jiménez-Santos, Monika Laukyte, Muhamed Saric, Myrthes Emy Takiuti, Nadia Asif, Nagaraja Moorthy, Naima L Ogletree, Nana O Katamadze, Nandita Nataraj, Naomi Uchida, Nasrul Ismail, Natalia S Oliveira, Natalia de Carvalho Maffei, Nathalie Brosens, Naved Aslam, Naveed Akhtar, Neamat Mowafy, Neeraj Pandit, Neeraj Parakh, Neesh Pannu, Neill Duncan, Nevena Garcevic, Ngaire Meadows, Nicholas Danchin, Nicole Deming, Nikola N Boskovic, Nikolaos Karogiannis, Ning Zhang, Nirmal Kumar, Niruta Sharma, Nitika Chadha, Nitish Naik, Noelle M Durfee, Nora M Cosgrove, Norbert Urbanski, Norma Hogg, Olga Walesiak, Olga Zdończyk, Olga Zhdanova, Olivia Anaya, Olugbenga Bello, Omar Almousalli, Omar Thompson, Orit Kliuk, Oscar Méndiz, Óscar Prada-Delgado, Oz Shapira, Pablo Raffaele, Page Salanger, Pal Maurovich-Horvat, Pallav Garg, Paloma Moraga, Pam Singh, Pamela Ouyang, Pamela Woodard, Paola Emanuela Poggio Smanio, Paola Smanio, Paolo Calabro, Patricia K Nguyen, Patricia Alarie, Patricia Carrilho, Patricia Endsley, Patricia Pellikka, Patrycja Lebioda, Paul Der Mesropian, Paul Hauptman, Paula García-González, Paula Wilson, Paulo Cury Rezende, Paulo Novis Rocha, Pedro Canas Silva, Pedro Farto E Abreu, Pedro Píccaro de Oliveira, Pedro Carvalho, Pedro Modas, Pedro Rio, Peiyu He, Peter A McCullough, Peter H Stone, Peter Douglass, Peter Sizeland, Peter Voros, Philippe Gabriel Steg, Philippe Genereux, Philippe Généreux, Philippe Menasche, Philippe Rheault, Piero Tassinario, Pierre Gervais, Pilar Calvillo, Ping Chai, Piotr Jakubowski, Piotr Pruszczyk, Poay-Huan Loh, Pouneh Samadi, Prakash Deedwania, Pranav M Patel, Praneeth Polamuri, Pratiksha Sharma, Preeti Kamath, Prince Thomas, Priyadarshani Arambam, Puneet Sodhi, Pushpa Naik, Qi Zhong, Qian Zhao, Qianqian Yuan, Qiulan Xie, Rachel Murphy, Radmila Lyubarova, Radmilar Lyubarova, Raewyn Fisher, Rafael Diaz, Rafael Maldonado, Rafael Selgas, Raffaele Bugiardini, Rafia Chaudhry, Raisa Kavalakkat, Rajalekshmi Vs, Rajesh Gopalan Nair, Rajiv Narang, Rakesh Yadav, Ramiro Carvalho, Ramon de Jesús-Pérez, Ran Leng, Ranjan Kachru, Raquel Sanchez, Raven R Dwyer, Raven Lee, Ray Wyman, Raymond C Wong, Reinette Hampson, Renato Abdala Karam Kalil, Renato D Lopes, Renato George Eick, Renato Lopes, Reshma Ravindran, Reto Andreas Gamma, Ricardo Costa, Richa Bhatt, Richard H J Trimlett, Risha Patel, Rita Coram, Robert K Riezebos, Robert M Donnino, Robert Guyton, Robert Harrington, Robert Malecki, Roberto René Favaloro, Robyn Elliott, Rodolfo G S D Lima, Rohit Tandon, Rolf Doerr, Roma Tewari, Ron Wald, Rongrong Hu, Rory Collins, Roxana Mehran, Roxy Senior, Rubén Baleón-Espinosa, Ruben Ramos, Rui Ferreira, Ruth Kirby, Ruth Pérez-Fernández, S Ramakrishnan, S K Dwivedi, Sadath Lubna, Sadiq Ahmed, Sajeev Chakanalil Govindan, Salamah Alfalahi, Salvador Cruz-Flores, Salvatore P Costa, Sampoornima Setty, Samuel Nwosu, Sandeep Mahajan, Sandeep Seth, Sandeep Singh, Sander R Niehe, Sandy Carr, Sanja Simic Ogrizovic, Sanja Ogrizovic, Sanjeev Gulati, Sanjeev Sharma, Sara Fernandez, Sarah Williams, Sarju Ralhan, Sasko Kedev, Satinder Singh, Satish Sankaranarayanan, Satvic Cholenahally Manjunath, Sau Lee, Schawana Thaxton, Sean M O'Brien, Sebastian Sobczak, Seema Nour, Sergey A Sayganov, Sérgio Bravo Baptista, Sergio Draibe, Seth Sokol, Sharad Chandra, Shari Mackedanz, Shaun Goodman, Shayan Shirazian, Sheetal Rupesh Karwa, Sheri Ussery, Sheromani Bajaj, Shirin Heydari, Shiv Kumar Choudhary, Shivali Patel, Shruti Pandey, Shuyang Zhang, Siddharth Gadage, Sik-Yin V Tan, Sílvia Zottis Poletti, Silvia Valbuena, Simone Savaris, Solomon Yakubov, Songlin Zhu, Sonika Gupta, Sorin Brener, Sothinathan Gurunathan, Soundarya Nayak, Sowjanya Reddy, Stanley E Cobos, Stefan Weikl, Stephanie M Lane, Stephanie Ferket, Stephanie Mavromichalis, Stephen Fremes, Steven A Fein, Steven P Sedlis, Steven Giovannone, Steven Weitz, Subhash Banerjee, Sudhanva S Hegde, Suellen Hosino, Sulagna Mookherjee, Suman Singh, Sumith Abeygunasekara, Sundeep Mishra, Sunil Kumar Verma, Suresh Kumar, Suryaprakash Narayanappa, Susan K Milbrandt, Susana Silva, Susanna Stevens, Suvarna Kolhe, Suzana Tavares, Suzanne Welsh, T A Kishore, Tamara Colaiácovo Soares, Tapan Umesh Pillay, Tarek Rashid, Tarun K Mittal, Tauane Bello Duarte, Téodora Dutoiu, Teresa Delgadillo, Terrance Chua, Terrance Welch, Theodoros Kofidis, Thierry Lefevre, Tiago Silva, Timea Boros, Titus Lau, Tiziana Formisano, Tomasz Ciurus, Tomasz Tarchalski, Tracy Tan, Umesh Lingaraj, V K Bahl, V S Narain, Valentina Pellu, Valentine Lobo, Valerie Robesyn, Vandana Yadav, Veerabhadra Gupta, Verghese Mathew, Vicente Miro, Victoria Gumerova, Victoria Hernandez, Vijay Kher, Vijay Kumar, Vikas Makkar, Vikranth Reddy, Viktoria Bulkley, Vinoi George David, Virendra Misra, Virginia Fernández-Figares, Vladimir Ryasniansky, Vojislav L Giga, Wael A Almahmeed, Wan Xian Chan, Wanda C Marfori, Wanda Parker, Wayne Pennachi, Wei Ling Lau, Weibing Xing, Weijing Bian, Wendy L Stewart, Wendy Drewes, Whady Hueb, William Weintraub, Winnie C Sia, Xacobe Flores-Ríos, Xiang Ma, Xiangqiong Gu, Xiaomei Li, Xiaoyi Xu, Xin Fu, Xuemei Li, Xutong Wang, Yanek Pépin-Dubois, Yaron Arbel, Yechen Han, Yiming Lit, Ying Tung Sia, Ying Wang, Yining Yang, Yitong Ma, Yolayfi Peralta, Yves Smets, Yvonne Taul, Zalina Kudzoeva, Zeljko Z Markovic, Zhangsuo Liu, Zhenyu Liu, Zhiming Ye, Zixiang Yu, Zoltan Davidovits, Zvezdana Petronijevic, Spertus J.A., Jones P.G., Maron D.J., Mark D.B., O'Brien S.M., Fleg J.L., Reynolds H.R., Stone G.W., Sidhu M.S., Chaitman B.R., Chertow G.M., Hochman J.S., Bangalore S, and ISCHEMIA-CKD Research Group: Abdallah M Abdallah, Abel E Moreyra, Abhay A Laddu, Abhishek Dubey, Abhishek Goyal, Abigail Knighton, Adedayo Adeboye, Agne Juceviciene, Agne Urboniene, Agnieszka Szramowska, Ahmed Abdel-Latif, Ahmed Ayoub, Ahmed Elghamaz, Ahmed Kamal, Ahmed Talaat, Ajay Sharma, Ajit Singh Narula, Akshay Bagai, Akvile Smigelskaite, Alain Raymond, Alain Rheault, Alaine Melanie Loehr, Albert Varga, Aldo P Maggioni, Alec Moorman, Alejandro Chevaile Ramos, Alejandro Gisbert, Aleksandra Fratczak, Aleksandras Laucevicius, Alexander M Chernyavskiy, Alexander Sergeevich Borisov, Alexandra Craft, Alexandra Hunter, Alexandre Ciappina Hueb, Alexandre Schaan de Quadros, Alice Manica Muller, Aline Peixoto Deiro, Allegra Stone, Almudena Castro, Amar Uxa, Amaryllis Van Craenenbroeck, Ambuj Roy, Amit Kakkar, Amy Flowers, Amy Iskandrian, Ana D Djordjevic-Dikic, Ana Gomes Almeida, Ana Rita Francisco, Ana S Mladenovic, Ana Santana, Anandaroop Lahiri, Anastasia M Kuzmina-Krutetskaya, Anastasia Vamvakidou, Andras Vertes, Andre Gabriel, Andrea Bartykowszki, Andrea Lorimer, Andrea Pascual, Andreia Coelho, Andreia Rocha, Andrés García-Rincón, Andrew Starovoytov, Andrzej Łabyk, Anelise Kawakami, Angela Hoye, Angelo Nobre, Anjali Acharya, Anjali Anand, Anjana Rishmawi, Ann Banfield, Ann Luyten, Anna Cichocka-Radwan, Anna Fojt, Anna Plachcinska, Anna Teresinska, Anne Marie Webb, Anne Heath, Anoop Mathew, Antonia Vega, Antonio Carvalho, Antonio Colombo, Antonio Fiarresga, Anu Tharini, Anupama Rao, Aquiles Valdespino-Estrada, Ariel Diaz, Arif Asif, Arnold H Seto, Arturo S Campos-Santaolalla, Asim N Cheema, Asker Ahmed, Atul Mathur, Audrey W Leong, Axel Åkerblom, Axelle Fuentes, Aynun Naher, Badhma Valaiyapathi, Balaji Srinivasan, Baljeet Kaur, Balram Bhargava, Bandula Guruge, Barbara Wicklund, Bartosz Czarniak, Bebek Singh, Begoña Igual, Bela Merkely, Benoy N Shah, Bernard de Bruyne, Beth Abramson, Beth Stefanchik, Bethany Harvey, Bharati Shivalkar, Bilal Malik, Binoy Mannekkattukudy Kurian, Bougrida Hammouche, Branko D Beleslin, Bruce Ferguson, Bruce McManus, Bruna Maria Ascoli, Bryn Smith, Byron J Allen, C Michael Gibson, C Noel Bairey Merz, Calin Pop, Carl-Éric Gagné, Carly Ohmart, Carol M Kartje, Caroline Alsweiler, Caroline Rodgers, Caroline Spindler, Carolyn J Gruber, Catherine Albert, Catherine Bone, Catherine Lemay, Cezary Kepka, Chandini Suvarna, Chantale Mercure, Charlene Wiyarand, Chetan Patel, Chiara Attanasio, Chi-Ming Chow, Ching Min Er, Ching-Ching Ong, Cholenahally Nanjappa Manjunath, Chris Buller, Christel Vassaliere, Christiaan Vrints, Christian Witzke, Christie Ballantyne, Christina Björklund, Christine Roraff, Christophe Laure, Christophe Thuaire, Christopher Chan, Christopher Fordyce, Christopher Kinsey, Chunli Xia, Cidney Schultz, Claes Held, Claudia Cortés, Claudia Escobar, Cláudia Freixo, Clemens T Kadalie, Corine Thobois, Courtney Page, Cristina Bare, Dalisa Espinosa, Dan Gao, Dana Rizk, Daniela Puzhevsky, Data Analyst, David M Charytan, David O Williams, David Booth, David Charytan, David Cohen, David DeMets, David Foo, David Goldfarb, David Schlichting, David Sisson, David Taggart, David Waters, David Wheeler, David Williams, Davis Vo, Dawid Teodorczyk, Dawn D Shelstad, Dean Kereiakes, Deborah Yip, Deepa Ramaswamy, Deirdre Mattina, Deirdre Murphy, Dengke Jiang, Derek Cyr, Diana Cukali, Diane Camara, Dimitrios Stournaras, Dipti Patel, Dongze Li, Donna Exley, Doreen Reimann, Doron Schwartz, Duarte Cacela, Dwayne S G Conway, Eapen Punnoose, Edgar L Tay, Edgar Karanjah, Eduardo Gomes Lima, Eduardo Hernandez-Rangel, Edward D Nicol, Edyta Kaczmarska, Elena Refoyo Salicio, Eli Feen, Elihú Durán-Cortés, Elisabeth M Janzen, Elise van Dongen, Elissa Restelli Piloto, Elizabeta Srbinovska Kostovska, Elizabeth Capasso-Gulve, Elizaveta V Zbyshevskaya, Ellie Fridell, Ellis W Lader, Elvira Gosmanova, Emilie Tachot, Emma Howard, Emmanuel Sorbets, Encarnación Alonso-Álvarez, Eric Daugas, Erick Alexánderson Rosas, Estelle Montpetit, Eugene Passamani, Evgeny Shutov, Ewa Szczerba, Ewelina Wojtala, Expedito Eustáquio Ribeiro Silva, Fabio Fimiani, Fadi Hage, Fahim Haider Jafary, Fang Feng, Fatima Ranjbaran, Fausto J Pinto, Fernando Caeiro, Fernando Nolasco, Filipa Silva, Filippo Ottani, Firas Al Solaiman, Flávia Egydio, Florina Chereches, Francesca De Micco, Francesca Bianchini, Francesca Pietrucci, Francesco Orso, Francesco Pisano, Francisca Patuleia Figueiras, François Madore, Frank Harrell, Frank Rockhold, Frans Van de Werf, Franziska Guenther, Fred Mohr, G Karthikeyan, Gabriel Galeote, Gabriel Grossmann, Gabriel Steg, Gabriela Guzman, Gabriele Gabrielli, Gang Chen, Gautam Sharma, Gaylin Petty, Gelmina Mikolaitiene, Gennie Yee, Gerard Patrick Devlin, Gerard Esposito, Gergely Ágoston, Gervasio Lamas, Gia Cobb, Gian Piero Perna, Gianpiero Leone, Girish Mishra, Gonzalo Barge-Caballero, Grace M Young, Graciela Scaro, Graham Wong, Gregg Pressman, Gregor Simonis, Gudrun Steinmaurer, Guilherme Portugal, Guilhermina Cantinho Lopes, Guillermo Garcia-Garcia, Guoqin Wang, Gurpreet S Wander, Gurpreet Gulati, Haibo Zhang, Halina Marciniak, Hao Dai, Haojian Dong, Harold Franch, Harvey White, Hatem Elabd, Hayley Pomeroy, Heather Golden, Heidi Wilson, Helene Abergel, Hemalata Siddaram, Hemant Shakhar Mahapatra, Henry C Stokes, Hermine Osseni, Herwig Schuchlenz, Hicham Skali, Holly Mattix-Kramer, Hong Cheng, Hossam Mahrous, Hristo Pejkov, Hugo Marques, Hui Zhong, Hussien El Fishawy, Ian Webb, Iftikhar Kullo, Igor O Grazhdankin, Ikraam Hassan, Ileana L Pina, Ilona Tamasauskiene, Inês Zimbarra Cabrita, Ines Rodrigues, Inga Soveri, Irena Peovska Mitevska, Irene Marthe Lang, Irina Subbotina, Irma Kalibataite-Rutkauskiene, Isabelle Roy, Ishita Tejani, Ivan A Naryshkin, Ivana Jankovic, Iwona Niedzwiecka, Jacek Kusmierek, Jackie Chow, Jaekyeong Heo, Jakub Maksym, James E Davies, James J Jang, James Hirsch, James Tatoulis, Jan Henzel, Janaina Oliveira, Janani Rangaswami, Jane Eckstein, Janitha Raj, Jaqueline Pozzibon, Jaroslaw Drozdz, Jason Loh Kwok Kong, Jason T Call, Jason Linefsky, Javier J Garcia, Jay Meisner, Jayne Scales, Jean Michel Juliard, Jean Diodati, Jean-Michel Juliard, Jeanne Russo, Jeannette J M Schoep, Jeff Leimberger, Jeffrey C Milliken, Jeffrey Anderson, Jeffrey Kanters, Jeffrey Lorin, Jeffrey Moses, Jelena J Stepanovic, Jelena Celutkiene, Jelena Stojkovic, Jenne M Jose, Jennifer L Stanford, Jennifer Hogan, Jennifer Horst, Jennifer Isaacs, Jennifer Thomson, Jennifer Tomfohr, Jennifer White, Jerry Yee, Jessica Berg, Jesus Peteiro, Jesús Peteiro, Jia Li, Jiamin Liu, Jianxin Zhang, Jill Marcus, Jim Blankenship, Jing Dong, Jiyan Chen, Jo Evans, Joaquín V Peñafiel, Joe Sabik, Johann Christopher, John B Kostis, John Joseph Graham, John Doan, John Jose, John Kotter, John Lehman, John Middleton, John Pownall, Jonathan M Gleadle, Jonathan S Chavez-Iñiguez, Jonathan Byrne, Jonathan Himmelfarb, Jonathan Lebowitz, Jonean Thorsen, Jorge Carrillo Calvillo, Jorge Escobedo, José A Ortega-Ramírez, José J Cuenca-Castillo, Jose L Diez, José Luis Narro Villanueva, José Luiz da Costa Vieira, José M Flores-Palacios, Jose Fragata, Jose Lopes, Jose Lopez-Sendon, José Lopez-Sendon, Jose Rueda, Joseph B Selvanayagam, Joseph Sacco, Joshua P Loh, Joy Burkhardt, Juan Manuel López Quijano, Juan Gaztanaga, Judit Sebo, Judith Wright, Juergen Stumpf, Julia de Aveiro Morata, Julio César Figal, Julio Hernandez Jaras, Junqing Yang, Jyotsna Garg, K Manjula Rani, K Preethi, Kaatje Goetschalckx, Karen Calfas, Karen Petrosyan, Karen Servilla, Karen Swan, Karin Ploetze, Karolina Kryczka, Karolina Wojtczak-Soska, Karolina Wojtera, Karthik Ramasamy, Katarzyna Łuczak, Katarzyna Malinowska, Katharina Knaut, Katherine Martin, Kathleen Claes, Kathryn Mason, Ken Mahaffey, Kenneth Gin, Kerry Lee, Kerstin Bonin, Kerstin Mikes, Kevin R Bainey, Kevin T Harley, Kevin Marzo, Kevin McMahon, Khaled Abdul-Nour, Khaled Alfakih, Khaled Dajani, Khrystyna Kushniriuk, Kian-Keong Poh, Kim Holland, Kimberly E Halverson, Kinnari Murphy, Kiran Reddy, Kirsten J Quiles, Kirsty Abercrombie, Klaus Matschke, Konrad Szymczyk, Koo Hui Chan, Kreton Mavromatis, Krishnakumar Hongalgi, Kristian Thygesen, Kristin M Salmi, Kristin Newby, Kristine Arges, Kristine Teoh, Krzysztof Drzymalski, Lalathaksha Kumbar, Laszlone Matics, LaTonya J Hickson, Laura Keinaite, Laura Sarti, Laura True, Lawrence M Phillips, Lawrence Friedman, Leandro C Maranan, Leda Lotaif, Lekshmi Dharmarajan, Leo A Bockeria, Leonardo Pizzol Caetano, Leonardo Bridi, Leonid L Bershtein, Li Hai Yan, Li Li, Lidia Sousa, Lihong Xu, Lihua Zhang, Lili Zhang, Lilian Mazza Barbosa, Liljana Tozija, Linda Arcand, Lino Patricio, Liping Zhang, Lisa Hatch, Lixin Jiang, Liz Low, Loay Salman, Lorena Lopez, Lori Pritchard, Luis Bernanrdes, Luis Guzman, Lynette L Teo, M Sowjanya Reddy, Maarten Simoons, Maayan Konigstein, Mafalda Selas, Magdalena Madero, Magdalena Miller, Magdalena Misztal-Teodorczyk, Magdy Abdelhamid, Magid Fahim, Mahevamma Mylarappa, Majo X Joseph, Malgorzata Frach, Manjula Rani, Marcello Galvani, Marcin Demkow, Marcin Szkopiak, Marco De Fabritis, Marco Magnoni, Marco Marini, Marco Sicuro, Marek Roik, Maria A Alfonso, Maria Antonieta Pereira de Moraes, María Dolores Martínez-Ruíz, Maria Eugenia Canziani, Maria Eugenia Martin, Maria Inês Caetano, Maria P Corral, Maria Pérez García, Maria Andreasson, Maria Posada, Marianna D A Dracoulakis, Mariano Rubio, Marija T Petrovic, Marina Vieira, Mario J Garcia, Mario D'arezzo, Maris Orgera, Marius Miglinas, Mark Garand, Mark Peterson, Mark Xavier, Marlowe Mosley, Marta Capinha, Marta Swiderek, Martha Meyer, Martina Ceseri, Martinia Tricoli, Mary Wiilliams, Mary Ann Champagne, Mary Streif, Massoud Leesar, Matei Claudia, Mateusz Solecki, Matías Nicolás Mungo, Matthew Shinseki, Matthew Weir, Maura Carina Nédio, Max-Paul Winter, Mayil S Krishnam, Meenakshi Mishra, Mei Hwang, Melemadathil Srilatha, Melissa LeFevre, Mengistu Simegn, Michael A Gibson, Michael B Rubens, Michael D Shapiro, Michael Chobanian, Michael Davidson, Michael Farkouh, Michael Mack, Michal Wlodarczyk, Michel G Khouri, Michelle Crowder, Michelle Ratliff, Miguel Borges Santos, Miguel Nobre Menezes, Miguel Perez Fontan, Miguel Barrero, Mihaly Tapolyai, Mikhail T Torosoff, Milan R Dobric, Milind Avdhoot Gadkari, Min Tun Kyaw, Miri Revivo, Mitchel B Lustre, Mohamed Adel, Mohamed Hassan, Mohammad El-Hajjar, Mohammed Hussain, Mohammed Saleem, Moisés Blanco-Calvo, Moisés Jiménez-Santos, Monika Laukyte, Muhamed Saric, Myrthes Emy Takiuti, Nadia Asif, Nagaraja Moorthy, Naima L Ogletree, Nana O Katamadze, Nandita Nataraj, Naomi Uchida, Nasrul Ismail, Natalia S Oliveira, Natalia de Carvalho Maffei, Nathalie Brosens, Naved Aslam, Naveed Akhtar, Neamat Mowafy, Neeraj Pandit, Neeraj Parakh, Neesh Pannu, Neill Duncan, Nevena Garcevic, Ngaire Meadows, Nicholas Danchin, Nicole Deming, Nikola N Boskovic, Nikolaos Karogiannis, Ning Zhang, Nirmal Kumar, Niruta Sharma, Nitika Chadha, Nitish Naik, Noelle M Durfee, Nora M Cosgrove, Norbert Urbanski, Norma Hogg, Olga Walesiak, Olga Zdończyk, Olga Zhdanova, Olivia Anaya, Olugbenga Bello, Omar Almousalli, Omar Thompson, Orit Kliuk, Oscar Méndiz, Óscar Prada-Delgado, Oz Shapira, Pablo Raffaele, Page Salanger, Pal Maurovich-Horvat, Pallav Garg, Paloma Moraga, Pam Singh, Pamela Ouyang, Pamela Woodard, Paola Emanuela Poggio Smanio, Paola Smanio, Paolo Calabro, Patricia K Nguyen, Patricia Alarie, Patricia Carrilho, Patricia Endsley, Patricia Pellikka, Patrycja Lebioda, Paul Der Mesropian, Paul Hauptman, Paula García-González, Paula Wilson, Paulo Cury Rezende, Paulo Novis Rocha, Pedro Canas Silva, Pedro Farto E Abreu, Pedro Píccaro de Oliveira, Pedro Carvalho, Pedro Modas, Pedro Rio, Peiyu He, Peter A McCullough, Peter H Stone, Peter Douglass, Peter Sizeland, Peter Voros, Philippe Gabriel Steg, Philippe Genereux, Philippe Généreux, Philippe Menasche, Philippe Rheault, Piero Tassinario, Pierre Gervais, Pilar Calvillo, Ping Chai, Piotr Jakubowski, Piotr Pruszczyk, Poay-Huan Loh, Pouneh Samadi, Prakash Deedwania, Pranav M Patel, Praneeth Polamuri, Pratiksha Sharma, Preeti Kamath, Prince Thomas, Priyadarshani Arambam, Puneet Sodhi, Pushpa Naik, Qi Zhong, Qian Zhao, Qianqian Yuan, Qiulan Xie, Rachel Murphy, Radmila Lyubarova, Radmilar Lyubarova, Raewyn Fisher, Rafael Diaz, Rafael Maldonado, Rafael Selgas, Raffaele Bugiardini, Rafia Chaudhry, Raisa Kavalakkat, Rajalekshmi Vs, Rajesh Gopalan Nair, Rajiv Narang, Rakesh Yadav, Ramiro Carvalho, Ramon de Jesús-Pérez, Ran Leng, Ranjan Kachru, Raquel Sanchez, Raven R Dwyer, Raven Lee, Ray Wyman, Raymond C Wong, Reinette Hampson, Renato Abdala Karam Kalil, Renato D Lopes, Renato George Eick, Renato Lopes, Reshma Ravindran, Reto Andreas Gamma, Ricardo Costa, Richa Bhatt, Richard H J Trimlett, Risha Patel, Rita Coram, Robert K Riezebos, Robert M Donnino, Robert Guyton, Robert Harrington, Robert Malecki, Roberto René Favaloro, Robyn Elliott, Rodolfo G S D Lima, Rohit Tandon, Rolf Doerr, Roma Tewari, Ron Wald, Rongrong Hu, Rory Collins, Roxana Mehran, Roxy Senior, Rubén Baleón-Espinosa, Ruben Ramos, Rui Ferreira, Ruth Kirby, Ruth Pérez-Fernández, S Ramakrishnan, S K Dwivedi, Sadath Lubna, Sadiq Ahmed, Sajeev Chakanalil Govindan, Salamah Alfalahi, Salvador Cruz-Flores, Salvatore P Costa, Sampoornima Setty, Samuel Nwosu, Sandeep Mahajan, Sandeep Seth, Sandeep Singh, Sander R Niehe, Sandy Carr, Sanja Simic Ogrizovic, Sanja Ogrizovic, Sanjeev Gulati, Sanjeev Sharma, Sara Fernandez, Sarah Williams, Sarju Ralhan, Sasko Kedev, Satinder Singh, Satish Sankaranarayanan, Satvic Cholenahally Manjunath, Sau Lee, Schawana Thaxton, Sean M O'Brien, Sebastian Sobczak, Seema Nour, Sergey A Sayganov, Sérgio Bravo Baptista, Sergio Draibe, Seth Sokol, Sharad Chandra, Shari Mackedanz, Shaun Goodman, Shayan Shirazian, Sheetal Rupesh Karwa, Sheri Ussery, Sheromani Bajaj, Shirin Heydari, Shiv Kumar Choudhary, Shivali Patel, Shruti Pandey, Shuyang Zhang, Siddharth Gadage, Sik-Yin V Tan, Sílvia Zottis Poletti, Silvia Valbuena, Simone Savaris, Solomon Yakubov, Songlin Zhu, Sonika Gupta, Sorin Brener, Sothinathan Gurunathan, Soundarya Nayak, Sowjanya Reddy, Stanley E Cobos, Stefan Weikl, Stephanie M Lane, Stephanie Ferket, Stephanie Mavromichalis, Stephen Fremes, Steven A Fein, Steven P Sedlis, Steven Giovannone, Steven Weitz, Subhash Banerjee, Sudhanva S Hegde, Suellen Hosino, Sulagna Mookherjee, Suman Singh, Sumith Abeygunasekara, Sundeep Mishra, Sunil Kumar Verma, Suresh Kumar, Suryaprakash Narayanappa, Susan K Milbrandt, Susana Silva, Susanna Stevens, Suvarna Kolhe, Suzana Tavares, Suzanne Welsh, T A Kishore, Tamara Colaiácovo Soares, Tapan Umesh Pillay, Tarek Rashid, Tarun K Mittal, Tauane Bello Duarte, Téodora Dutoiu, Teresa Delgadillo, Terrance Chua, Terrance Welch, Theodoros Kofidis, Thierry Lefevre, Tiago Silva, Timea Boros, Titus Lau, Tiziana Formisano, Tomasz Ciurus, Tomasz Tarchalski, Tracy Tan, Umesh Lingaraj, V K Bahl, V S Narain, Valentina Pellu, Valentine Lobo, Valerie Robesyn, Vandana Yadav, Veerabhadra Gupta, Verghese Mathew, Vicente Miro, Victoria Gumerova, Victoria Hernandez, Vijay Kher, Vijay Kumar, Vikas Makkar, Vikranth Reddy, Viktoria Bulkley, Vinoi George David, Virendra Misra, Virginia Fernández-Figares, Vladimir Ryasniansky, Vojislav L Giga, Wael A Almahmeed, Wan Xian Chan, Wanda C Marfori, Wanda Parker, Wayne Pennachi, Wei Ling Lau, Weibing Xing, Weijing Bian, Wendy L Stewart, Wendy Drewes, Whady Hueb, William Weintraub, Winnie C Sia, Xacobe Flores-Ríos, Xiang Ma, Xiangqiong Gu, Xiaomei Li, Xiaoyi Xu, Xin Fu, Xuemei Li, Xutong Wang, Yanek Pépin-Dubois, Yaron Arbel, Yechen Han, Yiming Lit, Ying Tung Sia, Ying Wang, Yining Yang, Yitong Ma, Yolayfi Peralta, Yves Smets, Yvonne Taul, Zalina Kudzoeva, Zeljko Z Markovic, Zhangsuo Liu, Zhenyu Liu, Zhiming Ye, Zixiang Yu, Zoltan Davidovits, Zvezdana Petronijevic
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Male ,Intention to Treat Analysi ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Health Status ,Myocardial Ischemia ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,law.invention ,Health Statu ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Odds Ratio ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Cardiology ,Female ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Revascularization ,Follow-Up Studie ,03 medical and health sciences ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Healthy Lifestyle ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Aged ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,business.industry ,Coronary Artery Bypa ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Angiography ,Exercise Test ,Proportional Hazards Model ,business ,Kidney disease ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND In the ISCHEMIA-CKD trial, the primary analysis showed no significant difference in the risk of death or myocardial infarction with initial angiography and revascularization plus guideline-based medical therapy (invasive strategy) as compared with guideline-based medical therapy alone (conservative strategy) in participants with stable ischemic heart disease, moderate or severe ischemia, and advanced chronic kidney disease (an estimated glomerular filtration rate of
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- 2020
8. The association of QRS duration with atrial fibrillation in a heart failure with preserved ejection fraction population: a pilot study
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David J. Malenka, Salvatore P. Costa, Mandeep S. Sidhu, Alan T. Kono, Jeremiah R. Brown, Joseph N. Gigliotti, David Steckman, Jonathan S. Zipursky, Robert T. Palac, Alina M. Robert, and Mark L. Greenberg
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Population ,Clinical Investigations ,Action Potentials ,Pilot Projects ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Electrocardiography ,03 medical and health sciences ,QRS complex ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Conduction System ,Heart Rate ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Odds Ratio ,Prevalence ,Humans ,New Hampshire ,Medicine ,Sinus rhythm ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Heart Failure ,education.field_of_study ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Diastolic heart failure ,Stroke Volume ,Atrial fibrillation ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Heart failure ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction - Abstract
Background Heart failure is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality, yet patient risk stratification may be difficult. Prevention or treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF) may be an important strategy in these patients that could positively affect their outcome. It has been demonstrated that in patients with systolic dysfunction, prolonged QRS duration (QRSd), an easily measured electrocardiographic parameter, is associated with AF. Hypothesis Prolonged QRSd is associated with an increase in prevalence of AF in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction(HFPEF). Methods Between February 2006 and February 2009, 718 patients were discharged with a diagnosis of HF from the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Of these, 206 had EF ≥50% by echocardiography performed within 72 hours of admission. After exclusions, 82 patients remained, of which 25 had AF and 57 had sinus rhythm. Characteristics of the AF and sinus-rhythm patients were compared in this pilot study. Results After adjustment for age, prior diagnosis of HF, and left atrial area, there was a nonsignificant trend (odds ratio: 2.2, 95% CI of 0.3-17.2) for a QRSd >120 ms to be associated with AF. Conclusions Similar to results in patients with systolic dysfunction, patients with preserved EF may have an association between a prolonged QRSd and AF.
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- 2017
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9. Pulmonary Hypertension in Chronic Kidney Disease
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Salvatore P. Costa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Kidney ,Anemia ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Volume overload ,Renal function ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Heart failure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,business ,Dialysis ,Kidney disease - Abstract
An elevated pulmonary pressure (PASP >35 mm Hg) is a highly prevalent finding in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) – approaching over 30% of patients with CKD in some studies. This is often first detected on an echocardiogram, which is a very common test performed in patients with kidney failure, as the volume overload consistent with CKD can often be confused for congestive heart failure at times. In addition, some national guidelines have recommended a screening echocardiogram at the start of dialysis to rule out possible cardiac contribution to poor kidney function. Often, the high pulmonary pressure is a reflection of chronic volume overload and diastolic dysfunction (WHO group 2 pulmonary HTN), but patients with chronic kidney disease may have other unique factors that make them more susceptible to pulmonary hypertension, including elevated levels of endothelin, decreased levels of nitric oxide, metabolic abnormalities of calcium handling, anemia, and high-flow states associated with an AV fistula. Whether as a marker of underlying disease or as a contributing factor, significant pulmonary hypertension has been associated with worse outcomes in patients with CKD as well as kidney transplant recipients. An invasive hemodynamic study can be used to further classify pulmonary hypertension into sub-groups and help generate targets for optimal treatment. Further work is needed to determine whether some of the advances in the treatment of pulmonary hypertension can help improve clinical outcomes in this challenging group of patients.
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- 2020
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10. Cardiorenal Syndrome: Classification, Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment Strategies: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association
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Janani Rangaswami, Vivek Bhalla, Wilfried Mullens, W.H. Wilson Tang, Salvatore P. Costa, Peter A. McCullough, John E.A. Blair, Krista L. Lentine, Mark E. Molitch, Claudio Ronco, Kenechukwu Mezue, Tara I. Chang, and Edgar V. Lerma
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Graft Rejection ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Context (language use) ,Cardiorenal syndrome ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Kidney ,Translational Research, Biomedical ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cardio-Renal Syndrome ,Physiology (medical) ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Expert Testimony ,Kidney transplantation ,Dialysis ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Education, Medical ,business.industry ,Acute kidney injury ,Heart ,American Heart Association ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,United States ,Heart failure ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Cardiorenal syndrome encompasses a spectrum of disorders involving both the heart and kidneys in which acute or chronic dysfunction in 1 organ may induce acute or chronic dysfunction in the other organ. It represents the confluence of heart-kidney interactions across several interfaces. These include the hemodynamic cross-talk between the failing heart and the response of the kidneys and vice versa, as well as alterations in neurohormonal markers and inflammatory molecular signatures characteristic of its clinical phenotypes. The mission of this scientific statement is to describe the epidemiology and pathogenesis of cardiorenal syndrome in the context of the continuously evolving nature of its clinicopathological description over the past decade. It also describes diagnostic and therapeutic strategies applicable to cardiorenal syndrome, summarizes cardiac-kidney interactions in special populations such as patients with diabetes mellitus and kidney transplant recipients, and emphasizes the role of palliative care in patients with cardiorenal syndrome. Finally, it outlines the need for a cardiorenal education track that will guide future cardiorenal trials and integrate the clinical and research needs of this important field in the future.
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- 2019
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11. BASELINE CHARACTERISTICS AND OUTCOMES BASED ON RENAL TRANSPLANT LISTING STATUS IN THE ISCHEMIA-CKD TRIAL
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Salvatore P. Costa, Yifan Xu, Mohammad El-Hajjar, Rafael A. Maldonado, Charles A. Herzog, Roy O. Mathew, Mengistu Simegn, Sanjeev Gulati, Mandeep S. Sidhu, Eric Daugas, Sripal Bangalore, Judith S. Hochman, Rebecca Anthopolos, Jerome L. Fleg, David J. Maron, and Marina Vieira
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Renal transplant ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Baseline characteristics ,Ischemia ,Medicine ,Listing (computer) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2021
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12. Evaluation and Management of Pulmonary Hypertension in Kidney Transplant Candidates and Recipients
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David A. Axelrod, Todd C. Villines, Summanther Kaviratne, Salvatore P. Costa, Matthew R. Weir, and Krista L. Lentine
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart disease ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Population ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Disease ,Pulmonary Artery ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Arterial Pressure ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Kidney transplantation ,Transplantation ,Kidney ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Kidney Diseases ,business - Abstract
Although cardiac evaluation before kidney transplantation commonly focuses on coronary artery disease, a comprehensive pretransplant cardiac evaluation must consider other prognostically important cardiac conditions including functional and structural heart disease. Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is increasingly recognized among patients with kidney failure and may be driven by left heart failure, high cardiac output from arteriovenous fistula, hypoxic lung diseases, and metabolic derangements associated with renal disease. In this article, we examine several key concepts and controversies relevant to optimizing the assessment and management of PH in kidney transplant candidates and recipients. First, categorizing PH according to underlying pathophysiologies, hemodynamic characteristics, and treatment responses as currently defined by the World Health Organization can be challenging in this population, but should be pursued to direct appropriate management. Second, echocardiographic PH (based on variable definitions) has been reported in 13% to 50% of selected pretransplant cohorts, but use of more precise diagnostic methods is needed to better define epidemiology and underlying etiologies. Third, although measures of PH have been associated with adverse patient and graft outcomes after kidney transplantation, pilot data suggest that PH may improve with successful transplantation. Fourth, recent advances in PH treatment in the general population focus on World Health Organization group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension, and the efficacy of management strategies for any PH type in patients with renal failure is largely unproven. Broader prospective data, including attention to the impact of transplantation, are needed to advance understanding of the frequency, causes, and optimal management of PH in kidney transplant candidates and recipients.
- Published
- 2017
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13. 2016 ACC Lifelong Learning Competencies for General Cardiologists
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Chittur A. Sivaram, Rosario V. Freeman, John A. McPherson, James A. Arrighi, Eric S. Williams, Jonathan L. Halperin, Eric H. Awtry, Salvatore P. Costa, Lisa A. Mendes, Howard H. Weitz, Thomas J. Ryan, and Eric R. Bates
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Gerontology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical knowledge ,Medical education ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,Lifelong learning ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Patient care - Abstract
Eric S. Williams, MD, MACC, Chair Jonathan L. Halperin, MD, FACC, Co-Chair James A. Arrighi, MD, FACC Eric H. Awtry, MD, FACC Eric R. Bates, MD, FACC John E. Brush, Jr, MD, FACC Salvatore Costa, MD, FACC Lori Daniels, MD, MAS, FACC Susan Fernandes, LPD, PA-C Rosario Freeman, MD, MS, FACC
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- 2016
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14. Practice gaps in the care of mitral valve regurgitation: Insights from the American College of Cardiology mitral regurgitation gap analysis and advisory panel
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Paul A. Grayburn, Marti L. McCulloch, Andrew Wang, Salvatore P. Costa, Michael J. Rinaldi, Vinod H. Thourani, James S. Gammie, Vinay Badhwar, Randolph P. Martin, Jill A. Foster, and Robert Michael Benitez
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Advisory Committees ,Cardiology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Disease management (health) ,Mitral valve repair ,Mitral regurgitation ,Interventional cardiology ,business.industry ,valvular heart disease ,Primary care physician ,Disease Management ,Mitral Valve Insufficiency ,American Heart Association ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Needs assessment ,Guideline Adherence ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Mitral valve regurgitation - Abstract
Background The revised 2014 American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association valvular heart disease guidelines provide evidenced-based recommendations for the management of mitral regurgitation (MR). However, knowledge gaps related to our evolving understanding of critical MR concepts may impede their implementation. Methods The ACC conducted a multifaceted needs assessment to characterize gaps, practice patterns, and perceptions related to the diagnosis and treatment of MR. A key project element was a set of surveys distributed to primary care and cardiovascular physicians (cardiologists and cardiothoracic surgeons). Survey and other gap analysis findings were presented to a panel of 10 expert advisors from specialties of general cardiology, cardiac imaging, interventional cardiology, and cardiac surgeons with expertise in valvular heart disease, especially MR, and cardiovascular education. The panel was charged with assessing the relative importance and potential means of remedying identified gaps to improve care for patients with MR. Results The survey results identified several knowledge and practice gaps that may limit implementation of evidence-based recommendations for MR care. Specifically, half of primary care physicians reported uncertainty regarding timing of intervention for patients with severe primary or functional MR. Physicians in all groups reported that quantitative indices of MR severity were frequently not reported in clinical echocardiographic interpretations, and that these measurements were not consistently reviewed when provided in reports. In the treatment of MR, nearly 30% of primary care physician and general cardiologists did not know the volume of mitral valve repair surgeries by their reference cardiac surgeons and did not have a standard source to obtain this information. After review of the survey results, the expert panel summarized practice gaps into 4 thematic areas and offered proposals to address deficiencies and promote better alignment with the 2014 ACC/American Heart Association valvular disease guidelines. Conclusion Important knowledge and skill gaps exist that may impede optimal care of the patient with MR. Focused educational and practice interventions should be developed to reduce these gaps.
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- 2016
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15. A Review of Echocardiography Training for Internal Medicine Residents: Proposed Goals, Methods, and Metrics
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Salvatore P. Costa, Jennifer Frampton, and Brenton Nash
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Protocol (science) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Modality (human–computer interaction) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,education ,Interventional radiology ,Cell Biology ,Focused cardiac ultrasound ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
Focused cardiac ultrasound (FCU) is a useful bedside tool that is often utilized by internal medicine residents. Multiple studies have shown that FCU adds valuable information beyond the history and physical. No formal recommendations exist regarding which physiologic parameters should be included in FCU, how those parameters should be assessed, or how to adequately train residents in its use. This review highlights the available literature on FCU training for medicine residents and provides in-depth analysis of the existing programs. There is significant variability among FCU training of internal medicine residents. A standard FCU training protocol should be considered to incorporate this powerful modality throughout the American Post-Graduate Medical Education System. This review offers recommendations for standard training.
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- 2018
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16. Echocardiographic Predictors of Response to Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy in 2016: Can Quantitative Global Parameters Succeed Where Segmental Parameters of Dyssynchrony Have Fallen Short?
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Salvatore P. Costa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cardiac resynchronization therapy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Heart Failure ,business.industry ,Left bundle branch block ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Echocardiography ,Parasternal line ,Temporal resolution ,Cardiology ,symbols ,High temporal resolution ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Doppler effect - Abstract
From almost the time of the initial randomized controlled trials demonstrating a benefit to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in the early 2000s,1,2 clinicians, investigators, and industry have all been drawn to the concept that quantitative parameters derived from echocardiographic images might be a powerful tool to enhance patient selection. The need for a tool was magnified by the early observation that approximately one third of patients remain nonresponders despite implantation of a CRT device—an observation that remains mostly unchanged today. See Article by Delgado-Montero et al The task seemed simple at first: because CRT is designed to resynchronize the mechanical motion of the left ventricular (LV) walls, all one needs is a tool that can measure the degree of dyssynchrony—the patients with the most dyssynchrony should have the most to gain. The high temporal resolution available through M-mode seemed well suited to the task of measuring differences in timing, and some of the earliest reports demonstrated that in patients with a left bundle branch block, a simple parasternal long-axis view with a septal to posterior delay of ≥ 130 ms on M-mode was associated with an improved likelihood of response to CRT.3 Around this same time, there were significant advances in echocardiographic technology with tissue Doppler that applied Doppler principles to the low velocity of the LV walls (tissue). These quantitative tools display the change in speed or distance over time, allow for simultaneous sampling of multiple sites, have high frame rates with excellent temporal resolution (although an order of magnitude less than M-mode), and some vendors even created specialized software that would color-code the timing of cardiac events allowing for a snapshot of synchrony or dyssynchrony (tissue synchronization index; GE). These factors converged to contribute to an exponential rise in published research because investigators raced …
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- 2016
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17. Cardiac Disease Evaluation and Management Among Kidney and Liver Transplantation Candidates
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Matthew R. Weir, Kline Bolton, Bertram L. Kasiske, Michael Ragosta, Salvatore P. Costa, Robert L. Carithers, Lee A. Fleisher, Kim A. Eagle, John F. Robb, Krista L. Lentine, and Andrew D. Auerbach
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kidney ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,exercise test ,Perioperative ,Disease ,Liver transplantation ,coronary disease ,liver ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Transplantation ,preoperative evaluation ,surgical procedures, operative ,ACCF Expert Consensus Documents ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Cumulative incidence ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Kidney transplantation ,transplantation - Abstract
The challenges inherent in conducting accurate, clinically effective, and cost-effective cardiac evaluations among transplantation candidates relate to the large size of the target population, the prevalence of disease, the limited number of donated organs, and the often extended waiting periods between initial evaluation and transplantation surgery. According to Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) records, nearly 85 000 candidates were on the waiting list for kidney transplantation in 2010, and ≈17 700 kidney transplantations (including 828 kidney-pancreas transplantations) were performed.1 Also in 2010, 16 000 people were awaiting liver transplantation and 6000 received liver allografts.1 Marked shifts in the age composition of transplant waitlists toward older adults are also raising the average medical complexity and comorbidity burden among listed candidates. In 2011, 62% of kidney transplantation candidates were ≥50 years of age compared with 28.7% of kidney transplantation candidates in 1991.1 A similar shift in age distribution has occurred among liver transplantation candidates; now, 77% are ≥50 years of age.1 Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among patients with end-stage failure of noncardiac organs before and after transplantation. Estimates of the cumulative incidence of myocardial infarction (MI) based on Medicare billing claims have ranged from 8.7% to 16.7% by 3 years after kidney transplant listing and from 4.7% to 11.1% after kidney transplantation.2,3 Observational data suggest particularly high frequencies of cardiovascular events in the first months after kidney transplantation.2,4,5 Cardiovascular diseases in aggregate make up the most common cause of death in patients with functioning allografts at all times after kidney transplantation, accounting for 30% of mortality overall, with highest rates in the peritransplantation period.6 Guidelines and position papers by national organizations can serve as useful tools for informing cardiac evaluation practices before …
- Published
- 2012
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18. Cardiac Disease Evaluation and Management Among Kidney and Liver Transplantation Candidates
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Bertram L. Kasiske, Andrew D. Auerbach, Kline Bolton, Matthew R. Weir, Salvatore P. Costa, Lee A. Fleisher, Robert L. Carithers, Michael Ragosta, Kim A. Eagle, Krista L. Lentine, and John F. Robb
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,business ,Risk assessment ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Kidney transplantation ,Mass screening ,Cause of death - Abstract
The challenges inherent in conducting accurate, clinically effective, and cost-effective cardiac evaluations among transplantation candidates relate to the large size of the target population, the prevalence of disease, the limited number of donated organs, and the often extended waiting periods
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- 2012
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19. Cardiac Catheterization in the Dialysis Population in 2012: We Know More, but Much Remains Unknown
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Salvatore P. Costa, Scott E. Friedman, Krista L. Lentine, and John E. Jayne
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education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,business.industry ,Unstable angina ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Revascularization ,Nephrology ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,business ,education ,Dialysis ,Kidney disease ,Cardiac catheterization - Abstract
Chronic kidney disease is now widely accepted as an independent risk factor for coronary disease and the dialysis population may represent the highest risk subgroup. Among all dialysis patients, a cardiac cause of mortality has been estimated at 40%. In addition, prior studies have demonstrated that when cardiac catheterization is obtained in a consecutive series of asymptomatic diabetic patients on dialysis the rates of coronary disease can approach 50%. However, the ability to define the problem continues to be greater than the ability to treat or prevent it. Coronary revascularization strategies have limitations in the general population which are amplified in the dialysis population. The ability to accurately diagnose an acute coronary syndrome is more difficult, clinical outcomes have a smaller margin of benefit, and technical challenges result in higher complication rates. Recent data demonstrate an inverse relationship between glomerular filtration rate and the risk of presenting with an acute myocardial infarction rather than unstable angina suggesting that patients with CKD may have a unique pathophysiologic profile that is more prone to plaque rupture. However, these "vulnerable" plaques typically are associated with stenoses
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- 2012
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20. Regional Patterns of Dyssynchrony: Lateral Wall Delay Is Desirable but Not Essential for Left Ventricular Remodeling in Biventricular Pacing
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Salvatore P. Costa, Robert T. Palac, Ethan M. Fruechte, and John E. O'Mara
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Ejection fraction ,Left bundle branch block ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cardiac resynchronization therapy ,medicine.disease ,QRS complex ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Internal medicine ,Heart failure ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Implant ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Ventricular remodeling ,business - Abstract
Background: Tissue synchronization imaging (TSI), a parametric imaging technique based on tissue velocity imaging, often demonstrates patterns other than lateral delay in patients evaluated for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). The prevalence of these patterns and their response to CRT has not been well described. We hypothesized that regional patterns of dyssynchrony might correlate with the extent of reverse remodeling. Methods: A consecutive series of 32 patients underwent echocardiographic study prior to CRT implant and 3 months postimplant. TSI was used to color-code the time-to-peak positive systolic velocity at six basal and six mid-LV segments. Each patient was assigned to one of four groups based on the predominant location of greatest delay (≥2 segments): (1) posterolateral delay, (2) septal delay, (3) no dyssynchrony, or (4) other. Results: Patients were classified as follows: posterolateral delay in 44% of patients (n = 14), septal delay in 28% (n = 9), no dyssynchrony in 16% (n = 5), and other pattern in 13% (n = 4). At 3-month follow-up, the group with the lateral delay pattern was associated with the greatest decrease in left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESV) and the largest improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (−45 mL and +9.3%, respectively, P < 0.05). The LVESV in the other three groups changed as follows: −24 mL (septal), −28 mL (no dyssynchrony), and −15 mL (other). Similar trends were observed for LVEF and left ventricular end-diastolic volume. Conclusions: Despite the presence of wide QRS and a left bundle branch block, the most delayed segment is not always the posterolateral wall. Posterolateral delay is associated with the best response to CRT, while other patterns respond at a lower magnitude. (Echocardiography 2012;29:554-559)
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- 2012
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21. Non-invasive detection of pulmonary hypertension prior to renal transplantation is a predictor of increased risk for early graft dysfunction
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David A. Axelrod, Salvatore P. Costa, Edward Catherwood, Jeremiah R. Brown, Michael Chobanian, Scott L. Friedman, and David Zlotnick
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Adult ,Graft Rejection ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Delayed Graft Function ,Kidney Function Tests ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Risk factor ,education ,Dialysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Graft Survival ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,surgical procedures, operative ,Nephrology ,Creatinine ,Pulmonary artery ,Cardiology ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,Hemodialysis ,business ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background. Early graft dysfunction is a significant complication after renal transplantation and is a marker of adverse outcomes. Although multiple predictors of graft dysfunction have been previously described, the reported prevalence of pulmonary hypertension (pulmonary HTN) in the dialysis population (40–50%), along with biologic and physiologic principles, led us to hypothesize that pulmonary HTN might be an additional risk factor for early graft dysfunction. Methods. We performed a retrospective study that screened all adult renal transplants performed at our institution over a 3-year period and limited the evaluation to those subjects who had an estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressure on a preoperative echocardiogram report (n = 55). The primary outcome of this study was to investigate the impact of pulmonary HTN on early graft dysfunction using a combined endpoint of delayed graft function or slow graft function. Results. Among patients receiving a living donor kidney, early graft dysfunction was not observed regardless of pulmonary HTN status. However, among patients receiving a deceased donor kidney, pulmonary HTN was found to be associated with a significant increased risk of early graft dysfunction (56 vs 11.7%, P = 0.01). Univariate and multivariable logistic regression supported this observation as an independent risk factor beyond potential confounding recipient, donor and graft-based risk factors for early graft dysfunction (P < 0.05). Conclusion. Pulmonary HTN detected on non-invasive imaging prior to renal transplantation appears to be an independent predictor of early graft dysfunction among those patients who receive a deceased donor kidney.
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- 2010
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22. Management and Clinical Outcomes of Acute Cardiac Tamponade Complicating Electrophysiologic Procedures: A Single-Center Case Series
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Jeremiah R. Brown, Salvatore P. Costa, Mark L. Greenberg, A D O Todd Silberstein, Robert J. Kim, and Samer Siouffi
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Resuscitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Perforation (oil well) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pericardial effusion ,Surgery ,Effusion ,Pericardiocentesis ,Cardiac tamponade ,medicine ,Tamponade ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Complication ,business - Abstract
Background: Cardiac perforation with tamponade is an infrequent occurrence during an electrophysiologic procedure. The customary approach to management includes volume resuscitation followed by pericardiocentesis. Such a procedure, however, is not without its own risk, especially when performed emergently. We hypothesized that some patients experiencing this type of complication can be managed successfully in a conservative fashion, without the need for an additional invasive procedure. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the clinical outcomes and echocardiographic features of 33 consecutive patients who experienced this complication during cardiac electrophysiology (EP) procedures performed at our institution from 1988 to 2007. Nineteen patients (58%) were managed conservatively with intravenous fluids and vasopressors (Group A). Fourteen patients (42%) were managed invasively with pericardiocentesis (Group B). Results: The mean systolic blood pressure at diagnosis did not differ between the two groups (64 vs 71 mmHg, P = 0.134). The mean lengths of hospitalization (4.7 vs 4.9 days, P = 0.75) and survival to hospital discharge (100% in both groups) were also similar. A large pericardial effusion (≥2 cm) was seen predominantly among Group B patients. There was a statistically significant temporal trend toward managing this type of complication invasively (P = 0.038). Conclusion: Among patients who experience cardiac perforation as an acute complication of EP procedure, there appears to be a role for conservative management in a subset of patients who do not have echocardiographic evidence of a large effusion and who respond well to initial stabilizing measures consisting of fluids and vasopressors. (PACE 2010; 33:667–674)
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- 2010
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23. The Echocardiographic Assessment of Dyssynchrony: Insights from a Consecutive Series of General Cardiology Patients with Normal LVEF and Narrow QRS
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Christine E. Young, Robert T. Palac, Salvatore P. Costa, Michelle Gama, and John E. O'Mara
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Cardiac resynchronization therapy ,Normal values ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Electrocardiography ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Narrow qrs ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Cutoff ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,education ,Series (stratigraphy) ,education.field_of_study ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Stroke Volume ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Echocardiography ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Female ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background: Prior studies have described the potential benefit of using echocardiographic rather than ECG techniques to help select the subgroup of heart failure patients that are most likely to benefit from cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Currently, the most commonly used echocardiographic techniques to assess dyssynchrony include discrepancies in radial motion derived from M-mode and in longitudinal motion derived from tissue Doppler; however, there are little data available on the range of these measurements in the general cardiology population. Methods and Results: A consecutive series of patients referred for a stress echocardiogram were screened for normal LV systolic function and normal QRS width. Fifty-one patients met inclusion criteria and underwent dyssynchrony measurements in addition to their baseline echo. Previously proposed cutoff values were applied. We observed 17% of study subjects were above the reported normal values for radial dyssynchrony and 41% were above the reported normal values for longitudinal dyssynchrony. However, when both criteria were required to be abnormal only 4% were classified as dyssynchronous. Conclusions: Echocardiographic indices in general cardiology patients appear most accurate when radial and longitudinal parameters are used in combination. While the ideal cutoff values remain to be determined, this combination may optimize patient selection for CRT response.
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- 2009
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24. Rapid cardiac ultrasound of inpatients suffering PEA arrest performed by nonexpert sonographers
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Michael L. Beach, Mark L. Greenberg, Salvatore P. Costa, Athos J. Rassias, Robert T. Palac, and Daniel F. Niendorff
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Adult ,Male ,Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Illness ,Allied Health Personnel ,Emergency Nursing ,Risk Assessment ,Cardiac tamponade ,Hypovolemia ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Emergency ultrasound ,Aged ,Quality of Health Care ,Inpatients ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,United States ,Cardiac Tamponade ,Heart Arrest ,Surgery ,Pulmonary embolism ,Ventricular Fibrillation ,Emergency medicine ,Pulseless electrical activity ,Sonographer ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,medicine.symptom ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Echocardiography, Transesophageal ,Life Support Systems - Abstract
Cardiac arrest presenting as pulseless electrical activity (PEA) currently has a very low survival rate. Many of the conditions underlying PEA (cardiac tamponade, hypovolemia, and pulmonary embolus) are associated with specific cardiac ultrasound findings. The aim of this study was to evaluate a rapid cardiac ultrasound assessment performed by trained nonexpert sonographers integrated into the ACLS response system at a major medical center. Methods: An emergency sonography system was created and deployed to each inpatient cardiac arrest occurring at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center between November 1, 2003 and April 30, 2004. Thirteen internal medicine house officers received training to perform a limited subcostal cardiac ultrasound examination designed to diagnose cardiac tamponade, pulmonary embolus, severe hypovolemia, and lack of cardiac motion. Time from arrest alert to sonographic result, and correlation with over-reading by blinded echocardiography physicians were assessed. Results: A complete emergency ultrasound examination was performed in five PEA arrests. The average time from arrest alert to interpretation was 7.75min. (95% CI 2.8–18.3min). Three of these examinations (60%, 95% CI 14.7–94.7%) were adequate for interpretation. Agreement between the nonexpert sonographer and echocardiography physician occurred in four of five (kappa=0.706) cases. Conclusion: Rapid cardiac sonography can be successfully integrated in the ACLS response. Nonexpert sonographers may be able to provide useful interpretive information when sufficiently trained.
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- 2005
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25. An Unusual Left Atrial Mass in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: The Role of Multimodality Imaging
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Timothy A. Beaver, Salvatore P. Costa, Pantila Vanichakarn, Robert T. Palac, and Julianna M. Czum
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Left atrial mass ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,Fibroma ,Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Heart Neoplasms ,Echocardiography ,Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging ,Subtraction Technique ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Heart Atria ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cardiac imaging - Published
- 2013
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26. ADVANCES IN 3D ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY: AUTOMATED SOFTWARE IMPROVES THE LEARNING CURVE AND CLINICAL IMPLEMENTATION IN A REAL WORLD SETTING FOR QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF LEFT VENTRICULAR EJECTION FRACTION
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Cassie M. Tighe, Salvatore P. Costa, Terrence D. Welch, Ronald B. Chin, and Timothy A. Beaver
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Ejection fraction ,040301 veterinary sciences ,business.industry ,Echo (computing) ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,0403 veterinary science ,Clinical Practice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Software ,Learning curve ,Internal medicine ,Quantitative assessment ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,3d echocardiography - Abstract
Background: Technological advances have made it feasible to obtain real-time 3D volume datasets using transthoracic echo; however, despite its widespread availability, only a few echocardiography labs utilize it in daily clinical practice. We hypothesized that an automated system would facilitate
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- 2017
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27. Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation and Management
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Kevin C. Abbott, Salvatore P. Costa, Krista L. Lentine, and Todd C. Villines
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Disease ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Coronary artery disease ,Transplantation ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Dialysis ,Disease burden - Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) including transplant candidates and recipients. Although transplantation improves cardiovascular risk in the long term compared with dialysis, cardiovascular diseases in aggregate comprise the most common cause of death in patients with functioning allografts at all times after kidney transplant. Achieving clinically and cost-effective management of cardiovascular disease in kidney transplant candidates is a challenging endeavor due to the large size of the target population, prevalent disease burden, and the often extended waiting periods between initial candidate evaluation and transplantation surgery. Further, there is a paucity of randomized clinical trials addressing the efficacy of cardiac screening, surveillance, coronary revascularization, and medical management among patients with ESRD, and extrapolation from trials performed in other populations or observational studies is often necessary to formulate practice recommendations. Recently, the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology Foundation convened a working group including cardiologists, nephrologists, and intensivists to compose a Scientific Statement on “Cardiac Disease Evaluation and Management Among Kidney and Liver Transplantation Candidates.” The current chapter provides a practical summary of some of the key recommendations in this Scientific Statement relevant to kidney transplant candidates, focused as a practical guide for the clinician. Our synthesis includes a final algorithm emphasizing the importance of history and physical examination to assess for active cardiac conditions, use of resting echocardiography in dialysis patients to evaluate ventricular function and screen for valvular disease and pulmonary hypertension, and use of noninvasive stress testing in asymptomatic transplant candidates with three or more coronary disease risk factors to target screening on the subgroup with the highest pretest probability of prognostically significant coronary artery disease. Moving forward, we believe that pursuit of more evidence, ideally from randomized clinical trials, is an urgent priority to strengthen the evidence base for pretransplant cardiac evaluation and the management of cardiovascular disease before, during, and after transplant.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Effect of preoperative pulmonary hypertension on outcomes in patients with severe aortic stenosis following surgical aortic valve replacement
- Author
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Elaine M. Olmstead, Salvatore P. Costa, Bruce J. Leavitt, Jeremiah R. Brown, John D. Klemperer, Donato Sisto, Joseph P. DeSimone, Carmine Frumiento, Joseph D. Schmoker, David J. Malenka, Yvon R. Baribeau, Gerald L. Sardella, Michelle L. Ouellette, Robert E. Helm, Daniel J. O'Rourke, Donald S. Likosky, Reed D. Quinn, Anthony W. DiScipio, and David Zlotnick
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac Catheterization ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Aortic valve replacement ,New England ,Risk Factors ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective cohort study ,Cardiac catheterization ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Acute kidney injury ,Aortic Valve Stenosis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Survival Rate ,Stenosis ,Treatment Outcome ,Heart failure ,Heart Valve Prosthesis ,Pulmonary artery ,Preoperative Period ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is prevalent in patients with aortic stenosis (AS); however, previous studies have demonstrated inconsistent results regarding the association of PH with adverse outcomes after aortic valve replacement (AVR). The goal of this study was to evaluate the effects of preoperative PH on outcomes after AVR. We performed a regional prospective cohort study using the Northern New England Cardiovascular Disease Study Group database to identify 1,116 consecutive patients from 2005 to 2010 who underwent AVR ± coronary artery bypass grafting for severe AS with a preoperative assessment of pulmonary pressures by right-sided cardiac catheterization. PH was defined as a mean pulmonary artery pressure of ≥25 mm Hg, with severity based on the pulmonary artery systolic pressure-mild, 35 to 44 mm Hg; moderate, 45 to 59 mm Hg; and severe, ≥60 mm Hg. We found that PH was present in 536 patients (48%). Postoperative acute kidney injury, low-output heart failure, and in-hospital mortality increased with worsening severity of PH. In multivariate logistic regression, severe PH was independently associated with postoperative acute kidney injury (adjusted odds ratio 4.1, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.7 to 10, p = 0.002) and in-hospital mortality (adjusted odds ratio 6.9, 95% CI 2.5 to 19.1, p0.001). There was a significant association between PH and decreased 5-year survival (adjusted log-rank p value = 0.006), with severe PH being associated with the poorest survival (adjusted hazard ratio 2.4, 95% CI 1.3 to 4.2, p = 0.003). In conclusion, severe PH in patients with severe AS is associated with increased rates of in-hospital adverse events and decreased 5-year survival after AVR.
- Published
- 2013
29. Putting the comparison of 2008 and 2011 appropriate use criteria for stress echocardiography in perspective: can screening in solid organ transplant be appropriate?
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Salvatore P. Costa
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Appropriate Use Criteria ,Transplantation ,Good clinical practice ,Health care ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Professional association ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,Kidney transplantation ,Echocardiography, Stress - Abstract
344 The study by Bhatia et al., ‘‘Comparison of the 2008 and 2011 Appropriate Use Criteria for Stress Echocardiography’’ in the current issue of JASE has identified a gap in the literature that at first seems insignificant but upon further examination has very important clinical and cost implications, particularly for academic centers with solidorgan transplantation programs. Patients being considered for solidorgan transplantation may seem a small niche population until one realizes that kidney transplantation alone in the United States has more than quadrupled since 1991. The most recent data from the US Department of Health and Human Services Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network report 23,360 kidney transplantations from January to October 2012 and 117,053 patients on the waiting list. All of these patients (plus those who are evaluated but not listed) will undergo some type of preoperative evaluation, and many will undergo cardiac testing for ‘‘screening’’ purposes. However, survey and registry data have demonstrated that significant variation exists from institution to institution with regard to the ‘‘standard’’ workup of asymptomatic transplantation candidates, ranging from routine coronary angiography to imaging stress testing to no testing at all. Because waiting times before eventual transplantation can be years, repeat cardiac testing compounds the problem, as some professional societies have suggested routine surveillance of waitlisted patients. Suddenly, the numbers start to add up. The observations made in the study by Bhatia et al. at the Massachusetts General Hospital are probably not that far off from the situation at other large hospitals with dedicated solid-organ transplantation programs. The question is, who needs to change? Are clinical practice patterns out of step with appropriateness criteria? Or are appropriateness criteria a step behind with regard to good clinical practice? In the retrospective chart review by Bhatia et al., the 2008 and 2011 appropriate use criteria were applied to a consecutive series of 252 clinically requested stress echocardiograms at a single large academic hospital (Massachusetts General Hospital; requesting providers consisted of 83 different health care providers, of whom 50% were cardiologists), and the appropriateness classifications were examined. An initial review of the results suggests that the 2008 guideline left too many studies unclassified, and the newer
- Published
- 2013
30. Cardiac disease evaluation and management among kidney and liver transplantation candidates: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology Foundation
- Author
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Krista L, Lentine, Salvatore P, Costa, Matthew R, Weir, John F, Robb, Lee A, Fleisher, Bertram L, Kasiske, Robert L, Carithers, Michael, Ragosta, Kline, Bolton, Andrew D, Auerbach, and Kim A, Eagle
- Subjects
Death, Sudden, Cardiac ,Postoperative Complications ,Cause of Death ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Coronary Disease ,American Heart Association ,Middle Aged ,Kidney Transplantation ,Risk Assessment ,United States ,Foundations ,Liver Transplantation - Published
- 2012
31. Cardiac disease evaluation and management among kidney and liver transplantation candidates: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology Foundation: endorsed by the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, American Society of Transplantation, and National Kidney Foundation
- Author
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Krista L, Lentine, Salvatore P, Costa, Matthew R, Weir, John F, Robb, Lee A, Fleisher, Bertram L, Kasiske, Robert L, Carithers, Michael, Ragosta, Kline, Bolton, Andrew D, Auerbach, Kim A, Eagle, and Peter K, Smith
- Subjects
Heart Diseases ,Risk Factors ,Patient Selection ,Disease Management ,Humans ,Perioperative Period ,Kidney Transplantation ,Liver Transplantation - Published
- 2012
32. Regional patterns of dyssynchrony: lateral wall delay is desirable but not essential for left ventricular remodeling in biventricular pacing
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John E, O'Mara, Ethan M, Fruechte, Robert T, Palac, and Salvatore P, Costa
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Aged, 80 and over ,Heart Failure ,Male ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Treatment Outcome ,Ventricular Remodeling ,Echocardiography ,Humans ,Female - Abstract
Tissue synchronization imaging (TSI), a parametric imaging technique based on tissue velocity imaging, often demonstrates patterns other than lateral delay in patients evaluated for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). The prevalence of these patterns and their response to CRT has not been well described. We hypothesized that regional patterns of dyssynchrony might correlate with the extent of reverse remodeling.A consecutive series of 32 patients underwent echocardiographic study prior to CRT implant and 3 months postimplant. TSI was used to color-code the time-to-peak positive systolic velocity at six basal and six mid-LV segments. Each patient was assigned to one of four groups based on the predominant location of greatest delay (≥ 2 segments): (1) posterolateral delay, (2) septal delay, (3) no dyssynchrony, or (4) other.Patients were classified as follows: posterolateral delay in 44% of patients (n = 14), septal delay in 28% (n = 9), no dyssynchrony in 16% (n = 5), and other pattern in 13% (n = 4). At 3-month follow-up, the group with the lateral delay pattern was associated with the greatest decrease in left ventricular end-systolic volume (LVESV) and the largest improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (-45 mL and +9.3%, respectively, P0.05). The LVESV in the other three groups changed as follows: -24 mL (septal), -28 mL (no dyssynchrony), and -15 mL (other). Similar trends were observed for LVEF and left ventricular end-diastolic volume.Despite the presence of wide QRS and a left bundle branch block, the most delayed segment is not always the posterolateral wall. Posterolateral delay is associated with the best response to CRT, while other patterns respond at a lower magnitude.
- Published
- 2012
33. Two-dimensional longitudinal strain in patients with aortic stenosis can be reliably acquired at the bedside without additional benefit of offline analysis
- Author
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Timothy A, Beaver, Johannes, Steiner, Clyde D, Sullivan, Salvatore P, Costa, and Robert T, Palac
- Subjects
Male ,Observer Variation ,Echocardiography ,Heart Ventricles ,Humans ,Female ,Aortic Valve Stenosis ,Severity of Illness Index - Abstract
Two-dimensional strain echocardiography (2DS) has been used to assess ventricular function in several disease states. In previous studies of 2DS, strain analysis was usually performed offline by experienced echocardiographers. The applicability of 2DS in busy clinical labs would be enhanced if 2DS could be reproducibly measured by sonographers at the time of the echo exam. In this study we compared the reproducibility of strain measurements between sonographers at the time of the echo exam with those performed offline by an experienced echocardiographer.Apical left ventricular (LV) B-mode images were acquired in 98 consecutive patients being evaluated for aortic stenosis. 2DS analysis was performed at the time of the exam by a sonographer. The same images were analyzed offline by an experienced echocardiographer. Global longitudinal strain (GLS) results were analyzed for interobserver reproducibility. Additionally, the regional longitudinal strain (RLS) of 20 randomly selected patients was analyzed for intraobserver reproducibility.Acceptable data quality was available in 97.8% of the segments measured at the time of the exam and in 96.9% at the workstation. Interobserver reproducibility of the global peak strain was high (r = 0.855, P0.001). Additionally, applying cutoffs for separating normal from abnormal GLS revealed good agreement between sonographer and experienced echocardiographer [kappa analysis (κ= 0.739, P0.001)]. Overall RLS intraobserver reproducibility was high (raw mean adjusted r = 0.915).The GLS in aortic stenosis patients can be reliably measured at the bedside by a sonographer without additional benefit of offline analysis.
- Published
- 2010
34. Management and clinical outcomes of acute cardiac tamponade complicating electrophysiologic procedures: a single-center case series
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Robert J, Kim, Samer, Siouffi, Todd A, Silberstein, Salvatore P, Costa, Jeremiah R, Brown, and Mark L, Greenberg
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Male ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Blood Pressure ,Pericardiocentesis ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,Pericardial Effusion ,Cardiac Tamponade ,Treatment Outcome ,Heart Injuries ,Acute Disease ,Humans ,Vasoconstrictor Agents ,Female ,Electrophysiologic Techniques, Cardiac ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Cardiac perforation with tamponade is an infrequent occurrence during an electrophysiologic procedure. The customary approach to management includes volume resuscitation followed by pericardiocentesis. Such a procedure, however, is not without its own risk, especially when performed emergently. We hypothesized that some patients experiencing this type of complication can be managed successfully in a conservative fashion, without the need for an additional invasive procedure.We retrospectively analyzed the clinical outcomes and echocardiographic features of 33 consecutive patients who experienced this complication during cardiac electrophysiology (EP) procedures performed at our institution from 1988 to 2007. Nineteen patients (58%) were managed conservatively with intravenous fluids and vasopressors (Group A). Fourteen patients (42%) were managed invasively with pericardiocentesis (Group B).The mean systolic blood pressure at diagnosis did not differ between the two groups (64 vs 71 mmHg, P = 0.134). The mean lengths of hospitalization (4.7 vs 4.9 days, P = 0.75) and survival to hospital discharge (100% in both groups) were also similar. A large pericardial effusion (or=2 cm) was seen predominantly among Group B patients. There was a statistically significant temporal trend toward managing this type of complication invasively (P = 0.038).Among patients who experience cardiac perforation as an acute complication of EP procedure, there appears to be a role for conservative management in a subset of patients who do not have echocardiographic evidence of a large effusion and who respond well to initial stabilizing measures consisting of fluids and vasopressors.
- Published
- 2010
35. Early mitral filling/diastolic mitral annular velocity ratio is not a reliable predictor of left ventricular filling pressure in the setting of severe mitral regurgitation
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Jeffrey J. Olson, Christine E. Young, Robert T. Palac, and Salvatore P. Costa
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diastole ,Blood Pressure ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Internal medicine ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Sinus rhythm ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Mitral regurgitation ,business.industry ,Mitral annular velocity ,Mitral Valve Insufficiency ,Reproducibility of Results ,Stroke Volume ,Stroke volume ,Preload ,Blood pressure ,Echocardiography ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Mitral Valve ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Ventricular filling - Abstract
The early mitral filling velocity (E)/early diastolic mitral annular velocity (E′) ratio is increasingly being used as a simplified approach to estimate left ventricular (LV) filling pressure. The validity of applying this Doppler parameter to patients with severe mitral regurgitation is unknown. We retrospectively identified 20 patients in sinus rhythm who had LV end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) invasively measured within 72 hours of a full echocardiogram including diastolic parameters. We observed a poor correlation between E/E′ ratio and LVEDP in these patients ( r = −0.07, P = not significant). Previously described E/E′ cut-off values did not accurately identify patients with low, intermediate, and high LVEDP. Of the diastolic parameters measured, the most significant correlation with LVEDP was found with mitral deceleration time ( r = −0.66, P = .002) and systolic/diastolic peak velocity ratio ( r = −0.52, P = .02). We conclude that E/E′ ratio is not reliable in predicting LV filling pressure in the setting of severe mitral regurgitation, and that in these cases mitral deceleration time or systolic/diastolic peak velocity ratio may be better indicators of LVEDP.
- Published
- 2005
36. Reduced longitudinal strain rate in patients with cardiac amyloid despite preserved fractional shortening equals that of dilated cardiomyopathy
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Flora Sam, Rodney H. Falk, Salvatore P. Costa, and Jun Koyama
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Amyloid ,Longitudinal strain ,business.industry ,Dilated cardiomyopathy ,macromolecular substances ,Fractional shortening ,medicine.disease ,Internal medicine ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Cardiology ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2003
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37. Comparison of real-time imaging cardiac magnetic resonance for left ventricular volumes with conventional imaging in patients with atrial fibrillation: Is real-time required?
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Salvatore P. Costa, Susan B. Yeon, Michael C. Chuang, Kraig V. Kissinger, and Warren J. Manning
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,P wave ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Real time imaging ,Atrial fibrillation ,In patient ,Cardiac magnetic resonance ,business ,medicine.disease ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction in a Real World Patient Population: How Good Is Echocardiography at Identifying Elevated Left Ventricular Pressure?
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Alan T. Kono, Salvatore P. Costa, David J. Malenka, Robert T. Palac, Mandeep S. Sidhu, Timothy A. Beaver, Jeremiah R. Brown, Hannah Foote, Alina M. Robert, and Daniel J. O'Rourke
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Patient population ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Ventricular pressure ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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39. Incidence, Clinical Correlates and Outcomes of Pulmonary Hypertension after Kidney Transplantation: Analysis of Linked US Registry and Medicare Billing Claims
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David A. Axelrod, Huiling Xiao, Krista L. Lentine, Yasar Caliskan, James R. Runo, Deborah Levine, Darshana Dadhania, Ngan N. Lam, Janani Rangaswami, Mark A. Schnitzler, Helen S. Te, Bertram L. Kasiske, Todd C. Villines, and Salvatore P. Costa
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Population ,Medicare ,Coronary artery disease ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Registries ,education ,Kidney transplantation ,Dialysis ,Aged ,Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Incidence ,Hazard ratio ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,United States ,Treatment Outcome ,Cohort ,Female ,Hemodialysis ,business - Abstract
Background The incidence, risks, and outcomes associated with pulmonary hypertension (P-HTN) in the kidney transplant (KTx) population are not well described. Methods We linked U.S. transplant registry data with Medicare claims (2006-2016) to investigate P-HTN diagnoses among Medicare-insured KTx recipients (N=35,512) using billing claims. Cox regression was applied to identify independent correlates and outcomes of P-HTN (adjusted hazard ratio, aHR, 95%LCLaHR95%UCL), and to examine P-HTN diagnoses as time-dependent mortality predictors. Results Overall, 8.2% of recipients had a diagnostic code for P-HTN within 2 years preceding transplant. By 3 years posttransplant, P-HTN was diagnosed in 10.310.6%11.0 of the study cohort. After adjustment, posttransplant P-HTN was more likely in KTx recipients who were older (aHR for age >60 vs. 18-30 years: 1.912.403.01) or female (aHR, 1.151.241.34), who had pretransplant P-HTN (aHR, 4.384.795.24), coronary artery disease (aHR, 1.051.151.27), valvular heart disease (aHR, 1.221.321.43), peripheral vascular disease (aHR, 1.051.181.33), chronic pulmonary disease (aHR, 1.201.311.43), obstructive sleep apnea (aHR, 1.151.281.43), longer dialysis duration, pretransplant hemodialysis (aHR, 1.171.371.59), or who underwent transplant in the more recent era (2012-2016 vs. 2006-2011: aHR, 1.291.391.51). Posttransplant P-HTN was associated with >2.5-fold increased risk of mortality (aHR, 2.572.843.14) and all-cause graft failure (aHR, 2.422.642.88) within 3 years posttransplant. Outcome associations of newly-diagnosed posttransplant P-HTN were similar. Conclusions Posttransplant P-HTN is diagnosed in 1 in 10 KTx recipients and is associated with an increased risk of death and graft failure. Future research is needed to refine diagnostic, classification, and management strategies to improve outcomes in KTx recipients who develop P-HTN.
40. Strain rate imaging in idiopathic cardiomyopathy: More sensitive than tissue doppler and potential application as a contractility index
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Salvatore P. Costa, Rodney H. Falk, Flora Sam, Ravin Davidoff, and Wilson S. Colucci
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Contractility ,medicine.medical_specialty ,symbols.namesake ,business.industry ,Strain rate imaging ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,symbols ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Doppler effect ,Idiopathic Cardiomyopathy - Full Text
- View/download PDF
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