138 results on '"Gutierrez Fajardo P."'
Search Results
2. Deep learning assisted measurement of echocardiographic left heart parameters: improvement in interobserver variability and workflow efficiency
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Mor-Avi, V, Blitz, A, Schreckenberg, M, Addetia, K, Kebed, K, Scalia, G, Badano, L, Kirkpatrick, J, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Tude Rodrigues, A, Sadeghpour, A, Tucay, E, Prado, A, Tsang, W, Ogunyankin, K, Rossmanith, A, Schummers, G, Laczik, D, Asch, F, Lang, R, Mor-Avi V., Blitz A., Schreckenberg M., Addetia K., Kebed K., Scalia G., Badano L., Kirkpatrick J. N., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Sadeghpour A., Tucay E. S., Prado A. D., Tsang W., Ogunyankin K. O., Rossmanith A., Schummers G., Laczik D., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Mor-Avi, V, Blitz, A, Schreckenberg, M, Addetia, K, Kebed, K, Scalia, G, Badano, L, Kirkpatrick, J, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Tude Rodrigues, A, Sadeghpour, A, Tucay, E, Prado, A, Tsang, W, Ogunyankin, K, Rossmanith, A, Schummers, G, Laczik, D, Asch, F, Lang, R, Mor-Avi V., Blitz A., Schreckenberg M., Addetia K., Kebed K., Scalia G., Badano L., Kirkpatrick J. N., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Sadeghpour A., Tucay E. S., Prado A. D., Tsang W., Ogunyankin K. O., Rossmanith A., Schummers G., Laczik D., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Machine learning techniques designed to recognize views and perform measurements are increasingly used to address the need for automation of the interpretation of echocardiographic images. The current study was designed to determine whether a recently developed and validated deep learning (DL) algorithm for automated measurements of echocardiographic parameters of left heart chamber size and function can improve the reproducibility and shorten the analysis time, compared to the conventional methodology. The DL algorithm trained to identify standard views and provide automated measurements of 20 standard parameters, was applied to images obtained in 12 randomly selected echocardiographic studies. The resultant measurements were reviewed and revised as necessary by 10 independent expert readers. The same readers also performed conventional manual measurements, which were averaged and used as the reference standard for the DL-assisted approach with and without the manual revisions. Inter-reader variability was quantified using coefficients of variation, which together with analysis times, were compared between the conventional reads and the DL-assisted approach. The fully automated DL measurements showed good agreement with the reference technique: Bland–Altman biases 0–14% of the measured values. Manual revisions resulted in only minor improvement in accuracy: biases 0–11%. This DL-assisted approach resulted in a 43% decrease in analysis time and less inter-reader variability than the conventional methodology: 2–3 times smaller coefficients of variation. In conclusion, DL-assisted approach to analysis of echocardiographic images can provide accurate left heart measurements with the added benefits of improved reproducibility and time savings, compared to conventional methodology.
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- 2023
3. Normal Values of Left Ventricular Mass by Two-Dimensional and Three-Dimensional Echocardiography: Results from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study
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Lee, L, Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Lee L., Cotella J. I., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Schreckenberg M., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Lee, L, Cotella, J, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Schreckenberg, M, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Lee L., Cotella J. I., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Schreckenberg M., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Although increased left ventricular (LV) mass is associated with adverse outcomes, measured values vary widely depending on the specific technique used. Moreover, the impact of sex, age, and race on LV mass remains controversial, further limiting the clinical use of this parameter. Accordingly, the authors studied LV mass using a variety of two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiographic techniques in a large population of normal subjects encompassing a wide range of ages. Methods: Transthoracic echocardiograms obtained from 1,854 healthy adult subjects (52% men) enrolled in the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) Normal Values Study, were divided into three age groups (young, 18-35 years; middle aged, 36-55 years; and old, >55 years). LV mass was obtained using five conventional techniques, including linear and two-dimensional methods, as well as direct three-dimensional measurement. All LV mass values were indexed to body surface area, and differences according to sex, age, and race were analyzed for each technique. Results: LV mass values differed significantly among the five techniques. Three-dimensional measurements were considerably smaller than those obtained using the other techniques and were closer to magnetic resonance imaging normal values reported in the literature. For all techniques, LV mass in men was significantly larger than in women, with and without body surface area indexing. These technique- and sex-related differences were larger than measurement variability. In women, age differences in LV mass were more pronounced and depicted significantly larger values in older age groups for all techniques, except three-dimensional echocardiography, which showed essentially no differences. LV mass was overall larger in black subjects than in white or Asian subjects. Conclusions: Significant differences in LV mass values exist across echocardiographic techniques, which are therefore not interchangeable. Sex-, race-, a
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- 2023
4. Age-, Sex-, and Race-Based Normal Values for Left Ventricular Circumferential Strain from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Cotella, J, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Addetia, K, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singulane C. C., Miyoshi T., Mor-Avi V., Cotella J. I., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Addetia K., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Mor-Avi, V, Cotella, J, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Addetia, K, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singulane C. C., Miyoshi T., Mor-Avi V., Cotella J. I., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Addetia K., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Left ventricular (LV) circumferential strain has received less attention than longitudinal deformation, which has recently become part of routine clinical practice. Among other reasons, this is because of the lack of established normal values. Accordingly, the aim of this study was to establish normative values for LV circumferential strain and determine sex-, age-, and race-related differences in a large cohort of healthy adults. Methods: Complete two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiograms were obtained in 1,572 healthy subjects (51% men), enrolled in the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study. Subjects were divided into three age groups (<35, 35-55, and >55 years) and stratified by sex and by race. Vendor-independent semiautomated speckle-tracking software was used to determine LV regional circumferential strain and global circumferential strain (GCS) values. Limits of normal for each measurement were defined as 95% of the corresponding sex and age group falling between the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles. Intergroup differences were analyzed using unpaired t tests. Results: Circumferential strain showed a gradient, with lower magnitude at the mitral valve level, increasing progressively toward the apex. Compared with men, women had statistically higher magnitudes of regional and global strain. Older age was associated with a stepwise increase in GCS despite an unaffected ejection fraction, a decrease in LV volume, and relatively stable global longitudinal strain in men, with a small gradual decrease in women. Asian subjects demonstrated significantly higher GCS magnitudes than whites of both sexes and blacks among women only. In contrast, no significant differences in GCS were found between white and black subjects of either sex. Importantly, despite statistical significance of these differences across sex, age, and race, circumferential strain values were similar in all groups, with variations of the order of magnitude
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- 2023
5. Normal Values of Left Atrial Size and Function and the Impact of Age: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Singh, A, Carvalho Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Prado, A, Addetia, K, Bellino, M, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singh A., Carvalho Singulane C., Miyoshi T., Prado A. D., Addetia K., Bellino M., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Hitschrich N., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Singh, A, Carvalho Singulane, C, Miyoshi, T, Prado, A, Addetia, K, Bellino, M, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Singh A., Carvalho Singulane C., Miyoshi T., Prado A. D., Addetia K., Bellino M., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Hitschrich N., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Left atrial (LA) evaluation includes volumetric and functional parameters with an abundance of diagnostic and prognostic implications. Solid normal reference ranges are compulsory for accurate interpretation in individual patients, but previous studies have yielded mixed conclusions regarding the effects of age, sex, and/or race. The present report from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study focuses on two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) measures of LA structure and function, with subgroup analysis by age, sex, and race. Methods: Transthoracic 2D and 3D echocardiographic images were obtained in 1,765 healthy individuals (901 men, 864 women) evenly distributed among age subgroups: 18 to 40 years (n = 745), 41 to 65 years (n = 618), and >65 years (n = 402); the racial distribution was 38.4% white, 39.9% Asian, and 9.7% black. Images were analyzed using dedicated LA analysis software to measure LA volumes and phasic function from 3D volume and 2D strain curves. Results: Three-dimensional maximum and minimum LA volumes adjusted for body surface area were nearly identical for men and women, but women demonstrated higher 3D total and passive emptying fractions (EFs). Two-dimensional reservoir strain was similar for both sexes. Age was associated with an incremental rise in LA volumes alongside characteristic shifts in functional indices. Total 2D EF and reservoir and conduit strain varied inversely with age, counteracted by higher booster strain, with a greater magnitude of effect in women. Active 3D EF was significantly higher, while total and passive EFs decreased with age. Interracial differences were noted in LA volumes, without substantial differences in functional indices. Conclusion: Although similar normal values for LA volumes and strain can be applied to both sexes, meaningful differences in LA size occur with aging. Indices of function also shift with age, with a compensatory rise in booster function, which may serve t
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- 2022
6. Normal Values of Left Ventricular Size and Function on Three-Dimensional Echocardiography: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Zhang Y., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Zhang Y., Hitschrich N., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., and Hwang J. -W.
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiography remains the most widely used modality to assess left ventricular (LV) chamber size and function. Currently this assessment is most frequently performed using two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography. However, three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography has been shown to be more accurate and reproducible than 2D echocardiography. Current normative reference values for 3D LV analysis are based predominantly on data from North America and Europe. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to sample normal subjects from around the world to provide more universal global reference ranges. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide feasibility of LV 3D echocardiography and report on size and functional measurements. Methods: A total of 2,262 healthy subjects were prospectively enrolled from 19 centers in 15 countries. Three-dimensional LV full-volume data sets were obtained and analyzed offline using vendor-neutral software. Measurements included LV end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), global longitudinal strain (GLS), and global circumferential strain. Results were categorized by age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years), sex, and race. Results: A total of 1,589 subjects (feasibility 70%) had adequate LV data sets for analysis. Mean normal values for indexed end-diastolic volume, end-systolic volume, and LVEF in men and women were 70 ± 15 and 65 ± 12 mL/m2, 28 ± 7 and 25 ± 6 mL/m2, and 60 ± 5% and 62 ± 5%, respectively. Men had larger LV volumes and lower LVEFs than women. GLS and global circumferential strain were higher in magnitude in women. In both sexes, LV volumes were lower and LVEF tended to be higher with increasing age, especially considering the differences between the youngest and oldest age groups. Although GLS was similar across age groups in men, in women, the youngest and middle-age cohorts revealed higher magnitudes of GLS compared with the oldest age group. Global circumfere
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- 2022
7. Sex-, Age-, and Race-Related Normal Values of Right Ventricular Diastolic Function Parameters: Data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Carvalho Singulane, C, Singh, A, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Soulat-Dufour, L, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Carvalho Singulane C., Singh A., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Soulat-Dufour L., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Carvalho Singulane, C, Singh, A, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Soulat-Dufour, L, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, Y, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Carvalho Singulane C., Singh A., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Soulat-Dufour L., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang Y., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Although the assessment of right ventricular (RV) diastolic function is feasible, it has garnered far less momentum for use compared with its left ventricular counterpart. The scarcity of data defining normative RV diastolic function and the fact that implications of RV diastolic dysfunction in different disease states on outcomes are less well known both hinder integration into routine clinical assessment. The aim of this study was to establish normal values of RV diastolic parameters stratified by sex, age, and race using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study. Methods: A subset of 888 normal subjects from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography database were analyzed, including measurements of tricuspid valve (TV) inflow E- and A-wave velocities, E-wave deceleration time, and TV annular tissue Doppler e′ and a′ velocities. Additionally, right atrial (RA) maximal volume and RA peak reservoir strain were measured. Patients were grouped by age ([removed]65 years) and stratified by sex and race. Differences were analyzed using unpaired t tests. Results: Compared with men, women had significantly higher TV e′ and E-wave and A-wave velocities, though differences were modest. Increasing age was associated with stepwise lower TV E wave, e′ velocity, and TV E/A ratio and higher a′ velocity and E/e′ ratio. RA peak reservoir strain was also lower, and RA end-systolic volume trended toward being smaller for older age groups. Asian subjects demonstrated significantly higher a′ velocities, lower E wave, the smallest RA end-systolic volumes, and the lowest RA peak strain values compared with white subjects of both sexes. Conclusions: This study provides normal values for parameters used in the assessment of RV diastolic function stratified by race, sex, and age. The results demonstrate significant differences in RV diastolic parameters between age groups, which manifest in both individual parameters and composite ratios of TV inflo
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- 2022
8. Three-Dimensional Transthoracic Static and Dynamic Normative Values of the Mitral Valve Apparatus: Results from the Multicenter World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Henry, M, Cotella, J, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Lang, R, Asch, F, Henry M. P., Cotella J., Mor-Avi V., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Lang R. M., Asch F. M., Henry, M, Cotella, J, Mor-Avi, V, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Hitschrich, N, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Tude Rodrigues, A, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Zhang, M, Lang, R, Asch, F, Henry M. P., Cotella J., Mor-Avi V., Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Hitschrich N., Amuthan V., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Kasliwal R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Ronderos R., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Zhang M., Lang R. M., and Asch F. M.
- Abstract
Background: Recent advances in mitral valve (MV) percutaneous interventions have escalated the need for a more quantitative and comprehensive assessment of the MV, which can be best achieved using three-dimensional echocardiography. Understanding normal valve size, structure, and function is essential for differentiation of healthy from disease states. The aims of this study were to establish normative values for MV apparatus size and morphology and to determine how they vary across age, sex, and race groups using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study. Methods: Three-dimensional volumetric data sets obtained on transthoracic echocardiography in 748 normal subjects (51% men) were analyzed using commercial MV analysis software (TomTec Imaging Systems) to determine annular and leaflet dimensions and areas. The subjects were divided into groups by sex (378 men and 370 women) and age (18 to 40 years [n = 266], 41 to 65 years [n = 249], and >65 years [n = 233]) to identify sex- and age-related differences. In addition, differences among black, white, and Asian populations were studied. Inter- and intraobserver variability was assessed in a subset of 30 subjects and expressed as mean absolute difference between pairs of repeated measurements. Results: Compared with women, men had larger annular size measurements, larger tenting size parameters, and larger leaflet length and area. Compared with the black and white populations, the Asian population showed significantly smaller mitral annular size. Although many of the age, sex, and race differences in MV parameters were statistically significant, they were comparable with or smaller than the corresponding measurement variability. Indexing to body surface area and height did not eliminate these differences consistently, suggesting that parameters may need to be indexed according to their dimensionality. Conclusions: This analysis of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography d
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- 2022
9. Normal Values of Three-Dimensional Right Ventricular Size and Function Measurements: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Singulane, C, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia, Karima, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Zhang, Yun, Singulane, Cristiane C, Hitschrich, Niklas, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Amuthan, V, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Zhang, Y, Singulane, C, Hitschrich, N, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia, Karima, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Zhang, Yun, Singulane, Cristiane C, Hitschrich, Niklas, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, and Lang, Roberto M
- Abstract
Background: Normal values for three-dimensional (3D) right ventricular (RV) size and function are not well established, as they originate from small studies that involved predominantly white North American and European populations, did not use RV-focused views, and relied on older 3D RV analysis software. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to generate reference ranges for normal subjects around the world. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide capability of 3D imaging of the right ventricle and report size and function measurements, including their dependency on age, sex, and ethnicity. Methods: Healthy subjects free of cardiac, pulmonary, and renal disease were prospectively enrolled at 19 centers in 15 countries, representing six continents. Three-dimensional wide-angle RV data sets were obtained and analyzed using dedicated RV software (TomTec) to measure end-diastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV), stroke volume, and ejection fraction (EF). Results were categorized by sex, age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years) and ethnicity. Results: Of the 2,007 subjects with attempted 3D RV acquisitions, 1,051 had adequate image quality for confident measurements. Upper and lower limits for body surface area-indexed EDV, ESV, and EF were 48 and 95 mL/m2, 19 and 43 mL/m2, and 44% and 58%, respectively, for men and 42 and 81 mL/m2, 16 and 36 mL/m2, and 46% and 61%, respectively, for women. Men had significantly larger EDVs, ESVs, and stroke volumes (even after body surface area indexing) and lower EFs than women (P < .05). EDV and ESV did not show any meaningful differences among age groups. Three-dimensional RV volumes were smallest in Asians. Conclusions: Reliability of 3D RV acquisition is low worldwide, underscoring the importance of future improvements in imaging techniques. Sex and race must be taken into consideration in the assessment of both RV volumes and EF.
- Published
- 2023
10. Two-Dimensional Echocardiographic Right Ventricular Size and Systolic Function Measurements Stratified by Sex, Age, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Addetia, K, Miyoshi, T, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Addetia K., Miyoshi T., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., and Lang R. M.
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiographic assessment of right ventricular (RV) systolic function is an important component of clinical decision making. Although professional societies have worked to define normal ranges of RV size and function, their guidelines have not included the impacts of age, sex, and ethnicity on these parameters, as they have for the left ventricle. The World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to investigate the effects of age, sex, and ethnicity on all cardiac chambers. The aim of this study was to explore whether these differences exist for RV systolic parameters. Methods: Adequate two-dimensional RV-focused views for the measurement of systolic parameters, including fractional area change and global and free wall longitudinal strain, were available in 1,913 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 51% men). Basal and mid-RV dimensions, length, tricuspid annular peak systolic excursion, tissue Doppler S′ velocity, and myocardial performance index were also measured. Subjects were grouped by age ([removed]65 years), with results also stratified by sex and ethnicity (Asian, black, or white) and analyzed using vendor-independent software. Differences among groups were evaluated using analysis of variance. Results: Women had smaller absolute and indexed RV areas and absolute RV dimensions and higher magnitudes of fractional area change, free wall strain, and global longitudinal strain compared to men. With respect to age, most of the statistically significant differences were noted between the [removed]65-year age groups, with RV areas and lengths smaller in older age groups and RV functional parameters (S′, fractional area change, tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion, global longitudinal strain, free wall strain, and myocardial performance index) showing minimal decreases or no changes with age. Although there were no meaningful differences in functional parameters among ethnic groups, RV size was smallest in Asians. Conclusions
- Published
- 2021
11. Normal Values of Cardiac Output and Stroke Volume According to Measurement Technique, Age, Sex, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
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Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Henry, M, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Rossmanith, A, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Patel H. N., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Henry M. P., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Rossmanith A., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Henry, M, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Rossmanith, A, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Alizadehasl, A, Badano, L, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Patel H. N., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Henry M. P., Citro R., Daimon M., Gutierrez Fajardo P., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Schreckenberg M., Blankenhagen M., Degel M., Rossmanith A., Mor-Avi V., Asch F. M., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Alizadehasl A., Badano L., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., and Hwang J. -W.
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) is essential to understand cardiac function and hemodynamics. These parameters can be examined using three echocardiographic techniques (pulsed-wave Doppler, two-dimensional [2D], and three-dimensional [3D]). Whether these methods can be used interchangeably is unclear. The influence of age, sex, and ethnicity on CO and SV has also not been examined in depth. In this report from the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study, the authors compare CO and SV in healthy adults according to age, sex, ethnicity, and measurement techniques. Methods: A total of 1,450 adult subjects (53% men) free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled in 15 countries, with even distributions among age groups and sex. Subjects were divided into three age groups (young, 18–40 years; middle aged, 41–65 years; and old, >65 years) and three main racial groups (whites, blacks, and Asians). CO and SV were indexed (cardiac index [CI] and SV index [SVI], respectively) to body surface area and height and measured using three echocardiographic methods: Doppler, 2D, and 3D. Images were analyzed at two core laboratories (one each for 2D and 3D). Results: CI and SVI were significantly lower by 2D compared with both Doppler and 3D methods in both sexes. SVI was significantly lower in women than men by all three methods, while CI differed only by 2D. SVI decreased with aging by all three techniques, whereas CI declined only with 2D and 3D. CO and SV were smallest in Asians and largest in whites, and the differences persisted after normalization for body surface area. Conclusions: The present results provide normal reference values for CO and SV, which differ by age, sex, and race. Furthermore, CI and SVI measurements by the different echocardiographic techniques are not interchangeable. All these factors need to be taken into account when evaluating cardiac function and hemodynamics in i
- Published
- 2021
12. Normal Values of Aortic Root Size According to Age, Sex, and Race: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
- Author
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Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Amuthan, V, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Patel, Hena N, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Addetia, Karima, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Zhang, Yun, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Hitschrich, Niklas, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, Patel, H, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Gutierrez Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Amuthan, V, Zhang, Y, Schreckenberg, M, Blankenhagen, M, Degel, M, Hitschrich, N, Mor-Avi, V, Asch, F, Lang, R, Patel, Hena N, Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Addetia, Karima, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Kirkpatrick, James N, Monaghan, Mark J, Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O, Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E, Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M, Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S, Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Amuthan, Vivekanandan, Zhang, Yun, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Hitschrich, Niklas, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M, and Lang, Roberto M
- Abstract
Background: Accurate measurements of the aortic annulus and root are important for guiding therapeutic decisions regarding the need for aortic surgery. Current echocardiographic guidelines for identification of aortic root dilatation are limited because current normative values were derived predominantly from white individuals in narrow age ranges, and based partially on M-mode measurements. Using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study, the authors sought to establish normal ranges of aortic dimensions across sexes, races, and a wide range of ages. Methods: Adult individuals free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled from 15 countries, with even distributions among sexes and age groups: young (18–40 years), middle aged (41–65 years) and old (>65 years). Transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiograms of 1,585 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 50.4% men; mean body surface area [BSA], 1.77 ± 0.22 m2) were analyzed in a core laboratory following American Society of Echocardiography guidelines. Measurements, indexed separately by BSA and by height, included the aortic annulus, sinuses of Valsalva, and sinotubular junction. Differences among age, sex, and racial groups were evaluated using unpaired two-tailed Student's t tests. Results: All aortic root dimensions were larger in men compared with women. After indexing to BSA, all measured dimensions were significantly larger in women, whereas men continued to show larger dimensions after indexing to height. Of note, the upper limits of normal for all aortic dimensions were lower across all age groups, compared with the guidelines. Aortic dimensions were larger in older age groups in both sexes, a trend that persisted regardless of BSA or height adjustment. Last, differences in aortic dimensions were also observed according to race: Asians had the smallest nonindexed aortic dimensions at all levels. Conclusions: There are significant differences in aortic dimensions acco
- Published
- 2022
13. Normal Values of Three-Dimensional Right Ventricular Size and Function Measurements: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study.
- Author
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Addetia K, Miyoshi T, Amuthan V, Citro R, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Zhang Y, Singulane CC, Hitschrich N, Blankenhagen M, Degel M, Schreckenberg M, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Reference Values, Reproducibility of Results, Stroke Volume, Echocardiography, Ventricular Function, Right, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional methods
- Abstract
Background: Normal values for three-dimensional (3D) right ventricular (RV) size and function are not well established, as they originate from small studies that involved predominantly white North American and European populations, did not use RV-focused views, and relied on older 3D RV analysis software. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to generate reference ranges for normal subjects around the world. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide capability of 3D imaging of the right ventricle and report size and function measurements, including their dependency on age, sex, and ethnicity., Methods: Healthy subjects free of cardiac, pulmonary, and renal disease were prospectively enrolled at 19 centers in 15 countries, representing six continents. Three-dimensional wide-angle RV data sets were obtained and analyzed using dedicated RV software (TomTec) to measure end-diastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV), stroke volume, and ejection fraction (EF). Results were categorized by sex, age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years) and ethnicity., Results: Of the 2,007 subjects with attempted 3D RV acquisitions, 1,051 had adequate image quality for confident measurements. Upper and lower limits for body surface area-indexed EDV, ESV, and EF were 48 and 95 mL/m
2 , 19 and 43 mL/m2 , and 44% and 58%, respectively, for men and 42 and 81 mL/m2 , 16 and 36 mL/m2 , and 46% and 61%, respectively, for women. Men had significantly larger EDVs, ESVs, and stroke volumes (even after body surface area indexing) and lower EFs than women (P < .05). EDV and ESV did not show any meaningful differences among age groups. Three-dimensional RV volumes were smallest in Asians., Conclusions: Reliability of 3D RV acquisition is low worldwide, underscoring the importance of future improvements in imaging techniques. Sex and race must be taken into consideration in the assessment of both RV volumes and EF., (Copyright © 2023 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Similarities and Differences in Left Ventricular Size and Function among Races and Nationalities: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study
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Asch, F, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Desale, S, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Blitz, A, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Zhang, M, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Palermo, C, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Fasawe, D, Schreckenberg, M, Amuthan, V, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Woo Park, S, Asch F. M., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Citro R., Daimon M., Desale S., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Blitz A., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Zhang M., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Palermo C., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Fasawe D., Schreckenberg M., Ronderos R., Scalia G., Amuthan V., Kasliwal R., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Woo Park S., Kirkpatrick J., Asch, F, Miyoshi, T, Addetia, K, Citro, R, Daimon, M, Desale, S, Fajardo, P, Kasliwal, R, Kirkpatrick, J, Monaghan, M, Muraru, D, Ogunyankin, K, Park, S, Ronderos, R, Sadeghpour, A, Scalia, G, Takeuchi, M, Tsang, W, Tucay, E, Tude Rodrigues, A, Vivekanandan, A, Zhang, Y, Blitz, A, Lang, R, Prado, A, Filipini, E, Kwon, A, Hoschke-Edwards, S, Afonso, T, Thampinathan, B, Sooriyakanthan, M, Zhu, T, Wang, Z, Wang, Y, Zhang, M, Yin, L, Li, S, Alagesan, R, Balasubramanian, S, Ananth, R, Bansal, M, Badano, L, Palermo, C, Bossone, E, Di Vece, D, Bellino, M, Nakao, T, Kawata, T, Hirokawa, M, Sawada, N, Nabeshima, Y, Yun, H, Hwang, J, Fasawe, D, Schreckenberg, M, Amuthan, V, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Woo Park, S, Asch F. M., Miyoshi T., Addetia K., Citro R., Daimon M., Desale S., Fajardo P. G., Kasliwal R. R., Kirkpatrick J. N., Monaghan M. J., Muraru D., Ogunyankin K. O., Park S. W., Ronderos R. E., Sadeghpour A., Scalia G. M., Takeuchi M., Tsang W., Tucay E. S., Tude Rodrigues A. C., Vivekanandan A., Zhang Y., Blitz A., Lang R. M., Prado A. D., Filipini E., Kwon A., Hoschke-Edwards S., Afonso T. R., Thampinathan B., Sooriyakanthan M., Zhu T., Wang Z., Wang Y., Zhang M., Yin L., Li S., Alagesan R., Balasubramanian S., Ananth R. V. A., Bansal M., Badano L., Palermo C., Bossone E., Di Vece D., Bellino M., Nakao T., Kawata T., Hirokawa M., Sawada N., Nabeshima Y., Yun H. R., Hwang J. -W., Fasawe D., Schreckenberg M., Ronderos R., Scalia G., Amuthan V., Kasliwal R., Gutierrez-Fajardo P., Woo Park S., and Kirkpatrick J.
- Abstract
Background: The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) Normal Values Study evaluates individuals from multiple countries and races with the aim of describing normative values that could be applied to the global community worldwide and to determine differences and similarities among people from different countries and races. The present report focuses specifically on two-dimensional (2D) left ventricular (LV) dimensions, volumes, and systolic function. Methods: The WASE Normal Values Study is a multicenter international, observational, prospective, cross-sectional study of healthy adult individuals. Participants recruited in each country were evenly distributed among six predetermined subgroups according to age and gender. Comprehensive 2D transthoracic echocardiograms were acquired and analyzed following strict protocols based on recent American Society of Echocardiography and European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging guidelines. Analysis was performed at the WASE 2D core laboratory and included 2D LV dimensions, LV volumes, and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) by the biplane Simpson method and global longitudinal strain (GLS). Results: Two thousand eight subjects were enrolled in 15 countries. The median age was 45 years (interquartile range, 32–65 years), 42.8% were white, 41.8% were Asian, and 9.7% were black. LV dimensions and volumes were larger in male subjects, while LVEF and GLS were higher in female subjects. Global WASE normal ranges for LV dimensions were smaller than those in the guidelines, but the upper limits of normal for LV volumes and the lower limits of normal for LVEF were higher in the WASE study. Significant intercountry variation was identified for all LV parameters reflecting LV size (dimensions, mass, and volumes) even after indexing to body surface area, with LV end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes having the highest variation. The largest volumes were noted in Australia, while the smallest were measured in India for both gen
- Published
- 2019
15. BROADENING THROMBOLYTIC THERAPY INDICATIONS IN PATIENTS WITH PULMONARY EMBOLISM
- Author
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Jerjes-Sanchez, C, Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Ramirez-Rivera, A, Trevino, H, Villarreal, I, Bermudez, M, and Garcia-Castillo, A
- Published
- 1999
16. ROLE OF TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY IN DIAGNOSIS AND STRATIFICATION IN MASSIVE OR LARGE PULMONARY EMBOLISM
- Author
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Gutierrez-Fajardo, P, Jerjes-Sanchez, C, and Ramirez-Rivera, A
- Published
- 1999
17. Normal Values of Left Ventricular Size and Function on Three-Dimensional Echocardiography: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study.
- Author
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Addetia K, Miyoshi T, Amuthan V, Citro R, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Zhang Y, Hitschrich N, Blankenhagen M, Degel M, Schreckenberg M, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Aged, Echocardiography methods, Female, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional methods, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiography remains the most widely used modality to assess left ventricular (LV) chamber size and function. Currently this assessment is most frequently performed using two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography. However, three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography has been shown to be more accurate and reproducible than 2D echocardiography. Current normative reference values for 3D LV analysis are based predominantly on data from North America and Europe. The World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to sample normal subjects from around the world to provide more universal global reference ranges. The aim of this study was to assess the worldwide feasibility of LV 3D echocardiography and report on size and functional measurements., Methods: A total of 2,262 healthy subjects were prospectively enrolled from 19 centers in 15 countries. Three-dimensional LV full-volume data sets were obtained and analyzed offline using vendor-neutral software. Measurements included LV end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes, LV ejection fraction (LVEF), global longitudinal strain (GLS), and global circumferential strain. Results were categorized by age (18-40, 41-65, and >65 years), sex, and race., Results: A total of 1,589 subjects (feasibility 70%) had adequate LV data sets for analysis. Mean normal values for indexed end-diastolic volume, end-systolic volume, and LVEF in men and women were 70 ± 15 and 65 ± 12 mL/m
2 , 28 ± 7 and 25 ± 6 mL/m2 , and 60 ± 5% and 62 ± 5%, respectively. Men had larger LV volumes and lower LVEFs than women. GLS and global circumferential strain were higher in magnitude in women. In both sexes, LV volumes were lower and LVEF tended to be higher with increasing age, especially considering the differences between the youngest and oldest age groups. Although GLS was similar across age groups in men, in women, the youngest and middle-age cohorts revealed higher magnitudes of GLS compared with the oldest age group. Global circumferential strain was higher in magnitude at older age in both men and women. Finally, Asians had smaller chamber sizes and higher LVEFs and absolute strain values than both blacks and whites., Conclusions: Age, sex, and race should be considered when defining normal reference values for LV dimension and functional parameters obtained by 3D echocardiography., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
18. Normal Values of Aortic Root Size According to Age, Sex, and Race: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study.
- Author
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Patel HN, Miyoshi T, Addetia K, Citro R, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Amuthan V, Zhang Y, Schreckenberg M, Blankenhagen M, Degel M, Hitschrich N, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Racial Groups, Reference Values, White People, Young Adult, Aorta diagnostic imaging, Echocardiography
- Abstract
Background: Accurate measurements of the aortic annulus and root are important for guiding therapeutic decisions regarding the need for aortic surgery. Current echocardiographic guidelines for identification of aortic root dilatation are limited because current normative values were derived predominantly from white individuals in narrow age ranges, and based partially on M-mode measurements. Using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study, the authors sought to establish normal ranges of aortic dimensions across sexes, races, and a wide range of ages., Methods: Adult individuals free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled from 15 countries, with even distributions among sexes and age groups: young (18-40 years), middle aged (41-65 years) and old (>65 years). Transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiograms of 1,585 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 50.4% men; mean body surface area [BSA], 1.77 ± 0.22 m
2 ) were analyzed in a core laboratory following American Society of Echocardiography guidelines. Measurements, indexed separately by BSA and by height, included the aortic annulus, sinuses of Valsalva, and sinotubular junction. Differences among age, sex, and racial groups were evaluated using unpaired two-tailed Student's t tests., Results: All aortic root dimensions were larger in men compared with women. After indexing to BSA, all measured dimensions were significantly larger in women, whereas men continued to show larger dimensions after indexing to height. Of note, the upper limits of normal for all aortic dimensions were lower across all age groups, compared with the guidelines. Aortic dimensions were larger in older age groups in both sexes, a trend that persisted regardless of BSA or height adjustment. Last, differences in aortic dimensions were also observed according to race: Asians had the smallest nonindexed aortic dimensions at all levels., Conclusions: There are significant differences in aortic dimensions according to sex, age, and race. Thus, current guideline-recommended normal ranges may need to be adjusted to account for these differences., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Normal Values of Left Atrial Size and Function and the Impact of Age: Results of the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography Study.
- Author
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Singh A, Carvalho Singulane C, Miyoshi T, Prado AD, Addetia K, Bellino M, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Vivekanandan A, Zhang Y, Schreckenberg M, Blankenhagen M, Degel M, Hitschrich N, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Atrial Function, Left, Echocardiography, Female, Heart Atria diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Reference Values, Young Adult, Atrial Appendage, Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional
- Abstract
Background: Left atrial (LA) evaluation includes volumetric and functional parameters with an abundance of diagnostic and prognostic implications. Solid normal reference ranges are compulsory for accurate interpretation in individual patients, but previous studies have yielded mixed conclusions regarding the effects of age, sex, and/or race. The present report from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography study focuses on two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) measures of LA structure and function, with subgroup analysis by age, sex, and race., Methods: Transthoracic 2D and 3D echocardiographic images were obtained in 1,765 healthy individuals (901 men, 864 women) evenly distributed among age subgroups: 18 to 40 years (n = 745), 41 to 65 years (n = 618), and >65 years (n = 402); the racial distribution was 38.4% white, 39.9% Asian, and 9.7% black. Images were analyzed using dedicated LA analysis software to measure LA volumes and phasic function from 3D volume and 2D strain curves., Results: Three-dimensional maximum and minimum LA volumes adjusted for body surface area were nearly identical for men and women, but women demonstrated higher 3D total and passive emptying fractions (EFs). Two-dimensional reservoir strain was similar for both sexes. Age was associated with an incremental rise in LA volumes alongside characteristic shifts in functional indices. Total 2D EF and reservoir and conduit strain varied inversely with age, counteracted by higher booster strain, with a greater magnitude of effect in women. Active 3D EF was significantly higher, while total and passive EFs decreased with age. Interracial differences were noted in LA volumes, without substantial differences in functional indices., Conclusion: Although similar normal values for LA volumes and strain can be applied to both sexes, meaningful differences in LA size occur with aging. Indices of function also shift with age, with a compensatory rise in booster function, which may serve to counteract observed lower total and passive EFs. Defining age-associated normal values may help differentiate age-associated "healthy" LA aging from pathologic processes., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Two-Dimensional Echocardiographic Right Ventricular Size and Systolic Function Measurements Stratified by Sex, Age, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study.
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Addetia K, Miyoshi T, Citro R, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Vivekanandan A, Zhang Y, Schreckenberg M, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Echocardiography, Female, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Ventricular Function, Right, Ethnicity, Ventricular Dysfunction, Right
- Abstract
Background: Echocardiographic assessment of right ventricular (RV) systolic function is an important component of clinical decision making. Although professional societies have worked to define normal ranges of RV size and function, their guidelines have not included the impacts of age, sex, and ethnicity on these parameters, as they have for the left ventricle. The World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography study was designed to investigate the effects of age, sex, and ethnicity on all cardiac chambers. The aim of this study was to explore whether these differences exist for RV systolic parameters., Methods: Adequate two-dimensional RV-focused views for the measurement of systolic parameters, including fractional area change and global and free wall longitudinal strain, were available in 1,913 subjects (mean age, 47 ± 17 years; 51% men). Basal and mid-RV dimensions, length, tricuspid annular peak systolic excursion, tissue Doppler S' velocity, and myocardial performance index were also measured. Subjects were grouped by age (<40, 41-65, and >65 years), with results also stratified by sex and ethnicity (Asian, black, or white) and analyzed using vendor-independent software. Differences among groups were evaluated using analysis of variance., Results: Women had smaller absolute and indexed RV areas and absolute RV dimensions and higher magnitudes of fractional area change, free wall strain, and global longitudinal strain compared to men. With respect to age, most of the statistically significant differences were noted between the <40- and >65-year age groups, with RV areas and lengths smaller in older age groups and RV functional parameters (S', fractional area change, tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion, global longitudinal strain, free wall strain, and myocardial performance index) showing minimal decreases or no changes with age. Although there were no meaningful differences in functional parameters among ethnic groups, RV size was smallest in Asians., Conclusions: These findings suggest that although two-dimensional RV parameters are age and sex dependent, association with race is less apparent, excepting that the Asian population appears to have smaller chamber sizes compared with whites and blacks., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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21. Normal Values of Cardiac Output and Stroke Volume According to Measurement Technique, Age, Sex, and Ethnicity: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study.
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Patel HN, Miyoshi T, Addetia K, Henry MP, Citro R, Daimon M, Gutierrez Fajardo P, Kasliwal RR, Kirkpatrick JN, Monaghan MJ, Muraru D, Ogunyankin KO, Park SW, Ronderos RE, Sadeghpour A, Scalia GM, Takeuchi M, Tsang W, Tucay ES, Tude Rodrigues AC, Vivekanandan A, Zhang Y, Schreckenberg M, Blankenhagen M, Degel M, Rossmanith A, Mor-Avi V, Asch FM, and Lang RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cardiac Output, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Stroke Volume, Young Adult, Echocardiography, Ethnicity
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) is essential to understand cardiac function and hemodynamics. These parameters can be examined using three echocardiographic techniques (pulsed-wave Doppler, two-dimensional [2D], and three-dimensional [3D]). Whether these methods can be used interchangeably is unclear. The influence of age, sex, and ethnicity on CO and SV has also not been examined in depth. In this report from the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Normal Values Study, the authors compare CO and SV in healthy adults according to age, sex, ethnicity, and measurement techniques., Methods: A total of 1,450 adult subjects (53% men) free of heart, lung, and kidney disease were prospectively enrolled in 15 countries, with even distributions among age groups and sex. Subjects were divided into three age groups (young, 18-40 years; middle aged, 41-65 years; and old, >65 years) and three main racial groups (whites, blacks, and Asians). CO and SV were indexed (cardiac index [CI] and SV index [SVI], respectively) to body surface area and height and measured using three echocardiographic methods: Doppler, 2D, and 3D. Images were analyzed at two core laboratories (one each for 2D and 3D)., Results: CI and SVI were significantly lower by 2D compared with both Doppler and 3D methods in both sexes. SVI was significantly lower in women than men by all three methods, while CI differed only by 2D. SVI decreased with aging by all three techniques, whereas CI declined only with 2D and 3D. CO and SV were smallest in Asians and largest in whites, and the differences persisted after normalization for body surface area., Conclusions: The present results provide normal reference values for CO and SV, which differ by age, sex, and race. Furthermore, CI and SVI measurements by the different echocardiographic techniques are not interchangeable. All these factors need to be taken into account when evaluating cardiac function and hemodynamics in individual patients., (Copyright © 2021 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Echocardiographic Measurements in Normal Chinese Adults (EMINCA) II focusing on left ventricular and left atrial size and function by three-dimensional echocardiography.
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Wang Y, Zhang Y, Yao G, Tang H, Chen L, Yin L, Zhu T, Yuan J, Han W, Yang J, Shu X, Yang Y, Wei Y, Guo Y, Ren W, Gao D, Lu G, Wu J, Yin H, Mu Y, Tian J, Yuan L, Ma X, Dai H, Ding Y, Ding M, Zhou Q, Wang H, Xu D, Zhang M, and Zhang Y
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Atrial Function, Left, China, East Asian People, Reference Values, Ventricular Function, Left, Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional methods, Heart Atria diagnostic imaging, Heart Atria anatomy & histology, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Heart Ventricles anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Current guidelines encourage large studies in a diverse population to establish normal reference ranges for three-dimensional (3D) echocardiography for different ethnic groups. This study was designed to establish the normal values of 3D-left ventricular (LV) and left atrial (LA) volume and function in a nationwide, population-based cohort of healthy Han Chinese adults. A total of 1117 healthy volunteers aged 18-89 years were enrolled from 28 collaborating laboratories in China. Two sets of 3D echocardiographic instruments were used, and full-volume echocardiographic images were recorded and transmitted to a core laboratory for image analysis with a vendor-independent off-line workstation. Finally, 866 volunteers (mean age of 48.4 years, 402 men) were qualified for final analysis. Most parameters exhibited substantial differences between different sex and age groups, even after indexation by body surface area. The normal ranges of 3D-LV and 3D-LA volume and function differed from those recommended by the American Society of Echocardiography and the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging guidelines, presented by the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) study, and from the 2D values in the EMINCA study. The normal reference values of 3D echocardiography-derived LV and LA volume and function were established for the first time in healthy Han Chinese adults. Normal ranges of 3D-LV and 3D-LA echocardiographic measurements stratified with sex, age, and race should be recommended for clinical applications., (© 2024. Higher Education Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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23. Mexican registry of pulmonary hypertension: REMEHIP.
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Sandoval Zarate J, Jerjes-Sanchez C, Ramirez-Rivera A, Zamudio TP, Gutierrez-Fajardo P, Elizalde Gonzalez J, Leon MS, Gamez MB, Abril FM, Michel RP, and Aguilar HG
- Subjects
- Humans, Mexico, Prospective Studies, Research Design, Hypertension, Pulmonary diagnosis, Hypertension, Pulmonary therapy, Registries
- Abstract
Objective: REMEHIP is a prospective, multicentre registry on pulmonary hypertension. The main objective will be to identify the clinical profile, medical care, therapeutic trends and outcomes in adult and pediatric Mexican patients with well-characterized pulmonary hypertension., Methods: REMEHIP a multicenter registry began in 2015 with a planned recruitment time of 12 months and a 4-year follow-up. The study population will comprise a longitudinal cohort study, collecting data on patients with prevalent and incident pulmonary hypertension. Will be included patients of age >2 years and diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension by right heart catheterization within Group 1 and Group 4 of the World Health Organization classification. The structure, data collection and data analysis will be based on quality current recommendations for registries. The protocol has been approved by institutional ethics committees in all participant centers. All patients will sign an informed consent form. Currently in Mexico, there is a need of observational registries that include patients with treatment in the everyday clinical practice so the data could be validated and additional information could be obtained versus the one from the clinical trials. In this way, REMEHIP emerges as a link among randomized clinical trials developed by experts and previous Mexican experience., (Copyright © 2016 Instituto Nacional de Cardiología Ignacio Chávez. Publicado por Masson Doyma México S.A. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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24. Molecular Pathophysiology of Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension: A Clinical Update from a Basic Research Perspective.
- Author
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Gonzalez-Hermosillo, Leslie Marisol, Cueto-Robledo, Guillermo, Navarro-Vergara, Dulce Iliana, Torres-Rojas, Maria Berenice, García-Cesar, Marisol, Pérez-Méndez, Oscar, and Escobedo, Galileo
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. [Certification in echocardiography. Why is it important?].
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Erdmenger-Orellana J and Gutierrez-Fajardo P
- Subjects
- Mexico, Certification, Echocardiography standards
- Published
- 2010
26. Lone Giant Atrium as a Variant of Atrial Cardiomyopathy: A Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Case Series.
- Author
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Meier, Claudia, Olteanu, Gabriel, Ellermeier, Marc, Eisenblätter, Michel, and Gielen, Stephan
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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27. Aging‐associated atrial fibrillation: A comprehensive review focusing on the potential mechanisms.
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Wang, Meng‐Fei, Hou, Can, Jia, Fang, Zhong, Cheng‐Hao, Xue, Cong, and Li, Jian‐Jun
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ATRIAL fibrillation ,INCURABLE diseases ,TELOMERES ,HEMODYNAMICS ,WORLD health ,CELLULAR aging - Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) has been receiving a lot of attention from scientists and clinicians because it is an extremely common clinical condition. Due to its special hemodynamic changes, AF has a high rate of disability and mortality. So far, although AF has some therapeutic means, it is still an incurable disease because of its complex risk factors and pathophysiologic mechanisms, which is a difficult problem for global public health. Age is an important independent risk factor for AF, and the incidence of AF increases with age. To date, there is no comprehensive review on aging‐associated AF. In this review, we systematically discuss the pathophysiologic evidence for aging‐associated AF, and in particular explore the pathophysiologic mechanisms of mitochondrial dysfunction, telomere attrition, cellular senescence, disabled macroautophagy, and gut dysbiosis involved in recent studies with aging‐associated AF. We hope that by exploring the various dimensions of aging‐associated AF, we can better understand the specific relationship between age and AF, which may be crucial for innovative treatments of aging‐associated AF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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28. Optimal combination of right ventricular functional parameters using echocardiography in pulmonary arterial hypertension.
- Author
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Li, Qimou, Zhang, Yu, Cui, Xiaopei, Lu, Weida, Ji, Qiushang, and Zhang, Mei
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PULMONARY arterial hypertension ,RIGHT ventricular dysfunction ,SYSTOLIC blood pressure ,PULMONARY artery ,VENTRICULAR ejection fraction - Abstract
Aims: Novel echocardiographic parameters of right ventricular (RV) function, including speckle‐tracking‐derived, three‐dimensional, and RV–pulmonary artery coupling parameters, have emerged for the evaluation of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The relative role of these parameters in the risk stratification of PAH patients is unclear. We compared the performance of multiple RV parameters and sought to establish an optimal model for identifying the risk profile of patients with PAH. Methods and results: Comprehensive risk assessments were performed for 70 patients with PAH. The risk profile of every patient was determined based on the guideline recommendations. Conventional parameters, including fractional area change (FAC) and tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), novel speckle‐tracking‐derived RV longitudinal strain (RVLS), and three‐dimensional RV ejection fraction (3D‐RVEF), were used to evaluate RV function. Pressure–strain loops were measured for the assessment of RV myocardial work, including RV global wasted work (RVGWW). RV–pulmonary artery coupling was assessed by indexing RV parameters to the estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP). The median age was 34 (30–43) years, and 62 (88.6%) patients were female. Forty‐five patients were classified into the low‐risk group, while 25 patients were classified into the intermediate–high‐risk group. Most RV parameters could be used to determine the risk profile and exhibited significantly improved diagnostic performance after indexing to PASP (including FAC/PASP, TAPSE/PASP, and 3D‐RVEF/PASP). RVLS/PASP showed the best performance, with an area under the curve of 0.895. In multivariate analysis (Model 1), only RVGWW (>90.5 mmHg%), RVLS (> −16.7%), and TAPSE (<17.5 mm) remained significant (all P < 0.05). Model 1 outperformed every single RV parameter, with a significantly larger area under the curve (all P < 0.05). With PASP indexing in Model 2, RVLS/PASP > −0.275 [odds ratio (OR) 20.63, 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.62–92.11, P < 0.001] and RVGWW > 90.5 mmHg% (OR 6.17, 95% CI 1.37–27.76, P = 0.018) independently identified a higher risk profile. The addition of RVGWW to two models determined incremental value in identification (continuous net reclassification improvement 1.058, 95% CI 0.639–1.477, P < 0.001). Conclusions: The combination models for RV function outperformed any single parameter in identifying the risk profile of patients with PAH. Comprehensive assessment of RV–pulmonary artery coupling using multiparametric methods is clinically meaningful in patients with PAH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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29. Multimodality Imaging for Right Ventricular Function Assessment in Severe Tricuspid Regurgitation.
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Melillo, Francesco, Fabiani, Dario, Santoro, Alessandro, Oro, Pietro, Frecentese, Francesca, Salemme, Luigi, Tesorio, Tullio, Agricola, Eustachio, De Bonis, Michele, and Lorusso, Roberto
- Subjects
CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging ,TRICUSPID valve insufficiency ,RIGHT ventricular dysfunction ,TRICUSPID valve ,EARLY medical intervention - Abstract
Severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a pathological condition associated with worse cardiovascular outcomes. In the vicious cycle of right ventricular compensation and maladaptation to TR, the development of right ventricle (RV) dysfunction has significant prognostic implications, especially in patients undergoing surgical or percutaneous treatments. Indeed, RV dysfunction is associated with increased operative morbidity and mortality in both surgical and percutaneously treated patients. In this context, the identification of clinical or subtle right ventricle dysfunction plays a critical role inpatient selection and timing of surgical or percutaneous tricuspid valve intervention. However, in the presence of severe TR, evaluation of RV function is challenging, given the increase in preload that may lead to an overestimation of systolic function for the Frank–Starling law, reduced reliability of pulmonary artery pressure estimation, the sensitivity of RV to afterload that may result in afterload mismatch after treatment. Consequently, conventional echocardiographic indices have some limitations, and the use of speckle tracking for right ventricular free wall longitudinal strain (RV-FWLS) analysis and the use of 3D echocardiography for RV volumes and ejection fraction estimation are showing promising data. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) represents the gold standards for volumes and ejection fraction evaluation and may add further prognostic information. Finally, cardiac computer tomography (CCT) provides measurements of RV and annulus dimensions that are particularly useful in the transcatheter field. Identification of subtle RV dysfunction may need, therefore, more than one imaging technique, which will lead to tip the balance between medical therapy and early intervention towards the latter before disease progression. Therefore, the aim of this review is to describe the main imaging techniques, providing a comprehensive assessment of their role in RV function evaluation in the presence of severe TR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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30. Normal Values of Aortic Root Size According to Age, Sex and Race: Results of the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography Study
- Author
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Patel, Hena N., Miyoshi, Tatsuya, Addetia, Karima, Citro, Rodolfo, Daimon, Masao, Gutierrez Fajardo, Pedro, Kasliwal, Ravi R., Kirkpatrick, James N., Monaghan, Mark J., Muraru, Denisa, Ogunyankin, Kofo O., Park, Seung Woo, Ronderos, Ricardo E., Sadeghpour, Anita, Scalia, Gregory M., Takeuchi, Masaaki, Tsang, Wendy, Tucay, Edwin S., Tude Rodrigues, Ana Clara, Vivekanandan, Amuthan, Zhang, Yun, Schreckenberg, Marcus, Blankenhagen, Michael, Degel, Markus, Hitschrich, Niklas, Mor-Avi, Victor, Asch, Federico M., and Lang, Roberto M.
- Abstract
Accurate measurements of the aortic annulus and root are important for guiding therapeutic decisions regarding the need for aortic surgery. Current echocardiographic guidelines for identification of aortic root dilatation are limited because current normative values were derived predominantly from white individuals in narrow age ranges, and based partially on M-mode measurements. Using data from the World Alliance Societies of Echocardiography (WASE) Study, we sought to establish normal ranges of aortic dimensions across sexes, races and a wide range of ages.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Left Atrial Mural Endocarditis: Diagnosis by Transesophageal Echocardiography.
- Author
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Gutierrez-Fajardo P, Espinola-Zavaleta N, Romero-Cárdenas A, Reyes-Navarro L, Keirns C, and Vargas Barron J
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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32. Current and Clinically Relevant Echocardiographic Parameters to Analyze Left Atrial Function.
- Author
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Mangia, Mario, D'Andrea, Emilio, Cecchetto, Antonella, Beccari, Riccardo, Mele, Donato, and Nistri, Stefano
- Published
- 2024
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33. Potential Role of Left Atrial Strain to Predict Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence after Catheter Ablation Therapy: A Clinical and Systematic Review.
- Author
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Barilli, Maria, Mandoli, Giulia Elena, Sisti, Nicolò, Dokollari, Aleksander, Ghionzoli, Nicolò, Soliman-Aboumarie, Hatem, D'Ascenzi, Flavio, Focardi, Marta, Cavigli, Luna, Pastore, Maria Concetta, and Cameli, Matteo
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
34. The assessment of left ventricular diastolic function: guidance and recommendations from the British Society of Echocardiography.
- Author
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Robinson, Shaun, Ring, Liam, Oxborough, David, Harkness, Allan, Bennett, Sadie, Rana, Bushra, Sutaria, Nilesh, Lo Giudice, Francesco, Shun-Shin, Matthew, Paton, Maria, Duncan, Rae, Willis, James, Colebourn, Claire, Bassindale, Gemma, Gatenby, Kate, Belham, Mark, Cole, Graham, Augustine, Daniel, and Smiseth, Otto A.
- Subjects
LEFT heart ventricle ,DIASTOLIC blood pressure ,HEART failure ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Impairment of left ventricular (LV) diastolic function is common amongst those with left heart disease and is associated with significant morbidity. Given that, in simple terms, the ventricle can only eject the volume with which it fills and that approximately one half of hospitalisations for heart failure (HF) are in those with normal/'preserved' left ventricular ejection fraction (HFpEF) (Bianco et al. in JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 13:258–271, 2020. 10.1016/j.jcmg.2018.12.035), where abnormalities of ventricular filling are the cause of symptoms, it is clear that the assessment of left ventricular diastolic function (LVDF) is crucial for understanding global cardiac function and for identifying the wider effects of disease processes. Invasive methods of measuring LV relaxation and filling pressures are considered the gold-standard for investigating diastolic function. However, the high temporal resolution of trans-thoracic echocardiography (TTE) with widely validated and reproducible measures available at the patient's bedside and without the need for invasive procedures involving ionising radiation have established echocardiography as the primary imaging modality. The comprehensive assessment of LVDF is therefore a fundamental element of the standard TTE (Robinson et al. in Echo Res Pract7:G59–G93, 2020. 10.1530/ERP-20-0026). However, the echocardiographic assessment of diastolic function is complex. In the broadest and most basic terms, ventricular diastole comprises an early filling phase when blood is drawn, by suction, into the ventricle as it rapidly recoils and lengthens following the preceding systolic contraction and shortening. This is followed in late diastole by distension of the compliant LV when atrial contraction actively contributes to ventricular filling. When LVDF is normal, ventricular filling is achieved at low pressure both at rest and during exertion. However, this basic description merely summarises the complex physiology that enables the diastolic process and defines it according to the mechanical method by which the ventricles fill, overlooking the myocardial function, properties of chamber compliance and pressure differentials that determine the capacity for LV filling. Unlike ventricular systolic function where single parameters are utilised to define myocardial performance (LV ejection fraction (LVEF) and Global Longitudinal Strain (GLS)), the assessment of diastolic function relies on the interpretation of multiple myocardial and blood-flow velocity parameters, along with left atrial (LA) size and function, in order to diagnose the presence and degree of impairment. The echocardiographic assessment of diastolic function is therefore multifaceted and complex, requiring an algorithmic approach that incorporates parameters of myocardial relaxation/recoil, chamber compliance and function under variable loading conditions and the intra-cavity pressures under which these processes occur. This guideline outlines a structured approach to the assessment of diastolic function and includes recommendations for the assessment of LV relaxation and filling pressures. Non-routine echocardiographic measures are described alongside guidance for application in specific circumstances. Provocative methods for revealing increased filling pressure on exertion are described and novel and emerging modalities considered. For rapid access to the core recommendations of the diastolic guideline, a quick-reference guide (additional file 1) accompanies the main guideline document. This describes in very brief detail the diastolic investigation in each patient group and includes all algorithms and core reference tables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Design and Analysis of a Polymeric Left Ventricular Simulator via Computational Modelling.
- Author
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Baturalp, Turgut Batuhan and Bozkurt, Selim
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ARTIFICIAL muscles ,SIMULATION software ,MEDICAL equipment ,PRODUCT life cycle ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,BLOOD flow ,SURGICAL gloves ,HEART - Abstract
Preclinical testing of medical devices is an essential step in the product life cycle, whereas testing of cardiovascular implants requires specialised testbeds or numerical simulations using computer software Ansys 2016. Existing test setups used to evaluate physiological scenarios and test cardiac implants such as mock circulatory systems or isolated beating heart platforms are driven by sophisticated hardware which comes at a high cost or raises ethical concerns. On the other hand, computational methods used to simulate blood flow in the cardiovascular system may be simplified or computationally expensive. Therefore, there is a need for low-cost, relatively simple and efficient test beds that can provide realistic conditions to simulate physiological scenarios and evaluate cardiovascular devices. In this study, the concept design of a novel left ventricular simulator made of latex rubber and actuated by pneumatic artificial muscles is presented. The designed left ventricular simulator is geometrically similar to a native left ventricle, whereas the basal diameter and long axis length are within an anatomical range. Finite element simulations evaluating left ventricular twisting and shortening predicted that the designed left ventricular simulator rotates approximately 17 degrees at the apex and the long axis shortens around 11 mm. Experimental results showed that the twist angle is 18 degrees and the left ventricular simulator shortens 5 mm. Twist angles and long axis shortening as in a native left ventricle show it is capable of functioning like a native left ventricle and simulating a variety of scenarios, and therefore has the potential to be used as a test platform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. Role and application of three-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography in the assessment of left and right ventricular volumes and ejection fraction: a UK nationwide survey.
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Corbett, Liam, O'Driscoll, Patrick, Paton, Maria, Oxborough, David, and Surkova, Elena
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ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,LEFT heart ventricle ,RIGHT heart ventricle ,INTERNET surveys ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
Three-dimensional echocardiography (3DE) imaging has permitted advancements in the quantification of left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) volumes and ejection fraction. We evaluated the availability of 3DE equipment / analysis software, the integration of 3DE assessment of the LV and RV in routine clinical practice, current training provisions in 3DE, and aimed to ascertain barriers preventing the routine use of 3DE for volumetric analysis. Through the British Society of Echocardiography (BSE) regional representatives' network, echocardiographers were invited to participate in an open online survey. A total of 181 participants from echocardiography departments in the United Kingdom (UK), the majority from tertiary centres (61%), completed the 28-question survey. For 3DE quantification, 3DE-LV was adopted more frequently than 3DE-RV (48% vs 11%, respectively). Imaging feasibility was a recognised factor in 3DE RV and LV adoption. Many respondents had access to 3D probes (93%). The largest observed barriers to 3DE routine use were training deficiencies, with 83% reporting they would benefit from additional training opportunities and the duration of time permitted for the scan, with 68% of responders reporting allowances of less than the BSE standard of 45–60 min per patient (8% < 30-min). Furthermore, of those respondents who had undertaken professional accreditation, competence in 3DE was not formally assessed in 89%. This UK survey also reported good accessibility to magnetic resonance imaging (72%), which was related to overall 3DE adoption. In summary, although 3DE is now readily available, it remains underutilised. Further training opportunities, integrated formal assessment, improved adoption of BSE minimum recommended scanning times, alongside industry and societal support, may increase 3DE utilisation in routine practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Blood volume contributes to the mechanical synchrony of the myocardium during moderate and high intensity exercise in women.
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Khor, Joyce, Diaz-Canestro, Candela, Chan, Koot Yin, Guo, Meihan, and Montero, David
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BLOOD volume ,EXERCISE intensity ,SPECKLE tracking echocardiography ,MYOCARDIUM ,SYNCHRONIC order - Abstract
Purpose: Whether blood volume (BV) primarily determines the synchronous nature of the myocardium remains unknown. This study determined the impact of standard blood withdrawal on left ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony (LVMD) in women. Methods: Transthoracic speckle-tracking echocardiography and central hemodynamic measurements were performed at rest and during moderate- to high-intensity exercise in healthy women (n = 24, age = 53.6 ± 16.3 year). LVMD was determined via the time to peak standard deviation (TPSD) of longitudinal and transverse strain and strain rates (LSR, TSR). Measurements were repeated within a week period immediately after a 10% reduction of BV. Results: With intact BV, all individuals presented cardiac structure and function variables within normative values of the study population. Blood withdrawal decreased BV (5.3 ± 0.7 L) by 0.5 ± 0.1 L. Resting left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic volume (− 8%, P = 0.040) and passive filling (− 16%, P = 0.001) were reduced after blood withdrawal. No effect of blood withdrawal was observed for any measure of LVMD at rest (P ≥ 0.225). During exercise at a fixed submaximal workload (100 W), LVMD of myocardial longitudinal strain (LS TPSD) was increased after blood withdrawal (36%, P = 0.047). At peak effort, blood withdrawal led to increased LVMD of myocardial transverse strain rate (TSR TPSD) (31%, P = 0.002). The effect of blood withdrawal on TSR TPSD at peak effort was associated with LV concentric remodeling (r = 0.59, P = 0.003). Conclusion: Marked impairments in the mechanical synchrony of the myocardium are elicited by moderate blood withdrawal in healthy women during moderate and high intensity exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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38. Cardiac defects of hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and hypermobility spectrum disorders: a retrospective cohort study.
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Knight, Dacre R. T., Bruno, Katelyn A., Singh, Ayush, Munipalli, Bala, Gajarawala, Shilpa, Solomon, Mahima, Kocsis, S. Christian, Darakjian, Ashley A., Jain, Angita, Whelan, Emily R., Kotha, Archana, Gorelov, David J., Phillips, Sabrina D., and Fairweather, DeLisa
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- 2024
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39. Demographic, hemodynamic characteristics, and therapeutic trends of pulmonary hypertension patients: The Pulmonary Hypertension Mexican registry (REMEHIP).
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Jerjes‐Sánchez, Carlos, Ramírez‐Rivera, Alicia, Hernandez, Nayeli Zayas, Cueto Robledo, Guillermo, García‐Aguilar, Humberto, Gutiérrez‐Fajardo, Pedro, Seoane García de León, Mario, Moreno Hoyos‐Abril, Francisco, Ernesto Beltrán Gámez, Miguel, Elizalde, Jose, Fccp, Tomás Pulido, and Sandoval, Julio
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HYPERTENSION ,PULMONARY arterial hypertension ,CHILD patients ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,HEMODYNAMICS - Abstract
Data on demographic characteristics and therapeutic approaches in Latin American pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) patients are scarce. Pulmonary Hypertension Mexican registry (REMEHIP) is a multicenter Mexican registry of adult and pediatric patients, including prevalent and incident cases. Objective: assess clinical characteristics, treatment trends, and in‐hospital outcomes. Inclusion: age >2 years, diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension (PH) (groups 1 and 4), right heart catheterization with mPAP ≥25 mmHg, PWP ≤ 15 mmHg, and PVR > 3 Wood unit (WU). We included 875 PH patients, 619 adults, 133 pediatric idiopathic PAH (IPAH), and 123 chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) patients. We enrolled 48.4% of the incident and 51.6% of the prevalent adult and pediatric patients. PAH adults: age 43 ± 15, females 81.9%, functional class (FC) (I/II) 66.5%, 6‐min walk distance (6MWD) 378 ± 112 m, mPAP 57.3 ± 19.0 mmHg, confidence interval (CI) 3.3 ± 1.5 L/min/m2, PVR 12.0 ± 8.1 WU. PAH pediatrics: age 9 ± 5, females 51.1%, FC (I/II) 85.5%, 6MWD 376 ± 103 m, mPAP 49.7 ± 13.4 mmHg, CI 2.6 ± 0.9 L/min/m2, PVR 16.4 ± 13.5 WU. CTEPH: age 44 ± 17, females 56.1%, FC (I/II) 65.5%, 6MWD 369 ± 126 m, mPAP 49.7 ± 13.4 mmHg, CI 2.6 ± 0.9 L/min/m2, PVR 10.5 + 6.5 WU. When we analyzed the IPAH group separately, it sustained a high functional class I/II incidence. REMEHIP shows better functional class in young females with severe PAH than in American and European patients. Also, PAH pediatric patients had a better functional class than other registries. However, our registry also shows that our population's access to specific pharmacologic treatments is still far from optimal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Identifying consistent echocardiographic thresholds for risk stratification in pulmonary arterial hypertension.
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Celestin, Bettia E., Bagherzadeh, Shadi P., Ichimura, Kenzo, Santana, Everton J., Sanchez, Pablo Amador, Tobore, Tobore, Hemnes, Anna R., Noordegraaf, Anton Vonk, Salerno, Michael, Zamanian, Roham T., Sweatt, Andrew J., and Haddad, Francois
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PULMONARY arterial hypertension ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,HEART size ,LUNG transplantation ,VASCULAR resistance - Abstract
Several indices of right heart remodeling and function have been associated with survival in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Outcome analysis and physiological relationships between variables may help develop a consistent grading system. Patients with Group 1 PAH followed at Stanford Hospital who underwent right heart catheterization and echocardiography within 2 weeks were considered for inclusion. Echocardiographic variables included tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), right ventricular (RV) fractional area change (RVFAC), free wall strain (RVFWS), RV dimensions, and right atrial volumes. The main outcome consisted of death or lung transplantation at 5 years. Mathematical relationships between variables were determined using weighted linear regression and severity thresholds for were calibrated to a 20% 1‐year mortality risk. PAH patients (n = 223) had mean (SD) age of 48.1 (14.1) years, most were female (78%), with a mean pulmonary arterial pressure of 51.6 (13.8) mmHg and pulmonary vascular resistance index of 22.5(6.3) WU/m2. Measures of right heart size and function were strongly related to each other particularly RVFWS and RVFAC (R2 = 0.82, p < 0.001), whereas the relationship between TAPSE and RVFWS was weaker (R2 = 0.28, p < 0.001). Death or lung transplantation at 5 years occurred in 78 patients (35%). Guided by outcome analysis, we ascertained a uniform set of parameter thresholds for grading the severity of right heart adaptation in PAH. Using these quantitative thresholds, we, then, validated the recently reported REVEAL‐echo score (AUC 0.68, p < 0.001). This study proposes a consistent echocardiographic grading system for right heart adaptation in PAH guided by outcome analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. Normal age- and sex-based values of right ventricular free wall and four-chamber longitudinal strain by speckle-tracking echocardiography: from the Copenhagen City heart study.
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Espersen, Caroline, Skaarup, Kristoffer Grundtvig, Lassen, Mats Christian Højbjerg, Johansen, Niklas Dyrby, Hauser, Raphael, Olsen, Flemming Javier, Jensen, Gorm Boje, Schnohr, Peter, Møgelvang, Rasmus, and Biering-Sørensen, Tor
- Abstract
Aim: To promote the implementation of right ventricular (RV) longitudinal strain in clinical practice, we sought to propose normal values for RV free wall (RVFWLS) and four-chamber longitudinal strain (RV4CLS) and investigate the association with clinical and echocardiographic parameters in participants from the general population. Methods and Results: Participants from the 5th Copenhagen City Heart Study (2011–2015)—a prospective cohort study—with available RV longitudinal strain measurements were included. RVFWLS and RV4CLS were assessed using two-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography. In total, 2951 participants were included. Amongst 1297 participants without cardiovascular disease or risk factors (median age 44, 63% female), mean values of RVFWLS and RV4CLS were − 26.7% ± 5.2 (95% prediction interval (PI) − 36.9, − 16.5) and − 21.7% ± 3.4 (95%PI − 28.4, − 15.0), respectively. Women had significantly higher absolute values of RVFWLS and RV4CLS than men (mean − 27.5 ± 5.5 vs. − 25.4 ± 4.5, p < 0.001 and − 22.3 ± 3.5 vs. − 20.6 ± 3.0, p < 0.001, respectively). Absolute values of RVFWLS but not RV4CLS decreased significantly with increasing age in unadjusted linear regression. Tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion, RV s' and left ventricular global longitudinal strain were the most influential parameters associated with both RVFWLS and RV4CLS in multiple linear regression. Participants with cardiovascular disease (n = 1531) had a higher proportion of abnormal values of RVFWLS and RV4CLS compared to the healthy population (8% vs. 4%, p < 0.001 and 8% vs. 3%, p < 0.001, respectively). Conclusion: This study proposed normal age- and sex-based values of RVFWLS and RV4CLS in a healthy population sample and showed significant sex differences in both measurements across ages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. Left ventricular remodeling in twin pregnancy, noninvasively assessed using hemodynamic forces and pressure-volume relation analysis: prospective, cohort study.
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Pellegrino, Alessio, Toncelli, Loira, Pasquini, Lucia, Masini, Giulia, Mecacci, Federico, Pedrizzetti, Gianni, and Modesti, Pietro Amedeo
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MULTIPLE pregnancy ,GLOBAL longitudinal strain ,VENTRICULAR remodeling ,HEMODYNAMICS ,SPECKLE tracking echocardiography - Abstract
This study was designed to prospectively investigate the pattern of intraventricular hemodynamic forces (HDFs) associated with left ventricular (LV) function and remodeling in women with uncomplicated twin pregnancy. Transthoracic echocardiography was performed on 35 women (aged 35.9 ± 4.7-yr old) during gestation (T1, <14 wk; T2, 14-27 wk; T3, >28 wk) and 6-7 mo after delivery (T0). LV HDFs were computed from echocardiography long-axis data sets using a novel technique based on endocardial boundary tracking, both in apex-base (A-B) and latero-septal (L-S) directions. HDF distribution was evaluated by L-S over A-B HDF ratio (L-S:A-B HDF ratio). At T1, L-S:A-B HDF ratio was higher than in T0 (P < 0.05) indicating HDF misalignment. At T2, a slight impairment of cardiac function was then recorded with a reduction of global longitudinal strain (GLS) and left ventricular end-systolic elastance (E
es ) at pressure-volume relationship analysis versus T1 (both P < 0.05). Finally, at T3, when HDF misalignment and LV contractility reduction (GLS and Ees ) were all restored, a rightward shift of the end-diastolic pressure-volume relationship (EDPVR) with an increase of ventricular capacitance was documented. In twin pregnancy, HDF misalignment in the first trimester precedes the slight temporary decrease in left ventricular systolic function in the second trimester; at the third trimester, a rightward shift of the EDPVR was associated with a realignment of HDF and normalization of ventricular contractility indexes. These coordinated changes that occur in the maternal heart during twin pregnancy suggest the role of HDFs in cardiac remodeling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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43. Three-dimensional echocardiographic evaluation of longitudinal and non-longitudinal components of right ventricular contraction: results from the World Alliance of Societies of Echocardiography study.
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Cotella, Juan I, Kovacs, Attila, Addetia, Karima, Fabian, Alexandra, Asch, Federico M, Lang, Roberto M, and Investigators, WASE
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ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,REFERENCE values ,COMPUTER software ,VENTRICULAR ejection fraction ,RIGHT heart ventricle ,AGE distribution ,STRUCTURAL models ,RACE ,ASIAN Americans ,WORLD health ,SEX distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEART physiology ,INTERNATIONAL agencies ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Aims Right ventricular (RV) functional assessment is mainly limited to its longitudinal contraction. Dedicated three-dimensional echocardiography (3DE) software enabled the separate assessment of the non-longitudinal components of RV ejection fraction (EF). The aims of this study were (i) to establish normal values for RV 3D-derived longitudinal, radial, and anteroposterior EF (LEF, REF, and AEF, respectively) and their relative contributions to global RVEF, (ii) to calculate 3D RV strain normal values, and (iii) to determine sex-, age-, and race-related differences in these parameters in a large group of normal subjects (WASE study). Methods and results 3DE RV wide-angle datasets from 1043 prospectively enrolled healthy adult subjects were analysed to generate a 3D mesh model of the RV cavity (TomTec). Dedicated software (ReVISION) was used to analyse RV motion along the three main anatomical planes. The EF values corresponding to each plane were identified as LEF, REF, and AEF. Relative contributions were determined by dividing each EF component by the global RVEF. RV strain analysis included longitudinal, circumferential, and global area strains (GLS, GCS, and GAS, respectively). Results were categorized by sex, age (18–40, 41–65, and >65 years), and race. Absolute REF, AEF, LEF, and global RVEF were higher in women than in men (P < 0.001). With aging, both sexes exhibited a decline in all components of longitudinal shortening (P < 0.001), which was partially compensated in elderly women by an increase in radial contraction. Black subjects showed lower RVEF and GAS values compared with white and Asian subjects of the same sex (P < 0.001), and black men showed significantly higher RV radial but lower longitudinal contributions to global RVEF compared with Asian and white men. Conclusion 3DE evaluation of the non-longitudinal components of RV contraction provides additional information regarding RV physiology, including sex-, age-, and race-related differences in RV contraction patterns that may prove useful in disease states involving the right ventricle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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44. Right Ventricular Function in Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy: Potential Value of Strain Echocardiography.
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Bjerregaard, Caroline Løkke, Biering-Sørensen, Tor, Skaarup, Kristoffer Grundtvig, Sengeløv, Morten, Lassen, Mats Christian Højbjerg, Johansen, Niklas Dyrby, and Olsen, Flemming Javier
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ARRHYTHMOGENIC right ventricular dysplasia ,RIGHT ventricular dysfunction ,VENTRICULAR arrhythmia ,ARRHYTHMIA ,CARDIAC arrest - Abstract
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy is an inherited cardiomyopathy, characterized by abnormal cell adhesions, disrupted intercellular signaling, and fibrofatty replacement of the myocardium. These changes serve as a substrate for ventricular arrhythmias, placing patients at risk of sudden cardiac death, even in the early stages of the disease. Current echocardiographic criteria for diagnosing arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy lack sensitivity, but novel markers of cardiac deformation are not subject to the same technical limitations as current guideline-recommended measures. Measuring cardiac deformation using speckle tracking allows for meticulous quantification of global systolic function, regional function, and dyssynchronous contraction. Consequently, speckle tracking to quantify myocardial strain could potentially be useful in the diagnostic process for the determination of disease progression and to assist risk stratification for ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. This narrative review provides an overview of the potential use of different myocardial right ventricular strain measures for characterizing right ventricular dysfunction in arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy and its utility in assessing the risk of ventricular arrhythmias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Enhancing Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy Detection and Risk Stratification: Insights from Advanced Echocardiographic Techniques.
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Olivetti, Natália, Sacilotto, Luciana, Moleta, Danilo Bora, França, Lucas Arraes de, Capeline, Lorena Squassante, Wulkan, Fanny, Wu, Tan Chen, Pessente, Gabriele D'Arezzo, Carvalho, Mariana Lombardi Peres de, Hachul, Denise Tessariol, Pereira, Alexandre da Costa, Krieger, José E., Scanavacca, Mauricio Ibrahim, Vieira, Marcelo Luiz Campos, and Darrieux, Francisco
- Subjects
ARRHYTHMOGENIC right ventricular dysplasia ,RIGHT ventricular hypertrophy ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,HEART assist devices ,SPECKLE tracking echocardiography ,ECHO-planar imaging ,HEART transplantation - Abstract
Introduction: The echocardiographic diagnosis criteria for arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) are highly specific but sensitivity is low, especially in the early stages of the disease. The role of echocardiographic strain in ARVC has not been fully elucidated, although prior studies suggest that it can improve the detection of subtle functional abnormalities. The purposes of the study were to determine whether these advanced measures of right ventricular (RV) dysfunction on echocardiogram, including RV strain, increase diagnostic value for ARVC disease detection and to evaluate the association of echocardiographic parameters with arrhythmic outcomes. Methods: The study included 28 patients from the Heart Institute of São Paulo ARVC cohort with a definite diagnosis of ARVC established according to the 2010 Task Force Criteria. All patients were submitted to ECHO's advanced techniques including RV strain, and the parameters were compared to prior conventional visual ECHO and CMR. Results: In total, 28 patients were enrolled in order to perform ECHO's advanced techniques. A total of 2/28 (7%) patients died due to a cardiovascular cause, 2/28 (7%) underwent heart transplantation, and 14/28 (50%) patients developed sustained ventricular arrhythmic events. Among ECHO's parameters, RV dilatation, measured by RVDd (p = 0.018) and RVOT PSAX (p = 0.044), was significantly associated with arrhythmic outcomes. RV free wall longitudinal strain < 14.35% in absolute value was associated with arrhythmic outcomes (p = 0.033). Conclusion: Our data suggest that ECHO's advanced techniques improve ARVC detection and that abnormal RV strain can be associated with arrhythmic risk stratification. Further studies are necessary to better demonstrate these findings and contribute to risk stratification in ARVC, in addition to other well-known risk markers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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46. Intraoperative Transesophageal Echocardiographic Assessment of Aortic Valve Repair in a Child – What to Look for?
- Author
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Munaf, Mamatha, Babu, Saravana, Sukesan, Subin, and Gadhinglajkar, Shrinivas V.
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AORTIC valve ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,SURGICAL indications ,AORTIC valve insufficiency - Abstract
Aortic valve (AV) repair is the desired surgical treatment option for young patients with aortic regurgitation (AR). It is considered as a class I indication for the surgical treatment of severeAR. The success of an AV repair depends on the detailed intraoperative transesophageal echocardiographic (TEE) examination which should fulfil the information required by the surgeon. The objective of this echo round is to describe the role of intraoperative TEE in systematic evaluation of the AV, before and after repair. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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47. A pooled analysis of nine studies in one institution to assess effects of whole heart irradiation in rat models.
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Landes, Reid D., Li, Chenghui, Sridharan, Vijayalakshmi, Bergom, Carmen, and Boerma, Marjan
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IRRADIATION ,HEART beat ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,HEART ,MAST cells - Abstract
Over the years, animal models of local heart irradiation have provided insight into mechanisms of and treatments for radiation-induced heart disease in human populations. However, it is not completely clear which manifestations of radiation injury are most commonly seen after whole heart irradiation, and whether certain biological factors impact experimental results. Combining 9 homogeneous studies in rat models of whole heart irradiation from one laboratory, we sought to identify experimental and/or biological factors that impact heart outcomes. We evaluated the usefulness of including (1) heart rate and (2) bodyweight as covariates when analyzing biological parameters, and (3) we determined which echocardiography, histological, and immunohistochemistry parameters are most susceptible to radiation effects. Finally, (4) as an educational example, we illustrate a hypothetical sample size calculation for a study design commonly used in evaluating radiation modifiers, using the pooled estimates from the 9 rat studies only for context. The results may assist investigators in the design and analyses of pre-clinical studies of whole heart irradiation. We made use of data from 9 rat studies from our labs, 8 published elsewhere in 2008–2017, and one unpublished study. Echocardiography, histological, and immunohistochemical parameters were collected from these studies. Using mixed effects analysis of covariance models, we estimated slopes for heart rate and bodyweight and estimated the radiation effect on each of the parameters. Bodyweight was related to most echocardiography parameters, and heart rate had an effect on echocardiography parameters related to the diameter of the left ventricle. For some parameters, there was evidence that heart rate and bodyweight relationships with the parameter depended on whether the rats were irradiated. Radiation effects were found in systolic measures of echocardiography parameters related to the diameter of the left ventricle, with ejection fraction and fractional shortening, with atrial wall thickness, and with histological measures of capillary density, collagen deposition, and mast cells infiltration in the heart. Accounting for bodyweight, as well as heart rate, in analyses of echocardiography parameters should reduce variability in estimated radiation effects. Several echocardiography and histological parameters were particularly susceptible to whole heart irradiation, showing robust effects compared to sham-irradiation. Lastly, we provide an example approach for a sample size calculation that will contribute to a rigorous study design and reproducibility in experiments studying radiation modifiers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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48. Added value of 3D echocardiography in the diagnosis and prognostication of patients with right ventricular dysfunction.
- Author
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Randazzo, Michael, Maffessanti, Francesco, Kotta, Alekhya, Grapsa, Julia, Lang, Roberto M., and Addetia, Karima
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- 2023
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49. Normal values and distribution of ventricular global longitudinal strain in 513 healthy fetuses measured by two-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography: a multi-institutional cohort study.
- Author
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Akazawa Y, Yasukochi S, Takei K, Takigiku K, Inamura N, Takagi K, Pooh RK, Yoshimatsu J, Kamei Y, Tamaru S, Yamamoto Y, Miyake T, and Hata T
- Abstract
This study aimed to determine the normal reference values and distribution of global longitudinal strain (GLS) in the right and left ventricles of healthy Japanese fetuses during pregnancy. This multi-institutional cohort study included healthy Japanese fetuses during normal pregnancies without maternal or fetal complications between 18 and 40 weeks of gestation. Two-dimensional fetal echocardiographic images of the four-chamber view with a high frame rate were acquired and stored as DICOM clips. Data were collected and analyzed in a central laboratory to measure the left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) GLS using two-dimensional speckle tracking. In total, 513 fetuses were enrolled. The mean LV-GLS and RV-GLS were - 24.3% ± 3.5% and - 23.5% ± 3.7%, respectively. The magnitude of the GLS, with normal limits in both ventricles, decreased with advancing gestation. LV values were r = 0.34 (95% confidence interval, 0.27-0.42) and p < 0.0001; RV values were r = 0.33 (95% confidence interval, 0.25-0.41) and p < 0.0001. The normal values of healthy Japanese fetuses in healthy pregnancies is the first to be established by the large-scale, multi-institutional cohort study as LV-GLS of 24.3% ± 3.5% and RV-GLS of - 23.5% ± 3.7%, respectively. This can serve as a basic reference for assessing the cardiac functions in Japanese fetuses with various heart diseases., (© 2024. Springer Nature Japan KK, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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50. New-onset aortic dilatation in the population: a quarter-century follow-up.
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Cuspidi, Cesare, Facchetti, Rita, Bombelli, Michele, Seravalle, Gino, Grassi, Guido, and Mancia, Giuseppe
- Abstract
Background: Aortic size tends to increase with aging but the extent of this dynamic process has not been evaluated in long-term longitudinal population-based studies. We investigated the incidence of new-onset aortic root (AR) dilatation and its principal correlates among middle-aged adults over a 25-year time period. Methods: A total of 471 participants with measurable echocardiographic parameters at baseline and after a 25-year follow-up were included in the analysis. Sex-specific upper limits of normality for absolute AR diameter, AR diameter indexed to body surface area (BSA) and to height were derived from healthy normotensive PAMELA participants. Results: New AR dilatation occurred in 7.4% (AR/BSA), 9.1% (AR/height) and 14.6% (absolute AR), respectively. According to the AR/height index, the risk of new dilation was similar in men and women. As for echocardiographic parameters, baseline AR diameter emerged as a key predictor of AR dilation, regardless of the diagnostic criteria and the 10-year change in LVMI was positively associated to new AR/height dilatation. No significant relationship was observed between baseline office and ambulatory systolic/diastolic blood pressure or their changes over time with incident AR dilatation. Baseline and the 25-year change in 24-h pulse pressure were negatively related to new AR dilatation. Conclusions: The incidence of AR dilatation from mid to late adulthood occurs in a small but clinically relevant fraction of participants and is unaffected by both office and out-office BP. It is significant related to baseline AR diameter and to the 25-year change in LVMI. Our data suggest that echocardiography performed in middle-aged individuals of both sexes may identify those at increased risk of future AR dilatation; moreover, preventing LVH may reduce the risk of progressive AR enlargement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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