3 resultados para CRT
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
La terapia di resincronizzazione cardiaca (TRC) è un presidio non farmacologico che riduce la mortalità e la morbosità nei pazienti con scompenso refrattario alla terapia medica. La maggior parte dei dati riguardanti gli effetti della TRC coinvolgono i pazienti con le indicazioni consolidate seguenti: classe NYHA III-IV, ritardo della conduzione ventricolare (QRS>opp= 20 msec), disfunzione sistolica ventricolare sinistra (frazione di eiezione ventricolare sinistra >opp= 35%) e ritmo sinusale (RS). Mentre è noto che la fibrillazione atriale permanente (FA) sia presente in una porzione consistente dei pazienti con scompenso cardiaco, vi sono pochi dati riguardanti la sopravvivenza e gli effetti a lungo-termine della TRC in pazienti con scompenso cardiaco e fibrillazione atriale (FA); la maggior parte degli studi sono osservazionali ed hanno dimostrato che la TRC potrebbe conferire dei benefici a corto e medio termine anche in pazienti con FA permanente. Solo recentemente un ampio studio osservazionale ha descritto che, a lungo-termine, la TRC migliora significativamente la capacità funzionale, la frazione di eiezione e induce il rimodellamento inverso del ventricolo sinistro solamente in quei pazienti con FA dove la TRC viene combinata con l’ablazione del nodo atrio-ventricolare (NAV). La strategia ablativa del NAV infatti conferendo una stimolazione completa e costante, permette di eliminare gli effetti del ritmo spontaneo di FA (ritmo irregolare e tendenzialmente tachicardico) cheinterferisce in maniera importante con la stimolazione biventricolare in particolare durante gli sforzi fisici. Sulla base di queste premesse il presente studio si propone di valutare gli effetti a lungo-termine della TRC su pazienti con scompenso cardiaco e FA permanente focalizzando su due aspetti principali: 1) confrontando la sopravvivenza di pazienti con FA permanente rispetto ai pazienti in RS; 2) confrontando la sopravvivenza di pazienti in FA suddivisi secondo la modalità di controllo della frequenza con somministrazione di farmaci antiaritmici (gruppo FA-farm) oppure mediante controllo ablazione del NAV (gruppo FA-abl). Metodi e risultati: Sono presentati i dati di 1303 pazienti sottoposti consecutivamente ad impianto di dispositivo per la TRC e seguiti per un periodo mediano di 24 mesi. Diciotto pazienti sono stati persi durante il follow-up per cui la popolazione dello studio è rappresentata da una popolazione totale di 1295 pazienti di cui 1042 in RS e 243 (19%) in FA permanente. Nei pazienti con FA il controllo della frequenza cardiaca è stato effettuato mediante la somministrazione di farmaci anti-aritmici (gruppo FA-farm: 125 pazienti) oppure mediante ablazione del NAV (FA-abl: 118 pazienti). Rispetto ai pazienti in RS, i pazienti in FA permanente erano significativamente più vecchi, più spesso presentavano eziologia nonischemica, avevano una frazione di eiezione più elevata al preimpianto, una durata del QRS minore e erano più raramente trattati con un defibrillatore. Lungo un follow-up mediano di 24 mesi, 170/1042 pazienti in RS e 39/243 in FA sono deceduti (l’incidenza di mortalità a 1 anno era di 8,4% e 8,9%, rispettivamente). I rapporti di rischio derivanti dall’analisi multivariata con il 95% dell’intervallo di confidenza (HR, 95% CI) erano simili sia per la morte per tutte le cause che per la morte cardiaca (0.9 [0.57-1.42], p=0.64 e 1.00 [0.60-1.66] p=0.99, rispettivamente). Fra i pazienti con FA, il gruppo FA-abl presentava una durata media del QRS minore ed era meno frequentemente trattato con il defibrillatore impiantabile rispetto al gruppo FA-farm. Soli 11/118 pazienti del FA-abl sono deceduti rispetto a 28/125 nel gruppo FA-farm (mortalità cumulativa a 1 anno di 9,3% e 15,2% rispettivamente, p<0.001), con HR, 95% CI per FA-abl vs FA-farm di 0.15 [0.05-0.43],,p<0.001 per la mortalità per tutte le cause, di 0.18 [0.06-0.57], p=0.004 per la mortalità cardiaca, e di 0.09 [0.02-0.42], p<0.002 per la mortalità da scompenso cardiaco. Conclusioni: I pazienti con scompenso cardiaco e FA permanente trattati con la TRC presentano una simile sopravvivenza a lungo-termine di pazienti in RS. Nei pazienti in FA l’ablazione del NAV in aggiunta alla TRC migliora significativamente la sopravvivenza rispetto alla sola TRC; questo effetto è ottenuto primariamente attraverso una riduzione della morte per scompenso cardiaco.
Resumo:
This work is structured as follows: In Section 1 we discuss the clinical problem of heart failure. In particular, we present the phenomenon known as ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony: its impact on cardiac function, the therapy for its treatment and the methods for its quantification. Specifically, we describe the conductance catheter and its use for the measurement of dyssynchrony. At the end of the Section 1, we propose a new set of indexes to quantify the dyssynchrony that are studied and validated thereafter. In Section 2 we describe the studies carried out in this work: we report the experimental protocols, we present and discuss the results obtained. Finally, we report the overall conclusions drawn from this work and we try to envisage future works and possible clinical applications of our results. Ancillary studies that were carried out during this work mainly to investigate several aspects of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) are mentioned in Appendix. -------- Ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony plays a regulating role already in normal physiology but is especially important in pathological conditions, such as hypertrophy, ischemia, infarction, or heart failure (Chapter 1,2.). Several prospective randomized controlled trials supported the clinical efficacy and safety of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in patients with moderate or severe heart failure and ventricular dyssynchrony. CRT resynchronizes ventricular contraction by simultaneous pacing of both left and right ventricle (biventricular pacing) (Chapter 1.). Currently, the conductance catheter method has been used extensively to assess global systolic and diastolic ventricular function and, more recently, the ability of this instrument to pick-up multiple segmental volume signals has been used to quantify mechanical ventricular dyssynchrony. Specifically, novel indexes based on volume signals acquired with the conductance catheter were introduced to quantify dyssynchrony (Chapter 3,4.). Present work was aimed to describe the characteristics of the conductancevolume signals, to investigate the performance of the indexes of ventricular dyssynchrony described in literature and to introduce and validate improved dyssynchrony indexes. Morevoer, using the conductance catheter method and the new indexes, the clinical problem of the ventricular pacing site optimization was addressed and the measurement protocol to adopt for hemodynamic tests on cardiac pacing was investigated. In accordance to the aims of the work, in addition to the classical time-domain parameters, a new set of indexes has been extracted, based on coherent averaging procedure and on spectral and cross-spectral analysis (Chapter 4.). Our analyses were carried out on patients with indications for electrophysiologic study or device implantation (Chapter 5.). For the first time, besides patients with heart failure, indexes of mechanical dyssynchrony based on conductance catheter were extracted and studied in a population of patients with preserved ventricular function, providing information on the normal range of such a kind of values. By performing a frequency domain analysis and by applying an optimized coherent averaging procedure (Chapter 6.a.), we were able to describe some characteristics of the conductance-volume signals (Chapter 6.b.). We unmasked the presence of considerable beat-to-beat variations in dyssynchrony that seemed more frequent in patients with ventricular dysfunction and to play a role in discriminating patients. These non-recurrent mechanical ventricular non-uniformities are probably the expression of the substantial beat-to-beat hemodynamic variations, often associated with heart failure and due to cardiopulmonary interaction and conduction disturbances. We investigated how the coherent averaging procedure may affect or refine the conductance based indexes; in addition, we proposed and tested a new set of indexes which quantify the non-periodic components of the volume signals. Using the new set of indexes we studied the acute effects of the CRT and the right ventricular pacing, in patients with heart failure and patients with preserved ventricular function. In the overall population we observed a correlation between the hemodynamic changes induced by the pacing and the indexes of dyssynchrony, and this may have practical implications for hemodynamic-guided device implantation. The optimal ventricular pacing site for patients with conventional indications for pacing remains controversial. The majority of them do not meet current clinical indications for CRT pacing. Thus, we carried out an analysis to compare the impact of several ventricular pacing sites on global and regional ventricular function and dyssynchrony (Chapter 6.c.). We observed that right ventricular pacing worsens cardiac function in patients with and without ventricular dysfunction unless the pacing site is optimized. CRT preserves left ventricular function in patients with normal ejection fraction and improves function in patients with poor ejection fraction despite no clinical indication for CRT. Moreover, the analysis of the results obtained using new indexes of regional dyssynchrony, suggests that pacing site may influence overall global ventricular function depending on its relative effects on regional function and synchrony. Another clinical problem that has been investigated in this work is the optimal right ventricular lead location for CRT (Chapter 6.d.). Similarly to the previous analysis, using novel parameters describing local synchrony and efficiency, we tested the hypothesis and we demonstrated that biventricular pacing with alternative right ventricular pacing sites produces acute improvement of ventricular systolic function and improves mechanical synchrony when compared to standard right ventricular pacing. Although no specific right ventricular location was shown to be superior during CRT, the right ventricular pacing site that produced the optimal acute hemodynamic response varied between patients. Acute hemodynamic effects of cardiac pacing are conventionally evaluated after stabilization episodes. The applied duration of stabilization periods in most cardiac pacing studies varied considerably. With an ad hoc protocol (Chapter 6.e.) and indexes of mechanical dyssynchrony derived by conductance catheter we demonstrated that the usage of stabilization periods during evaluation of cardiac pacing may mask early changes in systolic and diastolic intra-ventricular dyssynchrony. In fact, at the onset of ventricular pacing, the main dyssynchrony and ventricular performance changes occur within a 10s time span, initiated by the changes in ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony induced by aberrant conduction and followed by a partial or even complete recovery. It was already demonstrated in normal animals that ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony may act as a physiologic modulator of cardiac performance together with heart rate, contractile state, preload and afterload. The present observation, which shows the compensatory mechanism of mechanical dyssynchrony, suggests that ventricular dyssynchrony may be regarded as an intrinsic cardiac property, with baseline dyssynchrony at increased level in heart failure patients. To make available an independent system for cardiac output estimation, in order to confirm the results obtained with conductance volume method, we developed and validated a novel technique to apply the Modelflow method (a method that derives an aortic flow waveform from arterial pressure by simulation of a non-linear three-element aortic input impedance model, Wesseling et al. 1993) to the left ventricular pressure signal, instead of the arterial pressure used in the classical approach (Chapter 7.). The results confirmed that in patients without valve abnormalities, undergoing conductance catheter evaluations, the continuous monitoring of cardiac output using the intra-ventricular pressure signal is reliable. Thus, cardiac output can be monitored quantitatively and continuously with a simple and low-cost method. During this work, additional studies were carried out to investigate several areas of uncertainty of CRT. The results of these studies are briefly presented in Appendix: the long-term survival in patients treated with CRT in clinical practice, the effects of CRT in patients with mild symptoms of heart failure and in very old patients, the limited thoracotomy as a second choice alternative to transvenous implant for CRT delivery, the evolution and prognostic significance of diastolic filling pattern in CRT, the selection of candidates to CRT with echocardiographic criteria and the prediction of response to the therapy.
Resumo:
The aim of this study was to examine whether a real high speed-short term competition influences clinicopathological data focusing on muscle enzymes, iron profile and Acute Phase Proteins. 30 Thoroughbred racing horses (15 geldings and 15 females) aged between 4-12 years (mean 7 years), were used for the study. All the animals performed a high speed-short term competition for a total distance of 154 m in about 12 seconds, repeated 8 times, within approximately one hour (Niballo Horse Race). Blood samples were obtained 24 hours before and within 30 minutes after the end of the races. On all samples were performed a complete blood count (CBC), biochemical and haemostatic profiles. The post-race concentrations for the single parameter were corrected using an estimation of the plasma volume contraction according to the individual Alb concentration. Data were analysed with descriptive statistics and the percentage of variation from the baseline values were recorded. Pre- and post-race results were compared with non-parametric statistics (Mann Whitney U test). A difference was considered significant at p<0.05. A significant plasma volume contraction after the race was detected (Hct, Alb; p<0.01). Other relevant findings were increased concentrations of muscular enzymes (CK, LDH; p<0.01), Crt (p<0.01), significant increased uric acid (p<0.01), a significant decrease of haptoglobin (p<0.01) associated to an increase of ferritin concentrations (p<0.01), significant decrease of fibrinogen (p<0.05) accompanied by a non-significant increase of D-Dimers concentrations (p=0.08). This competition produced relevant abnormalities on clinical pathology in galloping horses. This study confirms a significant muscular damage, oxidative stress, intravascular haemolysis and subclinical hemostatic alterations. Further studies are needed to better understand the pathogenesis, the medical relevance and the impact on performance of these alterations in equine sport medicine.