980 resultados para Sudden death syndrome
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The long QT syndrome may be acquired or genetically determined. The syndrome is characterized by a prolonged QT interval and is associated with an increased risk of cardiac arrhythmia such as a torsade de pointe and death. Electrolytes disorders such as hypomagnesemia and hypokaliemia and several drugs may increase the risk to develop a long QT syndrome. The epidemiology, the aetiology, the diagnostic approach as well as the management options of an acquired QT prolongation is discussed and reviewed herein.
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The Simpson-Golabi-Behmel syndrome type 1 (SGBS1, OMIM #312870) is an X-linked overgrowth condition comprising abnormal facial appearance, supernumerary nipples, congenital heart defects, polydactyly, fingernail hypoplasia, increased risk of neonatal death and of neoplasia. It is caused by mutation/deletion of the GPC3 gene. We describe a macrosomic 27-week preterm newborn with SGBS1 who presents a novel GPC3 mutation and emphasize the phenotypic aspects which allow a correct diagnosis neonatally in particular the rib malformations, hypoplasia of index finger and of the same fingernail, and 2nd-3rd finger syndactyly.
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The danger of neck compression without restriction of the arterial flow remains unresolved in forensic medicine. There is an ongoing debate concerning life endangerment due to the cardioinhibitory reflex. The aim of this study was to determine what forensic medical experts believe and how they deal with this reflex. An anonymous electronic questionnaire was sent to 1429 forensic medical experts all over the world. We asked them about their opinion on the cardioinhibitory reflex, its role in causing death, and what their diagnostic criteria were.A total of 182 questionnaires were returned. The experts who answered were from 32 different countries. Our survey showed that 80.2% of experts believe that the cardioinhibitory reflex can theoretically cause death. In the practical application opinions diverge though. Apparently, the practical application mainly depends on the habit of the individual expert. We observed no consensus on the diagnostic criteria to be used. Given the potentially frequent use of the concept of the cardioinhibitory reflex in forensic practice and its judicial impact it would be important to reach a consensus.
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The purpose of this study was to assess the outcomes of 118 patients with eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA) enrolled in 2 prospective, randomized, open-label clinical trials (1994-2005), with or without Five-Factor Score (FFS)-defined poor-prognosis factors, focusing on survival, disease-free survival, relapses, clinical and laboratory findings, therapeutic responses, and factors predictive of relapse. Forty-four patients with FFS ≥ 1 were assigned to receive 6 or 12 cyclophosphamide pulses plus corticosteroids and the seventy-four with FFS = 0 received corticosteroids alone, with immunosuppressant adjunction when corticosteroids failed. Patients were followed (2005-2011) under routine clinical care in an extended study and data were recorded prospectively. Mean ± SD follow-up was 81.3 ± 39.6 months. Among the 118 patients studied, 29% achieved long-term remission and 10% died. Among the 115 patients achieving a first remission, 41% experienced ≥1 relapses, 26.1 ± 26.8 months after treatment onset, with 57% of relapses occurring when corticosteroid-tapering reached <10 mg/day. Treatment achieved new remissions in >90%, but relapses recurred in 38%. Overall survival was good, reaching 90% at 7 years, regardless of baseline severity. Age ≥65 years was the only factor associated with a higher risk of death during follow-up. The risk of relapse was higher for patients with anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies and lower for those with >3000 eosinophils/mm(3). Sequelae remained frequent, usually chronic asthma and peripheral neuropathy. In conclusion, EGPA patients' survival rate is very good when treatment is stratified according to the baseline FFS. Relapses are frequent, especially in patients with anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies and baseline eosinophilia <3000/mm(3).
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Hypothenar hammer syndrome is an uncommonly encountered cause of Raynaud's phenomenon associated with professional or recreational activities. We report 6 consecutive cases seen in our angiology unit between 1988 and 1990. Clinical findings include a history of repeated microtraumatisms of the dominant hand, male sex, unilaterality, sudden onset, and severe Raynaud's phenomenon of the last three fingers. Investigations reveal an aneurysm or thrombosis of the distal cubital artery or of the superficial palmar branch, associated with occlusion of digital arteries. Avoidance of the aggravating conditions or resection and/or plasty of the affected vascular segment usually leads to disappearance of the symptoms.
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BACKGROUND: Secondary prevention programs for patients experiencing an acute coronary syndrome have been shown to be effective in the outpatient setting. The efficacy of in-hospital prevention interventions administered soon after acute cardiac events is unclear. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to determine whether in-hospital, patient-level interventions targeting multiple cardiovascular risk factors reduce all-cause mortality after an acute coronary syndrome. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using a prespecified search strategy, we included controlled clinical trials and before-after studies of secondary prevention interventions with at least a patient-level component (ie, education, counseling, or patient-specific order sets) initiated in hospital with outcomes of mortality, readmission, or reinfarction rates in acute coronary syndrome patients. We classified the interventions as patient-level interventions with or without associated healthcare provider-level interventions and/or system-level interventions. Twenty-six studies met our inclusion criteria. The summary estimate of 14 studies revealed a relative risk of all-cause mortality of 0.79 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.92; n=37,585) at 1 year. However, the apparent benefit depended on study design and level of intervention. The before-after studies suggested reduced mortality (relative risk [RR], 0.77; 95% CI, 0.66 to 0.90; n=3680 deaths), whereas the RR was 0.96 (95% CI, 0.64 to 1.44; n=99 deaths) among the controlled clinical trials. Only interventions including a provider- or system-level intervention suggested reduced mortality compared with patient-level-only interventions. CONCLUSIONS: The evidence for in-hospital, patient-level interventions for secondary prevention is promising but not definitive because only before-after studies suggest a significant reduction in mortality. Future research should formally test which components of interventions provide the greatest benefit.
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Abstract :The contraction of the heart or skeletal muscles is mainly due to the propagation, through excitable cells, of an electrical influx called action potential (AP). The AP results from the sequential opening of ion channels that generate inward or outward currents through the cell membrane. Among all the channels involved, the voltage-gated sodium channel is responsible for the rising phase of the action potential. Ten genes encode the different isoforms of these channels (from Nav1.1 to Nav1.9 and an atypical channel named NavX). Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 are the main skeletal muscle and cardiac sodium channels respectively. Their importance for muscle and heart function has been highlighted by the description of mutations in their encoding genes SCN4A and SCNSA. They lead respectively to neuromuscular disorders such as myotonia or paralysis (for Nav1.4), and to cardiac arrhythmias that can deteriorate into sudden cardiac death (for Nav1.5).The general aim of my PhD work has been to study diseases linked with channels dysfunction, also called channelopathies. In that purpose, I investigated the function and the regulation of the muscle and cardiac voltage-gated sodium channels. During the two first studies, I characterized the effects of two mutations affecting Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 function. I used the HEK293 model cells to express wild-type or mutant channels and then studied their biophysical properties with the patch-clamp technique, in whole cell configuration. We found that the SCN4A mutation produced complex alterations of the muscle sodium channel function, that could explain the myotonic phenotype described in patients carrying the mutation. In the second study, the index case was an heterozygous carrier of a SCNSA mutation that leads to a "loss of function" of the channel. The decreased sodium current measured with mutated Nay 1.5 channels, at physiological temperature, was a one of the factors that could explain the observed Brugada syndrome. The last project aimed at identifying a new potential protein interacting with the cardiac sodium channel. We found that the protein SAP97 binds the three last amino-acids of the C-terminus of Na,, 1.5. Our results also indicated that silencing the expression of SAP97 in HEK293 cells decreased the sodium current. Sodium channels lacking their three last residues also produced a reduced INa. These preliminary results suggest that SAP97 is implicated in the regulation of sodium channel. Whether this effect is direct or imply the action of an adaptor protein remains to be investigated. Moreover, our group has previously shown that Nav1.5 channels are localized to lateral membranes of cardiomyocytes by the dystrophin multiprotein complex (DMC). This suggests that sodium channels are distributed in, at least, two different pools: one targeted at lateral membranes by DMC and the other at intercalated discs by another protein such as SAP97.These studies reveal that cardiac and muscle diseases may result from ion channel mutations but also from regulatory proteins affecting their regulation.Résumé :La contraction des muscles et du coeur est principalement due à la propagation, à travers les cellules excitables, d'un stimulus électrique appelé potentiel d'action (PA). C'est l'ouverture séquentielle de plusieurs canaux ioniques transmembranaires, permettant l'entrée ou la sortie d'ions dans la cellule, qui est à l'origine de ce PA. Parmi tous les canaux ioniques impliqués dans ce processus, les canaux sodiques dépendant du voltage sont responsables de la première phase du potentiel d'action. Les différentes isoformes de ces canaux (de Nav1.1 à Nav1.9 et NavX) sont codées par dix gènes distincts. Nav1.4 et Nav1.5 sont les principaux variants exprimés respectivement dans le muscle et le coeur. Plusieurs mutations ont été décrites dans les gènes qui codent pour ces deux canaux: SCN4A (pour Nav1.4) et SCNSA (pour Nav1.5). Elles sont impliquées dans des pathologies neuromusculaires telles que des paralysies ou myotonies (SCN4A) ou des arythmies cardiaques pouvant conduire à la mort subite cardiaque (SCNSA).Mon travail de thèse a consisté à étudier les maladies liées aux dysfonctionnements de ces canaux, aussi appelées canalopathies. J'ai ainsi analysé la fonction et la régulation des canaux sodiques dépendant du voltage dans le muscle squelettique et le coeur. A travers les deux premières études, j'ai ainsi pu examiner les conséquences de deux mutations affectant respectivement les canaux Nav1.4 et Nav1.5. Les canaux sauvages ou mutants ont été exprimés dans des cellules HEK293 afin de caractériser leurs propriétés biophysiques par la technique du patch clamp en configuration cellule entière. Nous avons pu déterminer que la mutation trouvée dans le gène SCN4A engendrait des modifications importantes de la fonction du canal musculaire. Ces altérations fournissent des indications nous permettant d'expliquer certains aspects de la myotonie observée chez les membres de la famille étudiée. Le patient présenté dans la deuxième étude était hétérozygote pour la mutation identifiée dans le gène SCNSA. La perte de fonction des canaux Nav1.5 ainsi engendrée, a été observée lors d'analyses à températures physiologiques. Elle représente l'un des éléments pouvant potentiellement expliquer le syndrome de Brugada du patient. La dernière étude a consisté à identifier une nouvelle protéine impliquée dans la régulation du canal sodique cardiaque. Nos expériences ont démontré que les trois derniers acides aminés de la partie C-terminale de Nav1.5 pouvaient interagir avec la protéine SAP97. Lorsque que l'expression de la SAP97 est réduite dans les cellules HEK293, cela induit une baisse importante du courant sodique. De même, les canaux tronqués de leurs trois derniers acides aminés génèrent un flux ionique réduit. Ces résultats préliminaires suggèrent que SAP97 est peut-être impliquée dans la régulation du canal Na,,1.5. Des expériences complémentaires permettront de déterminer si ces deux protéines interagissent directement ou si une protéine adaptatrice est nécessaire. De plus, nous avons préalablement montré que les canaux Nav1.5 étaient localisés au niveau de la membrane latérale des cardiomyocytes par le complexe multiprotéique de la dystrophine (DMC). Ceci suggère que les canaux sodiques peuvent être distribués dans un minimum de deux pools, l'un ciblé aux membranes latérales pax le DMC et l'autre dirigé vers les disques intercalaires par des protéines telles que SAP97.L'ensemble de ces études met en évidence que certaines maladies musculaires et cardiaques peuvent être la conséquence directe de mutations de canaux ioniques, mais que l'action de protéines auxiliaires peut aussi affecter leur fonction.
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The cellular FLICE inhibitory protein (c-FLIP) is an endogenous inhibitor of the caspase-8 proapoptotic signaling pathway downstream of death receptors. Recent evidence indicates that the long form of c-FLIP (c-FLIP(L)) is required for proliferation and effector T-cell development. However, the role of c-FLIP(L) in triggering autoimmunity has not been carefully analyzed. We now report that c-FLIP(L) transgenic (Tg) mice develop splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, multiorgan infiltration, high titers of auto-antibodies, and proliferative glomerulonephritis with immune complex deposition in a strain-dependent manner. The development of autoimmunity requires CD4(+) T cells and may result from impaired thymic selection. At the molecular level, c-FLIP(L) overexpression inhibits the zeta chain-associated protein tyrosine kinase of 70 kDa (ZAP-70) activation, thus impairing the signaling pathway derived from ZAP-70 required for thymic selection. Therefore, we have identified c-FLIP(L) as a susceptibility factor under the influence of epistatic modifiers for the development of autoimmunity.
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OBJECT: Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) is described as a clinical and radiological entity characterized by thunderclap headaches, a reversible segmental or multifocal vasoconstriction of cerebral arteries with or without focal neurological deficits or seizures. The purpose of this study is to determine risk factors of poor outcome in patients presented a RCVS. METHODS: A retrospective multi-center review of invasive and non-invasive neurovascular imaging between January 2006 and January 2011 has identified 10 patients with criterion of reversible segmental vasoconstriction syndrome. Demographics data, vascular risks and evolution of each of these patients were analyzed. RESULTS: Seven of the ten patients were females with a mean age of 46 years. In four patients, we did not found any causative factors. Two cases presented RCVS in post-partum period between their first and their third week after delivery. The other three cases were drug-induced RCVS, mainly vaso-active drugs. Cannabis was found as the causative factor in two patient, Sumatriptan identified in one patient while cyclosporine was the causative agent in also one patient. The mean duration of clinical follow-up was 10.2 months (range: 0-28 months). Two patients had neurological sequelae: one patient kept a dysphasia and the other had a homonymous lateral hemianopia. We could not find any significant difference of the evolution between secondary RCVS and idiopathic RCVS. The only two factors, which could be correlated to the clinical outcome were the neurological status at admission and the presence of intraparenchymal abnormalities (ischemic stroke, hematoma) in brain imaging. CONCLUSIONS: Fulminant vasoconstriction resulting in progressive symptoms or death has been reported in exceptional frequency. Physicians had to remember that such evolution could happen and predict them by identifying all factors of poor prognosis (neurological status at admission, the presence of intraparenchymal abnormalities).
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Abstract The cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5 plays a key role in cardiac excitability and conduction. Its importance for normal cardiac function has been highlighted by descriptions of numerous mutations of SCN5A (the gene encoding Nav1.5), causing cardiac arrhythmias which can lead to sudden cardiac death. The general aim of my PhD research project has been to investigate the regulation of Nav1.5 along two main axes: (1) We obtained experimental evidence revealing an interaction between Nav1.5 and a multiprotein complex comprising dystrophin. The first part of this study reports the characterization of this interaction. (2) The second part of the study is dedicated to the regulation of the cardiac sodium channel by the mineralocorticoid hormone named aldosterone. (1) Early in this study, we showed that Nav1.5 C-terminus was associated with dystrophin and that this interaction was mediated by syntrophin proteins. We used dystrophin-deficient mdx5cv mice to study the role of this interaction. We reported that dystrophin deficiency led to a reduction of both Nav1.5 protein level and the sodium current (INa). We also found that mdx5cv mice displayed atrial and ventricular conduction defects. Our results also indicated that proteasome inhibitor MG132 treatment of mdx5cv mice rescued Nav1.5 protein level and INa in cardiac tissue. (2) We showed that aldosterone treatment of mice cardiomyocytes led to an increase of the sodium current with no modification of Nav1.5 transcript and protein level. Altogether, these results suggest that the sodium current can be increased by distribution of intracellular pools of protein to the plasma membrane (e.g. upon aldosterone stimulation) and that interaction with dystrophin multiprotein complex is required for the stabilization of the channel at the plasma membrane. Finally, we obtained preliminary results suggesting that the proteasome could regulate Nav1.5 in mdx5cv mice. This study defines regulatory mechanisms of Nav1.5 which could play an important role in cardiac arrhythmia and bring new insight in cardiac conduction alterations observed in patients with dystrophinopathies. Moreover, this work suggests that Brugada syndrome, and some of the cardiac alterations seen in Duchenne patients may be caused by overlapping molecular mechanisms leading to a reduction of the cardiac sodium current.
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Individuals with an inherited deficiency in gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) have impaired sexual reproduction. Previous genetic linkage studies and sequencing of plausible gene candidates have identified mutations associated with inherited GnRH deficiency, but the small number of affected families and limited success in validating candidates have impeded genetic diagnoses for most patients. Using a combination of exome sequencing and computational modeling, we have identified a shared point mutation in semaphorin 3E (SEMA3E) in 2 brothers with Kallmann syndrome (KS), which causes inherited GnRH deficiency. Recombinant wild-type SEMA3E protected maturing GnRH neurons from cell death by triggering a plexin D1-dependent (PLXND1-dependent) activation of PI3K-mediated survival signaling. In contrast, recombinant SEMA3E carrying the KS-associated mutation did not protect GnRH neurons from death. In murine models, lack of either SEMA3E or PLXND1 increased apoptosis of GnRH neurons in the developing brain, reducing innervation of the adult median eminence by GnRH-positive neurites. GnRH neuron deficiency in male mice was accompanied by impaired testes growth, a characteristic feature of KS. Together, these results identify SEMA3E as an essential gene for GnRH neuron development, uncover a neurotrophic function for SEMA3E in the developing brain, and elucidate SEMA3E/PLXND1/PI3K signaling as a mechanism that prevents GnRH neuron deficiency.
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The late president of the Palestinian Authority, Yasser Arafat, died in November 2004 in Percy Hospital, one month after having experienced a sudden onset of symptoms that included severe nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain and which were followed by multiple organ failure. In spite of numerous investigations performed in France, the pathophysiological mechanisms at the origin of the symptoms could not be identified. In 2011, we found abnormal levels of polonium-210 ((210)Po) in some of Arafat's belongings that were worn during his final hospital stay and which were stained with biological fluids. This finding led to the exhumation of Arafat's remains in 2012. Significantly higher (up to 20 times) activities of (210)Po and lead-210 ((210)Pb) were found in the ribs, iliac crest and sternum specimens compared to reference samples from the literature (p-value <1%). In all specimens from the tomb, (210)Po activity was supported by a similar activity of (210)Pb. Biokinetic calculations demonstrated that a (210)Pb impurity, as identified in a commercial source of 3MBq of (210)Po, may be responsible for the activities measured in Arafat's belongings and remains 8 years after his death. The absence of myelosuppression and hair loss in Mr Arafat's case compared to Mr Litvinenko's, the only known case of malicious poisoning with (210)Po, could be explained by differences in the time delivery-scheme of intake. In conclusion, statistical Bayesian analysis combining all the evidence gathered in our forensic expert report moderately supports the proposition that Mr Arafat was poisoned by (210)Po.
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In recent years, one important objective of cardiovascular research has been to find new markers that would improve the risk stratification and diagnosis of patients presenting with symptoms of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A) is a large metalloproteinase involved in insulin-like growth factor signalling. It is expressed in various tissues and seems to be involved in many physiological and pathological processes, such as folliculogenesis, bone formation, wound healing, pregnancy and atherosclerosis. The aim of this thesis was to investigate PAPP-A in ACS patients. Circulating concentrations of PAPP-A had been previously shown to be elevated in ACS. In this study it was revealed that the form of PAPP-A causing this elevation was the free noncomplexed PAPP-A. Thus, the form of PAPP-A in the circulation of ACS patients differed from the complexed PAPP-A form abundantly present in the circulation during pregnancy. A point-of-care method based on time-resolved immunofluorometric assays was developed, which enabled the rapid detection of free PAPP-A. The method was found to perform well with serum and heparin plasma samples as well as with heparinized whole blood samples. With this method the concentrations of free PAPP-A in healthy individuals were shown to be negligible. When the clinical performance of the method was evaluated with serum samples from ACS patients, it was shown that the free PAPP-A concentration in the admission sample was an independent predictor of myocardial infarction and death. Moreover, as a prognostic marker, free PAPP-A was revealed to be superior to total PAPPA, i.e. the combination of free and complexed PAPP-A, which has been measured by the other groups in this field. As heparin products are widely used as medication in ACS patients, the effect of heparin products on free PAPP-A molecule and circulating concentrations were also investigated in this study. It was shown that intravenous administration of low molecular weight or unfractionated heparin elicits a rapid release of free PAPP-A into the circulation in haemodialysis patients and patients undergoing angiography. Moreover, the interaction between PAPP-A and heparin was confirmed in gel filtration studies. Importantly, the patients included in the clinical evaluation of the free PAPP-A detection method developed had not received any heparin product medication before the admission sample and thus the results were not affected by the heparin effect. In conclusion, free PAPP-A was identified as a novel marker associated with ACS. The point-of-care methods developed enable rapid detection of this molecule which predicts adverse outcome when measured in the admission sample of ACS patients. However, the effect revealed of heparin products on circulating PAPP-A concentrations should be acknowledged when further studies are conducted related to free or total PAPP-A in ACS.
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This study comprised 12 hearts of Wied´s black-tufted-ear marmoset, Callithrix kuhlii (Coimbra-Filho 1985), 6 with Wasting Marmoset Syndrome (WMS) and 6 non-affected. Biometry was performed after death. After necropsy, the hearts were weighed, dissected, fixed in 10% formalin solution (pH 7.2), and processed for optical microscopy at 5µm sections stained with Haematoxylin-Eosin. Quantitative analysis was performed by stereological techniques. The statistical differences between the biometrical and stereological parameters were assessed by the Mann-Whitney test. The morphometric results showed that WMS causes a significant reduction in body and cardiac weights, and also in the volume density of vessels in those animals. Further studies are necessary to understand some of the results shown here.
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Griscelli syndrome (GS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutation in the MYO5A (GS1, Elejalde), RAB27A (GS2) or MLPH (GS3) genes. Typical features of all three subtypes of this disease include pigmentary dilution of the hair and skin and silvery-gray hair. Whereas the GS3 phenotype is restricted to the pigmentation dysfunction, GS1 patients also show primary neurological impairment and GS2 patients have severe immunological deficiencies that lead to recurrent infections and hemophagocytic syndrome. We report here the diagnosis of GS2 in 3-year-old twin siblings, with silvery-gray hair, immunodeficiency, hepatosplenomegaly and secondary severe neurological symptoms that culminated in multiple organ failure and death. Light microscopy examination of the hair showed large, irregular clumps of pigments characteristic of GS. A homozygous nonsense mutation, C-T transition (c.550C>T), in the coding region of the RAB27A gene, which leads to a premature stop codon and prediction of a truncated protein (R184X), was found. In patient mononuclear cells, RAB27A mRNA levels were the same as in cells from the parents, but no protein was detected. In addition to the case report, we also present an updated summary on the exon/intron organization of the human RAB27A gene, a literature review of GS2 cases, and a complete list of the human mutations currently reported in this gene. Finally, we propose a flow chart to guide the early diagnosis of the GS subtypes and Chédiak-Higashi syndrome.