951 resultados para Acute coronary syndromes
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Background Cardiac disease is the principal cause of death in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Ischemia at dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) is associated with adverse events in these patients. We sought the efficacy of combining clinical risk evaluation with DSE. Methods We allocated 244 patients with CKD (mean age 54 years, 140 men, 169 dialysis-dependent at baseline) into low- and high-risk groups based on two disease-specific scores and the Framingham risk model. All underwent DSE and were further stratified according to DSE results. Patients were followed over 20 +/- 14 months for events (death, myocardial infarction, acute coronary syndrome). Results There were 49 deaths and 32 cardiac events. Using the different clinical scores, allocation of high risk varied from 34% to 79% of patients, and 39% to 50% of high-risk patients had an abnormal DSE. In the high-risk groups, depending on the clinical score chosen, 25% to 44% with an abnormal DSE had a cardiac event, compared with 8% to 22% with a.normal DSE. Cardiac events occurred in 2.0%, 3.1 %, and 9.7% of the low-risk patients, using the two disease-specific and Framingham scores, respectively, and DSE results did not add to risk evaluation in this subgroup. Independent DSE predictors of cardiac events were a lower resting diastolic blood pressure, angina during the test, and the combination of ischemia with resting left ventricular dysfunction. Conclusion In CKD patients, high-risk findings by DSE can predict outcome. A stepwise strategy of combining clinical risk scores with DSE for CAD screening in CKD reduces the number of tests required and identifies a high-risk subgroup among whom DSE results more effectively stratify high and low risk.
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Introduction - Monocytes, with 3 different subsets, are implicated in the initiation and progression of the atherosclerotic plaque contributing to plaque instability and rupture. Mon1 are the “classical” monocytes with inflammatory action, whilst Mon3 are considered reparative with fibroblast deposition ability. The function of the newly described Mon2 subset is yet to be fully described. In PCI era, fewer patients have globally reduced left ventricular ejection fraction post infarction, hence the importance of studying regional wall motion abnormalities and deformation at segmental levels using longitudinal strain. Little is known of the role for the 3 monocyte subpopulations in determining global strain in ST elevation myocardial infarction patients (STEMI). Conclusion In patients with normal or mildly impaired EF post infarction, higher counts of Mon1 and Mon2 are correlated with GLS within 7 days and at 6 months of remodelling post infarction. Adverse clinical outcomes in patients with reduced convalescent GLS were predicted with Mon1 and Mon2 suggestive of an inflammatory role for the newly identified Mon2 subpopulation. These results imply an important role for monocytes in myocardial healing when assessed by subclinical ventricular function indices. Methodology - STEMI patients (n = 101, mean age 64 ± 13 years; 69% male) treated with percutaneous revascularisation were recruited within 24 h post-infarction. Peripheral blood monocyte subpopulations were enumerated and characterised using flow cytometry after staining for CD14, CD16 and CCR2. Phenotypically, monocyte subpopulations are defined as: CD14++CD16-CCR2+ (Mon1), CD14++CD16+CCR2+ (Mon2) and CD14+CD16++CCR2- (Mon3). Phagocytic activity of monocytes was measured using flow cytometry and Ecoli commercial kit. Transthoracic 2D echocardiography was performed within 7 days and at 6 months post infarct to assess global longitudinal strain (GLS) via speckle tracking. MACE was defined as recurrent acute coronary syndrome and death. Results - STEMI patients with EF ≥50% by Simpson’s biplane (n = 52) had GLS assessed. Using multivariate regression analysis higher counts of Mon1 and Mon 2 and phagocytic activity of Mon2 were significantly associated with GLS (after adjusting for age, time to hospital presentation, and peak troponin levels) (Table 1). At 6 months, the convalescent GLS remained associated with higher counts of Mon1, Mon 2. At one year follow up, using multivariate Cox regression analysis, Mon1 and Mon2 counts were an independent predictor of MACE in patients with a reduced GLS (n = 21)
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© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.
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OBJECTIVE: The Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) score is a validated tool for risk stratification of acute coronary syndrome. We hypothesized that the TIMI risk score would be able to risk stratify patients in observation unit for acute coronary syndrome. METHODS: STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study of consecutive adult patients placed in an urban academic hospital emergency department observation unit with an average annual census of 65,000 between 2004 and 2007. Exclusion criteria included elevated initial cardiac biomarkers, ST segment changes on ECG, unstable vital signs, or unstable arrhythmias. A composite of significant coronary artery disease (CAD) indicators, including diagnosis of myocardial infarction, percutaneous coronary intervention, coronary artery bypass surgery, or death within 30 days and 1 year, were abstracted via chart review and financial record query. The entire cohort was stratified by TIMI risk scores (0-7) and composite event rates with 95% confidence interval were calculated. RESULTS: In total 2228 patients were analyzed. Average age was 54.5 years, 42.0% were male. The overall median TIMI risk score was 1. Eighty (3.6%) patients had 30-day and 119 (5.3%) had 1-year CAD indicators. There was a trend toward increasing rate of composite CAD indicators at 30 days and 1 year with increasing TIMI score, ranging from a 1.2% event rate at 30 days and 1.9% at 1 year for TIMI score of 0 and 12.5% at 30 days and 21.4% at 1 year for TIMI ≥ 4. CONCLUSIONS: In an observation unit cohort, the TIMI risk score is able to risk stratify patients into low-, moderate-, and high-risk groups.
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As Síndromes Coronárias Agudas (SCA) são responsáveis por elevadas taxas de mortalidade em todo o mundo. Segundo o Ministério da Saúde, “as doenças cardiovasculares (…) são a principal causa de mortalidade em Portugal, tal como se verifica em muitos países ocidentais, sendo considerada, no entanto, das mais elevadas da Europa e do Mundo” (MINISTÉRIO DA SAÚDE, 2006, p. 2). As intervenções de enfermagem na fase aguda das SCA são fulcrais e consistem na atenção dirigida à proteção e promoção da vida com base nas suas competências específicas, alívio da dor e desenvolvimento de uma relação terapêutica que passa pela consciencialização da necessidade de alterações dos hábitos não saudáveis de vida entre as pessoas internadas. Estas intervenções devem iniciar-se precocemente através de um processo de identificação e reconhecimento da necessidade de alterações comportamentais, educação para a saúde e planeamento do regime terapêutico, favorecendo a adesão a programas de reabilitação cardíaca. Verificamos que muitas das admissões no serviço de cardiologia, por SCA, são reinternamentos, sugerindo que a vigilância à saúde pode não ser a mais adequada. Neste trabalho pretende-se a partilha da experiência de educação para a saúde à pessoa com SCA no serviço de cardiologia de um hospital da região metropolitana de Lisboa. O serviço de cardiologia do HFF tem desenvolvido desde o ano 2000 um programa de educação para a saúde nas pessoas com SCA com extensão às suas famílias. Consistia, inicialmente, numa intervenção iniciada à cabeceira do doente como processo natural de educação para a saúde e, por ocasião da passagem pela enfermaria, com a apresentação de uma sessão em PowerPoint e disponibilização de um manual em formato papel. Ao longo dos anos o programa vem sofrendo modificações para melhor adequação às necessidades de educação para a saúde do indivíduo. Refletimos acerca da pertinência destas intervenções, o seu impacto sobre a saúde das pessoas e a relevância em termos de alteração de hábitos não saudáveis de vida entre os doentes internados. Neste processo de reformulação do programa, analisamos os processos hospitalares dos doentes submetidos às sessões de educação para a saúde num intervalo de 6 meses (janeiro a junho de 2014) e efetuamos entrevistas telefónicas a esta população um ano após a data do internamento. Dos dados analisados percebemos que uma parcela significativa destas pessoas não se lembrava da sessão de educação para a saúde. Por outro lado, das que se recordavam, revelaram o relevante impacto da educação para a saúde na alteração de hábitos não saudáveis de vida. A análise dos dados permitiu a reorganização das sessões de educação para a saúde desde o seu conteúdo até à metodologia. Ainda muitos passos devem ser dados no aperfeiçoamento deste projecto. Pretendemos elaborar um protocolo que permita uniformizar a prática de educação para a saúde e introduzir instrumentos de avaliação em cada etapa do mesmo. BIBLIOGRAFIA Cossette, S., D´Aoust, L.-X., Morin, M., Heppell, S., & Frasure-Smith, N. (2009). The Systematic Development of a Nursing Intervention Aimed at Increasing Enrollment in Cardiac Rehabilitation for Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients. Progress in Cardiovascular Nursing, 24, pp. 71-79. Fernandez, R., Davidson, P., Griffiths, R., Juergens, C., & Salamonson, Y. (2007). What do we know about the long term medication adherence in patients following percutaneous coronary intervention? Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing, 25 (2), pp. 53-61. Ministério da Saúde. (2006). Programa Nacional de Prevenção e Controlo das Doenças Cardiovasculares. Lisboa. Mota, T. G., Clara, J. G., Gonçalves, J. V., Rocha, A. P., Neves, A. P., & Santos, T. M. (2003). Passaporte para a Vida. Coimbra: Grupo de Estudos de Hemodinâmica e Cardiologia de Intervenção da Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia. Ordem dos Enfermeiros. (2003). Competências do enfermeiro de cuidados gerais. Lisboa. Santos, L. S., & Henriques, E. (2012). Gestão do regime terapêutico no pós- EAM: desenvolvimento de um protocolo de intervenção de enfermagem em follow-up. Relatório de Estágio de Mestrado, Escola Superior de Enfermagem de Lisboa, Lisboa. Thelan, L. A., Davie, J. K., Urden, L. D., & Lough, M. E. (1996). Enfermagem em Cuidados Intensivos ̶ Diagnóstico e Intervenção. Lisboa: Lusodidacta. Urden, L. D., Stacy, K. M., & Lough, M. E. (2008). Thelan´s Enfermagem de Cuidados Intensivos ̶ Diagnóstico e Intervenção. Loures: Lusodidacta.
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Cardiogenic shock (CS) has a poor prognosis. The heterogeneity in the mortality through different subgroups suggests that some factors can be useful to perform risk stratification and guide management. We aimed to find predictors of in-hospital mortality in these patients. We analyzed all cases of cardiogenic shock due to medical conditions admitted in our intensive acute cardiovascular care unity from November 2010 till November 2015. Clinical, biochemical and hemodynamic variables were registered, as was the Interagency Registry for Mechanically Assisted Circulatory Support (INTERMACS) profile at 24 h of CS diagnosis. From a total of 281 patients, 28 died within the first 24 h and were not included in the analysis. A total of 253 patients survived the first 24 h, mean age was 68.8 ± 14.4 years, and 174 (68.8%) were men. Etiologies: acute coronary syndrome 146 (57.7%), acute heart failure 60 (23.7%), arrhythmias 35 (13.8%), and others 12 (4.8%). A total of 91 patients (36.0%) died during hospitalization. We found the following independent predictors of in-hospital mortality: age (odds ratio [OR] 1.032, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.003–1.062), blood glucose (OR 1.004, 95% CI 1.001–1.008), heart rate (OR 1.014, 95% CI 1.001–1.028), and INTERMACS profile (OR 0.168, 95% CI 0.107–0.266). In patients with CS the INTERMACS profile at 24 h of diagnosis was associated with higher in-hospital mortality. This and other prognostic variables (age, blood glucose, and heart rate) may be useful for risk stratification and to select appropriate medical or invasive interventions.
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Introducción: Entre las diferentes herramientas clínicas para evaluar la presencia de enfermedad coronaria mediante puntajes, la más usada es la Escala de Riesgo cardiovascular de Framingham. Desde hace unos años, se creó el puntaje de calcio coronario el cual mide el riesgo cardiovascular según la presencia de placas ateromatosas vistas por tomografía computarizada. Se evaluó la asociación entre la escala de Framigham y el puntaje de calcio coronario en una población de sujetos sanos asintomáticos. Metodología: Se realizó un estudio transversal para evaluar la asociación entre el puntaje de calcio coronario y la escala de Framingham en sujetos asintomáticos que se practicaron exámen médico preventivo en la Fundación Cardioinfantil- Instituto de Cardiología (FCI-IC) en el periodo comprendido entre 1 de Julio 2011 hasta el 31 de octubre de 2015. Resultados: Se evaluaron 262 pacientes en total. La prevalencia de riesgo cardiovascular fue bajo en un 77.86% de la población, medio en 18.70% y alto en 3.44%, según la escala de Framingham. El riesgo cardiovascular según el puntaje de Calcio coronario fue nulo 70.99%, bajo en 21.75%, medio en 4.19%, severo en 3.05%. Se encontró una asociación entre ambos puntajes para riesgo estadísticamente significativa (p0,00001) Discusión: El riesgo cardiovascular establecido por escala de Framingham se relaciona de forma significativa con la presencia de placas aterioscleróticas. El estudio demostró que en una muestra de sujetos asintomáticos, hay una alteración estructural coronaria temprana.
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La miocardiopatía por estrés o síndrome de Takotsubo es una patología cardiaca ampliamente reconocida con una presentación clínica similar al síndrome coronario agudo y relacionado a estrés físico o emocional. Su identificación perioperatoria es un reto dada las diferentes formas y escenarios de presentación. Nosotros describimos una paciente de 22 años con una presentación atípica del síndrome de Takotsubo durante la inducción anestésica resaltando la utilidad de la ecocardiografía transesofágica para el diagnóstico inicial.
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Introducción El modelo desequilibrio esfuerzo – recompensa es un importante predictor de estrés laboral y por consiguiente de alteraciones en la salud cardiovascular, por ello en los últimos 10 años se ha encontrado importante evidencia y estudios respecto al tema; las publicaciones científicas se han enfocado en establecer relación entre factores psicosociales en el trabajo y consecuencias sobre la salud dándole relevancia a los factores biológicos principalmente los cardiovasculares. Objetivo Se evaluó la evidencia entre el desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa y las alteraciones cardiovasculares en los trabajadores. Metodología Se realizó una revisión de la literatura en principales bases de datos como son pubmed, ovid y revistas electrónicas, en idioma inglés – español durante los últimos 10 años, usando palabras de búsqueda como desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa, alteraciones cardiovasculares, trabajadores. Resultados Se encontró fuerte evidencia entre el desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa con enfermedades cardiovasculares en los trabajadores, principalmente con las alteraciones en la tensión arterial en los trabajadores más expuestos, al igual que una relación mayor en mujeres que hombres que aumentaba con la edad. Se evidenció que después de haber sufrido un evento coronario agudo los trabajadores que continuaban expuestos a altas cargas de tensión laboral eran más propensos a desarrollar enfermedad coronaria recurrente. El sobrecompromiso (PR 1,91, IC 95% 1,35-2,69) y el desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa (PR 2,47, IC 95% 1,62-3,75) se asociaron con riesgo de hipertensión arterial después de ajustar las variables de confusión. Se encontró asociación entre el desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa e hipertensión arterial (OR 1,53-3,71 IC 95%). La ERI alta y la baja recompensa se asociaron con enfermedad coronaria recurrente (RR = 1,75, intervalo de confianza del 95% [IC] = 0,99 - 3,08 y HR = 1,77, IC del 95% = 1,16 - 2,71). Hubo una interacción de género que mostró efectos más fuertes entre las mujeres (HR respectivamente ajustadas para ERI alta y baja recompensa: HR = 3,95, IC del 95% = 0,93- 16,79, y HR = 9,53, IC del 95% = 1,15- 78,68). Conclusiones Se encontró una relación entre el desequilibrio esfuerzo recompensa con enfermedades cardiovasculares, principalmente con las alteraciones en la tensión arterial y eventos coronarios
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Few studies have prospectively addressed the effects of exercise in the inflammatory activity of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). We sought to evaluate the consequences of an acute bout of exercise on inflammatory markers and BNP in untrained CAD patients before and after randomization to a training program. 34 CAD patients underwent a 50-min acute exercise session on a cycle-ergometer at 65% peak oxygen uptake before and after blood sampling. They were then randomized to a 4-month chronic exercise program (15 patients) or general lifestyle recommendations (19 patients), undergoing a new acute session of exercise after that. In the overall population, acute exercise caused a significant increase in C-reactive protein [CRP; 1.79 (4.49) vs. 1.94 (4.89) mg/L, P < 0.001], monokine induced by interferon-gamma [Mig; 351 (324) vs. 373 (330) pg/mL, P = 0.027] and vascular adhesion molecule-1 [VCAM-1; 226 (82) vs. 252 (110) pg/mL, P = 0.02]. After 4-months, in exercise-trained patients, there was a significant decrease in the inflammatory response provoked by the acute exercise compared to patients in the control group reflected by a significant decrease in the differences between rest and post-exercise levels of CRP [-0.29 (0.84) mg/L vs. -0.11 (0.21) mg/L, P = 0.05]. Resting BNP was also significantly lower in exercise-trained patients when compared to untrained controls [15.6 (16.2) vs. 9.7 (11.4) pg/mL, P = 0.04 and 19.2 (27.8) vs. 23.2 (27.5) pg/mL, P = 0.76; respectively]. Chronic exercise training might partially reverse the inflammatory response caused by acute exercise in CAD patients. These results suggest that regular exercise is an important nonpharmacological strategy to the improvement in inflammation in CAD patients.
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Background: Tobacco cessation after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) substantially improves outcome but how effective individual programmes are needs to be established. To date, few studies have examined this factor. Aims: To assess the outcome of two smoking cessation programmes after AMI. Methods: One hundred and ninety-eight current smokers admitted to coronary care with an AMI participated in a randomized controlled study comparing two outpatient tobacco interventions, the Stanford Heart Attack Staying Free (SF) programme and a Usual Care (UC) programme. Results: Log-rank analyses revealed that patients in the SF programme were retained longer (P < 0.001) and had higher cotinine validated abstinence rates (P < 0.001) compared with patients in the UC programme. Twelve months after intervention, 39% of the SF programme compared with 2% of the UC programme demonstrated cotinine validated tobacco cessation, representing a significant reduced relapse rate in the SF programme (chi (2), P < 0.001). Conclusions: The SF smoking cessation programme initiated in hospital can significantly reduce smoking rates at 12 months after myocardial infarction. Although superior to the UC quit programme, Australian outcomes were lower than the American programme originators' published outcomes.
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This report describes two patients with chronic Chagas' Heart Disease who developed clinical and laboratorial signs of myocardial infarction. Both patients presented sudden oppressive chest pain, without precipitating factor. In the first case, the highest MB-CK value was 65 IU, 22 hours after the beginning of the pain. On the second case, it was 77 IU at 18 hours after the beginning of the pain. In both cases ECG changes suggesting non-transmural infarction were present. The 99mTc PYP myocardial scintigram of the first case was positive. Coronary angiograms performed on the 18th and 9th day, respectively, after the acute infarction did not display obstructive lesions. Possible mechanisms causing myocardial infarction with normal coronary arteries in Chagas' Disease may include: embolic event's, particularly when there is associated congestive heart failure; coronary thrombosis and coronary spasms.
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In this review we report our recent findings of histopathological features of plaque instability and the association with Mycoplasma pneumoniae (MP) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) infection, studying thrombosed coronary artery segments (CAS) of patients who died due to acute myocardial infarction. Vulnerable plaques are known to be associated with fat atheromas and inflammation of the plaque. Here we demonstrated that vulnerability is also related with focal positive vessel remodeling that maintains relatively well preserved lumen even in the presence of large atheromatous plaques. This phenomena may explain why the cinecoronariography may not detect large and dangerous vulnerable plaques. Greater amount of these bacteria in vulnerable plaques is associated with adventitial inflammation and positive vessel remodeling: the mean numbers of lymphocytes were significantly higher in adventitia than in the plaque, good direct correlation was obtained between numbers of CD20 B cells and numbers of CP infected cells in adventitia, and between % area of MP-DNA in the plaque and cross sectional area of the vessel, suggesting a cause-effect relationship. Mycoplasma is a bacterium that needs cholesterol for proliferation and may increase virulence of other infectious agents. In conclusion, co-infection by Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae may represent an important co-factor for plaque instability, leading to coronary plaque thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction, since larger amount of these bacteria strongly correlated with histological signs of more vulnerability of the plaque. The search of CMV and Helicobacter pilori in these tissues resulted negative.
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We reviewed the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) syndromes of 100 consecutive HIV-positive patients presenting acute consciousness compromise in emergency rooms, and correlated them with clinical data. The most frequent CSF syndromes were: absolute protein-cytological dissociation (21), viral (19), neurocryptococcosis (7), relative protein-cytological dissociation (6) and septic (4), moderate hypoglycorrachia (4), severe hypoglycorrachia (4) and hydroelectrolytic disturbance (3). One fifth of the patients had CSF syndromes considered sufficient for diagnosis or an immediate clinical decision. The most common clinical data were infective and neurological. There was little correlation between the clinical data and the CSF syndromes. We conclude that in HIV-positive individuals presenting acute consciousness disturbances there are frequently non-specific results in the CSF analysis that must be weighed against a detailed history and thorough physical examination. Taking this into account, in about one fifth of cases the CSF analysis can offer useful information for treatment.