1,720,982 research outputs found
Pragmatic electrocardiogram tracings in non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy: diagnostic and prognostic role
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a primitive heart muscle disease characterized by a great heterogeneous aetiology and prognostic outcome. Dilated cardiomyopathy is an umbrella term encompassing different aetiologies that might require specific treatments. It principally affects young and male adults, with high-risk arrhythmic competitive risk. Unfortunately, the prevention of major ventricular arrhythmic events remains a clinical challenge. In the era of advanced multimodality imaging and widely available genetic testing, electrocardiogram (ECG) continues to represent a reliable diagnostic tool, for specific work up of every single patient. However, approaching DCM patients, only a cardiomyopathy-oriented reading makes the role of ECG central in the management of DCM, both for diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic management. In this paper, we present four ECGs of four different DCM patients, in order to guide a cardiomyopathy-oriented ECG reading, emphasizing its impact in an early, cost-effective, and personalized diagnostic and prognostic work up in this specific setting
The complex interplay between systolic and diastolic function at rest and during exercise in heart failure: the case of cardiac amyloidosis
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Analogies and disparities among scintigraphic bone tracers in the diagnosis of cardiac and non-cardiac ATTR amyloidosis
In this issue of JNC, BW Spery and Coll report a retrospective analysis of 57 patients with transthyretin-related amyloidosis (ATTR) in an advanced phase of the disease who underwent 99mTechnetium-pyrophosphate (99mTcPYP) scintigraphy. Although relatively small and “negative,” the study is relevant since it broadens our knowledge on the uptake of “bone tracers” in ATTR and contributes to understand the limitations of the clinical use of scintigraphy in this disease. The paper raises, directly or indirectly, at least three questions: To what extent are the different bone tracers interchangeable for the diagnosis of ATTR cardiac amyloidosis? Are bone tracers able to image non-cardiac ATTR amyloidosis? What is the explanation for the variable performance of the different bone tracers in the diagnosis of cardiac and extracardiac ATTR amyloidosis
Extracardiac imaging in amyloidosis: A long and winding (but possible) road
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A new therapy for transthyretin amyloidosis, no longer an orphan condition
Amyloid cardiomyopathy is a condition characterized by intra-myocardial deposit of protein-like material, in fibrillar shape (amyloid), which presence determine a progressive thickening and stiffening of the cardiac walls leading to a cardiac dysfunction. The proteins most often involved with cardiac amyloid are the light chains of the immunoglobulin, typical of amyloidosis AL, and transthyretin, responsible for transthyretin amyloidosis, in both its forms, hereditary and wild type. An accurate estimate of the incidence of cardiac amyloidosis is still difficult due to the variety and complexity of the clinical presentation of the condition. Nonetheless, the condition has stimulated the interest of the scientific community, so that a specific diagnostic path has been developed, beginning from the clinical suspicion and first-line testing, such as electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and blood work, to progress to the diagnostic confirmation using more sophisticated testing such as magnetic resonance, scintiscan, and eventually cardiac biopsy. To understand and recognize this condition is very important, stemming from the availability of 'aetiology oriented therapies' (designed to prevent, control and possibly regress amyloid deposition), which should be added to the 'supportive therapies', used for the treatment of the complication of the condition, namely heart failure
Cardiac amyloidosis: the great pretender
Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is often misdiagnosed because of both physician-related and disease-related reasons including: fragmented knowledge among different specialties and subspecialties, shortage of centres and specialists dedicated to disease management, erroneous belief it is an incurable disease, rarity of the condition, intrinsic phenotypic heterogeneity, genotypic heterogeneity in transthyretin-related forms and the necessity of target organ tissue histological diagnosis in the vast majority of cases. Pitfalls, incorrect beliefs and deceits challenge not only the path to the diagnosis of CA but also the precise identification of aetiological subtype. The awareness of this condition is the most important prerequisite for the management of the risk of underdiagnoses and misdiagnosis. Almost all clinical, imaging and laboratory tests can be misinterpreted, but fortunately each of these diagnostic steps can also offer diagnostic “red flags” (i.e. highly suggestive findings that can foster the correct diagnostic suspicion and facilitate early, timely diagnosis). This is especially important because outcomes in CA are largely driven by the severity of cardiac dysfunction and emerging therapies are aimed at preventing further amyloid deposition
La cardiomiopatia amiloidotica correlata alla transtiretina: Alla ricerca del trattamento eziologico
Transthyretin (TTR)-related amyloidosis is a disease caused by the deposition of insoluble fibrils deriving from the misfolding of TTR, a protein mainly produced by the liver. In the hereditary form of the disease (ATTRm), protein misfolding is secondary to a mutation in the TTR gene. ATTRm can manifest with different phenotypes: mainly neurological, mainly cardiac, or mixed. In the senile form of the disease (wild-type TTR or SSA), the deposition of non-mutated TTR occurs and, clinically, cardiomyopathy is predominant. Cardiac amyloidosis is still an underdiagnosed disease and clinical heterogeneity makes the diagnosis challenging. Until recently, no specific pharmacological treatment was available, liver transplantation being the only therapeutic option aimed at slowing disease progression in ATTRm and treatment was based on symptom relief. This review focuses on the emerging pharmacological treatments for TTR-related amyloidosis targeting different steps of the amyloidogenic process (blocking hepatic TTR synthesis, TTR tetramer stabilization and promotion of TTR amyloid fibril clearance). © 2014 Il Pensiero Scientifico Editore
Cardiac amyloidosis: the great pretender
Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is often misdiagnosed because of both physician-related and disease-related reasons including: fragmented knowledge among different specialties and subspecialties, shortage of centres and specialists dedicated to disease management, erroneous belief it is an incurable disease, rarity of the condition, intrinsic phenotypic heterogeneity, genotypic heterogeneity in transthyretin-related forms and the necessity of target organ tissue histological diagnosis in the vast majority of cases. Pitfalls, incorrect beliefs and deceits challenge not only the path to the diagnosis of CA but also the precise identification of aetiological subtype. The awareness of this condition is the most important prerequisite for the management of the risk of underdiagnoses and misdiagnosis. Almost all clinical, imaging and laboratory tests can be misinterpreted, but fortunately each of these diagnostic steps can also offer diagnostic “red flags” (i.e. highly suggestive findings that can foster the correct diagnostic suspicion and facilitate early, timely diagnosis). This is especially important because outcomes in CA are largely driven by the severity of cardiac dysfunction and emerging therapies are aimed at preventing further amyloid deposition
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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