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1.
J Thromb Thrombolysis ; 56(1): 196-201, 2023 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37140805

RESUMO

The factors associated with persistent hypoxemia after pulmonary embolus (PE) are not well understood. Predicting the need for oxygen post discharge at the time of diagnosis using available CT imaging will enable better discharge planning. To examine the relationship between CT derived imaging markers (automated computation of arterial small vessel fraction, pulmonary artery diameter to aortic diameter ratio (PA:A), right to left ventricular diameter ratio (RV:LV) and new oxygen requirement at the time of discharge in patients diagnosed with acute intermediate-risk PE. CT measurements were obtained in a retrospective cohort of patients with acute-intermediate risk PE admitted to Brigham and Women's Hospital between 2009 and 2017. Twenty one patients without a history of lung disease requiring home oxygen and 682 patients without discharge oxygen requirements were identified. There was an increased median PA:A ratio (0.98 vs. 0.92, p = 0.02) and arterial small vessel fraction (0.32 vs. 0.39, p = 0.001) in the oxygen-requiring group], but no difference in the median RV:LV ratio (1.20 vs. 1.20, p = 0.74). Being in the upper quantile for the arterial small vessel fraction was associated with decreased odds of oxygen requirement (OR 0.30 [0.10-0.78], p = 0.02). Loss of arterial small vessel volume as measured by arterial small vessel fraction and an increase in the PA:A ratio at the time of diagnosis were associated with the presence of persistent hypoxemia on discharge in acute intermediate-risk PE.


Assuntos
Embolia Pulmonar , Disfunção Ventricular Direita , Humanos , Feminino , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Assistência ao Convalescente , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Alta do Paciente , Hipóxia , Oxigênio , Doença Aguda
2.
Chest ; 159(1): 311-327, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32858008

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The treatment, genotyping, and phenotyping of patients with World Health Organization Group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have evolved dramatically in the last decade. RESEARCH QUESTION: The United States Pulmonary Hypertension Scientific Registry was established as the first US PAH patient registry to investigate genetic information, reproductive histories, and environmental exposure data in a contemporary patient population. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Investigators at 15 US centers enrolled consecutively screened adults diagnosed with Group 1 PAH who had enrolled in the National Biological Sample and Data Repository for PAH (PAH Biobank) within 5 years of a cardiac catheterization demonstrating qualifying hemodynamic criteria. Exposure and reproductive histories were collected by using a structured interview and questionnaire. The biobank provided genetic data. RESULTS: Between 2015 and 2018, a total of 499 of 979 eligible patients with clinical diagnoses of idiopathic PAH (IPAH) or familial PAH (n = 240 [48%]), associated PAH (APAH; n = 256 [51%]), or pulmonary venoocclusive disease/pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (n = 3 [1%]) enrolled. The mean age was 55.8 years, average BMI was 29.2 kg/m2, and 79% were women. Mean duration between symptom onset and diagnostic catheterization was 1.9 years. Sixty-six percent of patients were treated with more than one PAH medication at enrollment. Past use of prescription weight loss drugs (16%), recreational drugs (27%), and oral contraceptive pills (77%) was common. Women often reported miscarriage (37%), although PAH was rarely diagnosed within 6 months of pregnancy (1.9%). Results of genetic testing identified pathogenic or suspected pathogenic variants in 13% of patients, reclassifying 18% of IPAH patients and 5% of APAH patients to heritable PAH. INTERPRETATION: Patients with Group 1 PAH remain predominately middle-aged women diagnosed with IPAH or APAH. Delays in diagnosis of PAH persist. Treatment with combinations of PAH-targeted medications is more common than in the past. Women often report pregnancy complications, as well as exposure to anorexigens, oral contraceptives, and/or recreational drugs. Results of genetic tests frequently identify unsuspected heritable PAH.


Assuntos
Hipertensão Pulmonar/epidemiologia , Sistema de Registros , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Estudos de Coortes , Feminino , Hormônios Esteroides Gonadais/uso terapêutico , Humanos , Hipertensão Pulmonar/complicações , Hipertensão Pulmonar/diagnóstico , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Mutação , História Reprodutiva , Avaliação de Sintomas , Estados Unidos/epidemiologia , Adulto Jovem
3.
Pulm Circ ; 10(1): 2045894020908786, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32166018

RESUMO

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a sexually dimorphic disease that for unknown reasons affects women more than men. The role of estrogens, both endogenous and exogenous, and reproductive factors in this female susceptibility is still poorly understood. It has been strongly suggested that sex hormones may influence the development and progression of the disease. We sought to determine whether sex hormone exposures and reproductive factors associate with PAH patients compared to control subjects, using a questionnaire and interview to obtain information regarding these potential risk factors. We conducted a single-center unmatched case-control study. Six hundred and thirty-four women and men with PAH, as well as 27 subjects with BMPR2 mutations but no PAH and 132 healthy population controls were enrolled from the Vanderbilt Pulmonary Hypertension Research Cohort and researchmatch.org. Questionnaires and nurse-led interviews were conducted to obtain information regarding sex hormone exposures and reproductive factors. Additional history was obtained on enrolled patients including disease severity variables and comorbidities. Responses to the questionnaires were analyzed to describe these exposures in this population as well as assess the association between disease severity variables and sex hormone exposures. Reproductive and endogenous factors that determine lifelong estrogen exposure were similar between PAH cases and controls. Patients with associated PAH were significantly more likely to be postmenopausal compared to controls. There were similar rates of "ever-use" and duration of use of oral contraceptive pills and hormone replacement therapy in patients when compared to controls. Disease severity variables were not significantly affected by any exposure after adjusting for PAH sub-group. In contrast to our hypothesis, that a greater exposure to exogenous sources of female sex hormones associates with PAH case status, we found similar rates of endogenous and exogenous sex hormone exposure between PAH patients and unmatched controls.

4.
Pulm Circ ; 9(2): 2045894019851696, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31099303

RESUMO

Diagnostic World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and Diagnostic Group 1' pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD) and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PCH) are progressive and fatal disorders. Past registries provided important insights into these disorders, but did not include hormonal exposures or genomic data. The United States Pulmonary Hypertension Scientific Registry (USPHSR) will provide demographic, physiologic, anorexigen and hormone exposure, genomic, and survival data in the current therapeutic era for 499 patients diagnosed with PAH, PVOD, or PCH. The USPHSR also will explore the relationship between pharmacologic, non-pharmacologic, and dietary hormonal exposures and the increased risk for women to develop idiopathic or heritable PAH.

5.
Blood Adv ; 3(6): 884-896, 2019 03 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30890545

RESUMO

Cold storage of blood for 5 to 6 weeks has been shown to impair endothelial function after transfusion and has been associated with measures of end-organ dysfunction. Although the products of hemolysis, such as cell-free plasma hemoglobin, arginase, heme, and iron, in part mediate these effects, a complete analysis of transfused metabolites that may affect organ function has not been evaluated to date. Blood stored for either 5 or 42 days was collected from 18 healthy autologous volunteers, prior to and after autologous transfusion into the forearm circulation, followed by metabolomics analyses. Significant metabolic changes were observed in the plasma levels of hemolytic markers, oxidized purines, plasticizers, and oxidized lipids in recipients of blood stored for 42 days, compared with 5 days. Notably, transfusion of day 42 red blood cells (RBCs) increased circulating levels of plasticizers (diethylhexyl phthalate and derivatives) by up to 18-fold. Similarly, transfusion of day 42 blood significantly increased circulating levels of proinflammatory oxylipins, including prostaglandins, hydroxyeicosatrienoic acids (HETEs), and dihydroxyoctadecenoic acids. Oxylipins were the most significantly increasing metabolites (for 9-HETE: up to ∼41-fold, P = 3.7e-06) in day 42 supernatants. Measurements of arginine metabolism confirmed an increase in arginase activity at the expense of nitric oxide synthesis capacity in the bloodstream of recipients of day 42 blood, which correlated with measurements of hemodynamics. Metabolic changes in stored RBC supernatants impact the plasma metabolome of healthy transfusion recipients, with observed increases in plasticizers, as well as vasoactive, pro-oxidative, proinflammatory, and immunomodulatory metabolites after 42 days of storage.


Assuntos
Preservação de Sangue/efeitos adversos , Eritrócitos/citologia , Metaboloma , Plasma/metabolismo , Adulto , Preservação de Sangue/métodos , Preservação de Sangue/normas , Transfusão de Eritrócitos , Voluntários Saudáveis , Humanos , Fatores Imunológicos/sangue , Mediadores da Inflamação/sangue , Oxidantes/sangue , Plastificantes/análise , Fatores de Tempo , Transplante Autólogo , Vasoconstritores/sangue
8.
Ther Adv Chronic Dis ; 8(2-3): 47-64, 2017 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28348727

RESUMO

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a chronic disease that results in narrowing of the small pre-capillary pulmonary arteries leading to elevation of pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance, subsequent right ventricular failure, and if unchecked, death. Advances in the treatment of PAH over the last two decades have markedly improved survival. These improvements reflect a combination of changes in treatments, improved patient care strategies, and varying disease phenotypes in the PAH population. Currently approved therapies for PAH are directed at the recognized abnormalities within the pulmonary vasculature and include endothelin receptor antagonists, phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors, soluble guanylate cyclase stimulators, and prostacyclin pathway agents. Most of these drugs have been approved on the basis of short-term trials that mainly demonstrated improvements in exercise capacity. More recently, long-term, event-driven trials of novel drugs have been performed, demonstrating new efficacy parameters. There have also been exciting advances in the understanding of right heart failure pathophysiology in PAH that have the potential to inspire the development of right ventricular targeted therapy and continued discoveries in the heterogeneity of disease and response to treatment has great potential for developing more 'personalized' therapeutic options. In this article, we review the current available data regarding the management of PAH, with an emphasis on the pharmacologic therapies and discussion of novel therapeutic directions for the treatment of this fatal disease.

10.
Chest ; 149(6): e191-4, 2016 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27287596

RESUMO

A 65-year-old man with treated latent tuberculous infection presented with 1 week of fevers (up to 39.6°C), chills, headache, lightheadedness, and malaise. He reported a chronic, nonproductive cough without hemoptysis but denied other localizing symptoms, sick contacts, or recent travel. He lived in an urban area in eastern Colorado and owned one healthy dog but otherwise denied known animal exposures. He was a retired oil driller who had worked in southern Arizona, New Mexico, and northern Mexico (Sonora region). Other travel included 3 years in the early 1970s working as a military aircraft mechanic in Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. Six weeks prior to admission, he began work as a groundskeeper on a golf course that had experienced recent flooding, using a riding mower and exposing himself to airborne dust and organic debris. He smoked a pipe daily for 30 years but quit 2 months prior to presentation, although he continued to smoke marijuana weekly. He denied intravenous drug use.


Assuntos
Ciprofloxacina/administração & dosagem , Francisella tularensis , Linfadenopatia , Nódulos Pulmonares Múltiplos/diagnóstico , Tórax/diagnóstico por imagem , Tularemia , Idoso , Antibacterianos/administração & dosagem , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Francisella tularensis/imunologia , Francisella tularensis/isolamento & purificação , Humanos , Linfadenopatia/diagnóstico , Linfadenopatia/etiologia , Masculino , Testes Sorológicos/métodos , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Resultado do Tratamento , Tularemia/complicações , Tularemia/diagnóstico , Tularemia/tratamento farmacológico , Tularemia/fisiopatologia
11.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med ; 192(10): 1223-33, 2015 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26222884

RESUMO

RATIONALE: A major abnormality that characterizes the red cell "storage lesion" is increased hemolysis and reduced red cell lifespan after infusion. Low levels of intravascular hemolysis after transfusion of aged stored red cells disrupt nitric oxide (NO) bioavailabity, via accelerated NO scavenging reaction with cell-free plasma hemoglobin. The degree of intravascular hemolysis post-transfusion and effects on endothelial-dependent vasodilation responses to acetylcholine have not been fully characterized in humans. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effects of blood aged to the limits of Food and Drug Administration-approved storage time on the human microcirculation and endothelial function. METHODS: Eighteen healthy individuals donated 1 U of leukopheresed red cells, divided and autologously transfused into the forearm brachial artery 5 and 42 days after blood donation. Blood samples were obtained from stored blood bag supernatants and the antecubital vein of the infusion arm. Forearm blood flow measurements were performed using strain-gauge plethysmography during transfusion, followed by testing of endothelium-dependent blood flow with increasing doses of intraarterial acetylcholine. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We demonstrate that aged stored blood has higher levels of arginase-1 and cell-free plasma hemoglobin. Compared with 5-day blood, the transfusion of 42-day packed red cells decreases acetylcholine-dependent forearm blood flows. Intravascular venous levels of arginase-1 and cell-free plasma hemoglobin increase immediately after red cell transfusion, with more significant increases observed after infusion of 42-day-old blood. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that the transfusion of blood at the limits of Food and Drug Administration-approved storage has a significant effect on the forearm circulation and impairs endothelial function. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01137656).


Assuntos
Preservação de Sangue/normas , Transfusão de Sangue Autóloga/normas , Células Endoteliais/fisiologia , Transfusão de Eritrócitos/normas , Hemólise , Óxido Nítrico/sangue , Acetilcolina/fisiologia , Adulto , Transfusão de Sangue Autóloga/efeitos adversos , Transfusão de Sangue Autóloga/métodos , Transfusão de Eritrócitos/efeitos adversos , Transfusão de Eritrócitos/métodos , Eritrócitos , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pennsylvania , Pletismografia , Fatores de Tempo , Vasodilatação/fisiologia
12.
Intern Emerg Med ; 9(2): 143-50, 2014 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22392230

RESUMO

Antimicrobial therapy has been the main stay of therapy of community-acquired aspiration pneumonia (CAAP), but the duration of treatment has not been established. The objective of this study was to describe the time to reach clinical stability in patients with aspiration pneumonia compared to community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). A retrospective case control study at two university affiliated centers encompassing 329 consecutive patients admitted with CAAP and 329 consecutive patients with CAP was conducted between 2007 and 2011. While the median time to stability for patients with CAP was distributed around a median of 4 days, there was a bimodal distribution for time to clinical stability in patients with CAAP with dual peaks at days 2 and 5, respectively. CAAP patients who required more than 2 days to achieve clinical stability had a higher mortality rate compared to those with 2 days or less [odds ratio (OR) 5.95, 95% CI 2.85-12.4], and a longer hospital stay (6.6 ± 5.8 vs. 3.9 ± 1.2 days; p < 0.001). None of the CAAP patients who achieved clinical stability in 2 days or less was transferred to a higher level of care. In a multivariate analysis, time to clinical stability was found to be an independent predictor of outcome in patients with CAAP (OR 2.59, 95% CI 2.02-3.32). Normalization of vital signs in aspiration pneumonia follows a distinct pattern from that of patients with CAP. Time to achieve clinical stability may assist in identifying CAAP patients who are likely to require a shorter hospital stay and a shorter course of antimicrobial therapy.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/uso terapêutico , Pneumonia Aspirativa/tratamento farmacológico , Pneumonia Bacteriana/tratamento farmacológico , Idoso , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Infecções Comunitárias Adquiridas/tratamento farmacológico , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Indução de Remissão , Estudos Retrospectivos , Fatores de Tempo
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