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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38949760

ABSTRACT

Heart failure (HF) is a clinical syndrome which is due to cardiac structural and/or functional abnormalities that result in elevated intra-cardiac pressures and/or inadequate cardiac output. Hemodynamic assessment in HF allows the identification and characterization of cardiac dysfunction, systemic and/or pulmonary congestion and the eventual impairment of systemic perfusion which are fundamental to phenotype HF, risk stratify HF patients and to guide their treatment. Patient hemodynamics can be characterized invasively with right heart catheterization but also non-invasively with the use of echocardiography and other non-invasive ultrasound tools. The aim of the present review is to summarize the main echocardiographic and ultrasound parameters to characterize the hemodynamics of patients with HF and help clinicians to make the most of these non-invasive tools to guide HF patient management.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38950757

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Left atrioventricular coupling index (LACI), an index coupling left atrial (LA) to left ventricular (LV) volume at end-diastole, showed to be associated with prognosis in different clinical settings. However, the relation between LACI and LV diastolic dysfunction (DD) remains to be established. The present study aimed to investigate the association between LACI and LV DD and to assess its prognostic value in patients with heart failure (HF). METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed 1158 stable HF patients, on optimal medical therapy (derivation cohort). Clinical and echocardiographic features were characterized across LACI tertiles. The independent prognostic value of LACI (endpoint: all-cause death/HF-hospitalization) was assessed by Cox regression. Results were validated in an external cohort of 242 HF patients. RESULTS: In the derivation cohort, the median LACI value was 0.29 (IQR:0.19-0.42). Patients in the third tertile (LACI>0.36) were older and presented with more advanced HF symptoms. While the prevalence of grade-1 DD (ASE/EACVI classification) progressively decreased across LACI tertiles, the prevalence of grade-3 DD significantly increased (8%,23%, and 46% respectively, P<0.0001). A cut-off value ≥0.26 identified moderate-to-severe DD with an area-under the-curve of 0.75. During follow-up (median 28 months, IQR:11-53), 407 (35%) patients reached the endpoint. On multivariable analysis, LACI was independently associated with outcomes (HR for 1-SD increase 1.16; 95%CI 1.06-1.28; P=0.002), showing incremental predictive value over the DD grading system (net reclassification improvement=0.150, P<0.0001). The prognostic value of LACI was consistent in the external validation cohort. CONCLUSIONS: LACI is associated with DD severity and is an independent predictor of outcomes in HF patients.

3.
Clin Res Cardiol ; 2023 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37733084

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), treatment with sacubitril-valsartan (S/V) may reverse left ventricular remodeling (rLVR). Whether this effect is superior to that induced by other renin-angiotensin system (RAS) inhibitors is not well known. METHODS: HFrEF patients treated with S/V (n = 795) were compared, by propensity score matching, with a historical cohort of 831 HFrEF patients (non-S/V group) treated with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (RAS inhibitors). All patients were also treated with beta-blockers and shared the same protocol with repeat echocardiogram 8-12 months after starting therapy. The difference-in-difference (DiD) analysis was used to evaluate the impact of S/V on CR indices between the two groups. RESULTS: After propensity score matching, compared to non-S/V group (n = 354), S/V group (n = 354) showed a relative greater reduction in end-diastolic and end-systolic volume index (ESVI), and greater increase in ejection fraction (DiD estimator = + 5.42 mL/m2, P = 0.0005; + 4.68 mL/m2, P = 0.0009, and + 1.76%, P = 0.002, respectively). Reverse LVR (reduction in ESVI ≥ 15% from baseline) was more prevalent in S/V than in non-S/V group (34% vs 26%, P = 0.017), while adverse LVR (aLVR, increase in ESVI at follow-up ≥ 15%) was more frequent in non-S/V than in S/V (16% vs 7%, P < 0.001). The beneficial effect of S/V on CR over other RAS inhibitors was appreciable across a wide range of patient's age and baseline end-diastolic volume index, but it tended to attenuate in more dilated left ventricles (P for interaction = NS for both). CONCLUSION: In HFrEF patients treated with beta-blockers, sacubitril/valsartan is associated with a relative greater benefit in LV reverse remodeling indices than other RAS inhibitors.

4.
J Cardiovasc Echogr ; 33(2): 95-97, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37772050

ABSTRACT

Right-sided infective endocarditis (IE), which represents a small but not negligible percentage of IE cases, can be observed in patients with congenital heart diseases. We discuss the case of a young woman with unrepaired perimembranous ventricular septal defect and repeated episodes of right ventricle and tricuspid valve IE with septic embolism.

5.
J Cardiovasc Echogr ; 33(3): 139-143, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38161771

ABSTRACT

Hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) is a systemic disorder with various manifestations, characterized by hypereosinophilia and caused by primary or secondary conditions. Loeffler's endocarditis (LE) represents a frequent cardiac manifestation of HES, caused by infiltration of the myocardium by eosinophilic cells, which determines endocardial damage, with subsequent inflammation, thrombosis, and fibrosis of either one or both ventricles. The diagnosis of cardiac involvement is based on a multimodality approach (i.e., two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography [2D-TTE], speckle-tracking echocardiography [STE], and cardiac magnetic resonance [CMR]), with different findings depending on the stage of disease. STE may be useful in the initial phase when traditional imaging techniques may result negative, whereas CMR allows myocardial tissue characterization along with a better definition of the right ventricle. We present a rare case of LE with isolated right ventricular involvement in a patient with HES caused by chronic eosinophilic leukemia with constitutively activated fusion tyrosine kinase on chromosome 4q12, successfully treated with imatinib mesylate.

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