Soluble Neprilysin, NT-proBNP, and Growth-Differentiation-Factor-15 as Biomarkers for Heart Failure...
Heart FailureEnd Stage Renal DiseaseObjectives: The aim of this study is to determine whether growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF15) and circulating neprilysin (cNEP) improve the diagnosis of congestive heart failure (HF) in patients on dialysis. Background: Dialysis patients are at increased risk of HF. However, diagnostic utility of NT-proBNP as a biomarker is decreased in patients on dialysis. GDF15 and cNEP are biomarkers of distinct mechanisms that may contribute to HF pathophysiology in such cohorts. Methods: We compare circulating concentrations of NT-proBNP, GDF15, and cNEP along with NEP activity in patients on chronic dialysis without and with HF, as diagnosed by clinical parameters and post-dialysis echocardiography. We use correlation, linear and logistic regression as well as receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses.
Effectiveness of Oral Anticoagulants in Elderly Patients With Non-Valvular Atrial Fibrillation and...
Atrial FibrillationHeart FailureObservational study of elderly individuals diagnosed with Non-Valvular Atrial Fibrillation and Heart Failure who are beginning oral blood thinners
Different Loop Gain Phenotypes in Patients With Chronic Systolic Heart Failure and Periodic Breathing...
Periodic BreathingCentral sleep apnoea (CSA) is common in patients with chronic systolic heart failure (HFrEF). Various trials have shown a prevalence of 21 - 37% in this group of people. Up to 66% of patients with CSA and HFrEF present with periodic breathing (PB), which is considered being a marker of HF severity and poor prognosis. Brack et al. summarized data from cohorts, longitudinal studies and retrospective analyses showing an independently increased risk of death in HF patients with PB (HR 2.1-5.7 in five of seven studies). Furthermore, PB in HF patients is known to reduce quality of life and exercise performance and to increase sympathetic nerve activity as well as the probability of malignant cardiac arrhythmias. The pathogenesis of PB is characterized by an instability of ventilatory drive. The level of carbon dioxide (CO2) in blood and cerebrospinal fluid correlates linearly with minute ventilation. A high level of CO2 increases ventilation while hypocapnia dampens it. This control theory is based on the loop gain (LG), which represents the sensitivity and reactivity of the ventilatory system and comprises three components: The plant gain defines the capacity of the system to change PaCO2 in response to a change in ventilation (metabolic response). It is influenced by the lung volume as well as the anatomy of the thorax and the upper airways. The feedback gain is defined by the chemoreceptor responsiveness in reaction to blood gas changes. The controller gain is represented by the respiratory control center in the brain stem and defines the capacity of the system to change ventilation in response to a change in PaCO2 (ventilatory response). Sands et al. proposed and validated a mathematical model based on the ventilatory cycle pattern that quantifies the feedback loop. The ratio of ventilatory and cycle duration within the PB pattern is defined as the duty ratio (DR), which is the basis to calculate the LG. Any temporary breathing disturbance causing a PB pattern with a LG < 1 stabilizes within a few breathing cycles. A LG > 1 represents an unstable ventilatory response and slight changes of CO2 are accompanied by overshooting and undershooting of the ventilation. In that case, the polysomnography shows the typical pattern of waxing and waning of the tidal volume and effort. HF patients typically present with an increased LG due to an impaired left ventricular function and a hyperstimulation of pulmonary vagal receptors. Furthermore, Khoo showed an increased chemosensitivity (controller gain) as well as a decreased ventilatory capacity (plant gain) in this group of people. Sands and colleagues characterized PB considering the mean LG derived from several ventilatory cycles during non-REM sleep. This retrospective study of PB in HFrEF patients addresses the following questions: Is a single LG value appropriate to characterize the individual PB? Does the LG depend on sleep stage and body position? Does the intraindividual LG variability allow for the discrimination of different PB phenotypes and, if so, do these phenotypes differ in further characteristics?
Registry Study of ID & IDA in Korean Patients With Heart Failure
Iron Deficiency AnemiaThe prevalence of Iron Deficiency and Iron Deficiency Anemia in Korean HF patient
Effort-Lung Ultra Sound
Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection FractionThe E-LUS study is a prospective, non randomised, monocenter case-control study. The main objective is to evaluate the association of exercise lung ultrasound data acquired during a stress test on a bicycle ergometer with the diagnosis of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).
Oxygen Pulse and Its Curve Patterns in Male Patients With Heart Failure and Chronic Obstructive...
OutcomeFatalBackground: In non-invasive cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), oxygen pulse (O2P) is defined as oxygen uptake divided by heart rate and is equal to the product of stroke volume and oxygen extraction by cells. As per, the O2P indicates the capability of oxygen consumption of whole body tissues and cells per heart beat. During exercise, the O2P changes can be deemed as the stroke volume changes as the oxygen extraction by muscle cells are normal. Hence, CPET-O2P can be non-invasively and continuously used to monitor the stroke volume changes during exercise. O2P value (i.e., % of predicted) is related to the severity and prognosis of heart failure and to the severity of constraint of the heart caused by exercise-induced hyperinflation or air trapping in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, O2P plateau pattern is not uncommonly encountered in the daily practice. Hypothesis and aims: O2P patterns during incremental exercise are seldom investigated although they have been hypothesized that the plateau or decreasing patterns are related to myocardial failure or ischemia. In this proposal, the O2P patterns are to be thoroughly investigated: (1) the patterns in norms, patients with heart failure and COPD, (2) the relationship between the O2P pattern and cardiac function and/or myocardial ischemia in patients with heart failure and COPD. As yet there are no relative reports on the O2P pattern and its possible mechanisms in the literature, the results of the proposal might tremendously impact the interpretation strategy of CPET reports. Methods: Multidisciplinary, prospective, comparative cross-sectional study is designed. Subjects aged from 40-85 years with the BMI of 18-28kg/m2 are to be enrolled: sample sizes of the norms, heart failure and COPD groups are 10, 20, and 20, respectively, equally distributed in two years. The definitions of COPD and heart failure with NYHA class I-III are according to the GOLD and ESC guidelines, respectively。All the three groups undergo CPET-NIRS, echocardiography, and the first pass and myocardial perfusion studies using Tc-99. The primary measurements are the O2P patterns and the cardiac function measured with echocardiography, the first pass and myocardial perfusion studies and air trapping in the lungs.。 Statistical analysis: For normal continuous data, t-test or ANOVA is used. For non-normal data, the Mann-Whitney test is used. The chi-square test or Fisher's exact test is used to compare the proportion of categorical variables between the two groups. A p value of less than .05 is considered to be statistically significant. Statistical procedures are performed using the SAS software package version 9.3.
Outcomes of Patients With Heart Failure Hospitalized in an Internal Medicine Unit
Heart FailureIn 2018, the investigators evaluated the treatment of 236 patients with heart failure (with preserved or reduced ejection fraction) before and after hospitalization in our internal medicine unit (from 2016 to 2017). The investigators showed that patients, mainly elderly women with comorbidities, often had suboptimal heart failure treatment without an identified cause. The investigators tried, whenever possible, to optimize treatment before hospital discharge. Our objective is now to analyze the 4-year outcome of these patients, including re-hospitalization for heart failure or death.
Right Ventricular Failure After Implantation of Left Ventricular Assist Devices
Heart FailureThe left ventricular assist device (LVAD) is a portable mechanical pump that helps the left side of the heart of patients with severe heart failure that are awaiting heart transplantation or are not transplant candidates. However, while LVAD supports the left side of the heart, the right side must work on its own. Sometimes the right side does not recover, a condition called right ventricular failure (RVF). This complication increases mortality, prolongs hospitalization, requires additional procedures, and increases costs. Several risk factors and scores have been proposed to identify patients at risk for RVF. However, these methods have proven inadequate; one out of three patients is still experiencing right ventricular failure after LVAD surgery. Echocardiography, an established noninvasive method to see the heart without radiation or risk, has a lot of potential to identify patients at risk for RVF. The questions we will tray to answer with this American Heart Association funded project are: Can echocardiography before scheduled LVAD surgery predict who is going to develop RVF and poor quality of life so we can better select patients for LVAD surgery? Can echocardiography before scheduled LVAD surgery tell us the course of right ventricular function after implantation so we can potentially take additional measures and prevent RVF? To answer these questions, we will record images of the heart with echocardiography before LVAD surgery in 120 LVAD recipients at Emory University. We will then follow the patients for 90 days to detect any symptoms and signs of clinical RVF and poor quality of life and record the course of right ventricular function with echocardiography. Currently, it is estimated that 150,000 to 250,000 patients in US are potential LVAD recipients with 2,000 devices implanted in 2012. LVAD can improve survival and quality of life in suitable patients. However, implantation requires a major surgical procedure with associated risks and considerable resources. Thus, careful patient selection is necessary to minimize risk for patients and maximize benefit for patients and society. Our long-term goal is to use echocardiography as a tool to (1) optimally select patients for LVAD and offer alternatives to patients at increased risk for complications and (2) potentially, inform earlier LVAD implantation in patients with weakening right ventricular function.
Verizon Wireless - Sarasota Memorial Hospital Converged Health Management (CHM) For Heart Failure...
Heart FailureThe primary objective is to evaluate the impact on heart failure related quality of life when integrating a mobile health system, Verizon Wireless's Converged Health Management (CHM), into a subject's self-management of their heart failure (HF) as well as in the medical management of HF by the subjects' clinical team.
Studies Investigating Co-morbidities Aggravating Heart Failure
Heart FailureType 2 Diabetes MellitusSICA-HF is a prospective, multicentre, multinational, longitudinal, pathophysiological evaluation study, which is being conducted in 11 centres across six countries. SICA-HF receives funding from the European commission's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 241558 (SICA-HF) and from the Russian Ministry of Science and Education within the file transfer protocol "R&D in priority fields of the S&T complex of Russia 2007-2012" under state contract number 02.527.11.0007. The aim of SICA-HF is to provide detailed characteristics of co-morbidities of heart failure at baseline and over time, particularly with regards to obesity, cachexia, and type 2 diabetes.