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1.
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-216091

ABSTRACT

Rheumatic Fever (RF)/ Rheumatic Heart Disease (RHD) is the result of autoimmune response triggered by group A Beta-haemolytic streptococcal pharyngitis leading to immune-inflammatory injury to cardiac valves. It is practically disappeared in developed countries. However, it continues to be a major cause of disease burden among children, adolescents, and young adults in low-income countries and even in high-income countries with socioeconomic inequalities. For decades, many cases of Acute Rheumatic Fever (ARF) and RHD were missed and were denied the secondary prophylaxis, as a result these patients used to end up with complications and untimely death. Advanced understanding of the echocardiography can prevent both under diagnosis and over diagnosis and thus help in management strategy. Another new advancement in recent past is the mitral valve repair, which is technically demanding, and the results are acceptable in experienced cardiac surgical units. Whenever feasible, valve repair should be preferred over valve replacement since it precludes the need for anticoagulation and future risks of prosthesis dysfunction.

2.
Indian Heart J ; 2018 Nov; 70(6): 915-921
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-191642

ABSTRACT

Patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) exhibit an increased risk for cardiovascular (CV) events. Hyperglycemia itself contributes to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and heart failure (HF) in these patients, but glucose-lowering strategies studied to date have had little or no impact on reducing CV risk, especially in patients with a long duration of T2DM and prevalent CV disease (CVD). Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors are the new class of glucose-lowering medications that increase urinary glucose excretion, thus improving glycemic control, independent of insulin. The recently published CV outcome trial, Empagliflozin Cardiovascular Outcome Event Trial in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Patients—Removing Excess Glucose (EMPA-REG OUTCOME), demonstrated that the SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin significantly reduced the combined CV end point of CV death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and nonfatal stroke vs. placebo in a population of patients with T2DM and prevalent atherosclerotic CVD. In addition, and quite unexpectedly, empagliflozin significantly and robustly reduced the individual end points of CV death, overall mortality, and hospitalization for HF in this high-risk population. Several beneficial factors beyond glucose control, such as weight loss, lowering blood pressure, sodium depletion, renal hemodynamic effects, effects on myocardial energetics, and/or neurohormonal effects, have been seen with SGLT2 inhibition.

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