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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38970594

ABSTRACT

3-dimensional (3D) intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) is emerging as a promising complement and potential alternative to transesophageal echocardiography for imaging guidance in structural heart interventions. To establish standardized practices, our multidisciplinary expert position statement serves as a comprehensive guide for the appropriate indications and utilization of 3D-ICE in various structural heart procedures. The paper covers essential aspects such as the fundamentals of 3D-ICE imaging, basic views, and workflow recommendations specifically tailored for ICE-guided structural heart procedures, such as transeptal puncture, device closure of intracardiac structures, and transcatheter mitral and tricuspid valve interventions. Current challenges, future directions, and training requirements to ensure operator proficiency are also discussed, thereby promoting the safety and efficacy of this innovative imaging modality to support expanding its future clinical applications.

2.
Clin Cardiol ; 45(12): 1236-1245, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36070481

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The number of MitraClip® implantations increased significantly in recent years. Data regarding the impact of weight class on survival are sparse. HYPOTHESIS: We hypothesized that weight class influences survival of patients treated with MitraClip® implantation. METHODS: We investigated in-hospital, 1-year, 3-year, and long-term survival of patients successfully treated with isolated MitraClip® implantation for mitral valve regurgitation (MR) (June 2010-March 2018). Patients were categorized by weight classes, and the impact of weight classes on survival was analyzed. RESULTS: Of 617 patients (aged 79.2 years; 47.3% females) treated with MitraClip® implantation (June 2010-March 2018), 12 patients were underweight (2.2%), 220 normal weight (40.1%), 237 overweight (43.2%), and 64 obesity class I (11.7%), 12 class II (2.2%), and 4 class III (0.7%). Preprocedural Logistic EuroScore (21.1 points [IQR 14.0-37.1]; 26.0 [18.5-38.5]; 26.0 [18.4-39.9]; 24.8 [16.8-33.8]; 33.0 [25.9-49.2]; 31.6 [13.1-47.6]; p = .291) was comparable between groups. Weight class had no impact on in-hospital death (0.0%; 4.1%; 1.5%; 0.0%; 7.7%; 0.0%; p = .189), 1-year survival (75.0%; 72.0%; 76.9%; 75.0%; 75.0%; 33.3%; p = .542), and 3-year survival (40.0%; 36.8%; 38.2%; 48.6%; 20.0%; 33.3%; p = .661). Compared to normal weight, underweight (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.35 [95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.65-2.79], p = .419), obesity-class I (HR: 0.93 [95% CI: 0.65-1.34], p = .705), class II (HR: 0.39 [95% CI: 0.12-1.24], p = .112), and class III (HR: 1.28 [95% CI: 0.32-5.21], p = .726) did not affect long-term survival. In contrast, overweight was associated with better survival (HR: 1.32 [95% CI: 1.04-1.68], p = .023). CONCLUSION: Overweight affected the long-term survival of patients undergoing MitraClip® implantation beneficially compared to normal weight.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Mitral Valve Insufficiency , Female , Humans , Male , Thinness/complications , Hospital Mortality , Overweight/complications , Treatment Outcome , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnosis , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/surgery , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/complications , Obesity/complications , Cardiac Catheterization/adverse effects
3.
Rev Cardiovasc Med ; 23(1): 20, 2022 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35092212

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Systemic inflammation can occur after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and correlates with adverse outcome. The impact of remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) on TAVR associated systemic inflammation is unknown and was focus of this study. METHODS: We performed a prospective controlled trial at a single center and included 66 patients treated with remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) prior to TAVR, who were matched to a control group by propensity score. RIPC was applied to the upper extremity using a conventional tourniquet. Definition of systemic inflammation was based on leucocyte count, C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT) and interleukin-6 (IL-6), assessed in the first 5 days following the TAVR procedure. Mortality was determined within 6 months after TAVR. RIPC group and matched control group showed comparable baseline characteristics. RESULTS: Systemic inflammation occurred in 66% of all patients after TAVR. Overall, survival after 6 months was significantly reduced in patients with systemic inflammation. RIPC, in comparison to control, did not significantly alter the plasma levels of leucocyte count, CRP, PCT or IL-6 within the first 5 days after TAVR. Furthermore, inflammation associated survival after 6 months was not improved by RIPC. Of all peri-interventional variables assessed, only the amount of the applied contrast agent was connected to the occurrence of systemic inflammation. CONCLUSIONS: Systemic inflammation frequently occurs after TAVR and leads to increased mortality after 6 months. RIPC neither reduces the incidence of systemic inflammation nor improves inflammation associated patient survival within 6 months.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve Stenosis , Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Ischemic Preconditioning , Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement , Aortic Valve Stenosis/surgery , Humans , Inflammation/diagnosis , Inflammation/prevention & control , Ischemic Preconditioning/adverse effects , Ischemic Preconditioning/methods , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement/adverse effects , Treatment Outcome
4.
Echocardiography ; 38(11): 1948-1958, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34729813

ABSTRACT

Intraprocedural transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) guidance plays an essential role in transcatheter repair therapy of the tricuspid valve (TV). So far, several different imaging concepts are in use. We propose an imaging protocol that fully addresses the morphological complexity of the TV and further offers efficacious workarounds for the frequently occurring restrictions of TV imaging in edge-to-edge repair of the TV. As a tertiary referral center with a large experience of more than 250 cases of transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) of the TV performed at the Heart Valve Center in Mainz/Germany, we have constantly adapted our peri-interventional echocardiographic approach to accomplish both. As a key measure for success, we intensely rely on the transgastric acoustic windows that not only deliver high-resolution information on the morphology of the TV and all relevant procedural steps but also help to avoid the frequent shadowing artifacts experienced in transesophageal imaging.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Tricuspid Valve Insufficiency , Cardiac Catheterization , Echocardiography , Echocardiography, Transesophageal , Humans , Tricuspid Valve/diagnostic imaging , Tricuspid Valve/surgery , Tricuspid Valve Insufficiency/surgery
6.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 8: 623146, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33816574

ABSTRACT

Objectives: We investigated performance and outcome of the latest-generation balloon-expandable SAPIEN 3 Ultra prosthesis (S3U) compared to the established SAPIEN 3 prosthesis (S3) in a real-world cohort, with focus on paravalvular regurgitation (PVR). Background: PVR is an adverse prognostic indicator of short- and long-term survival after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). The S3U has been designed to improve sealing. Methods: We enrolled 343 consecutive patients presenting with severe native aortic valve stenosis eligible for a balloon-expandable prosthesis. The established S3 was implanted in the first 200 patients, the following 143 patients received the novel S3U after introduction in our institution. Primary endpoint was PVR after TAVR. Furthermore, we investigated procedural parameters and in-hospital and 30-day outcome. Results: PVR was significantly lower in the S3U cohort compared to the S3 cohort. They differed in their rate of mild PVR (11.2 vs. 48.0%, p < 0.001), whereas at least moderate PVR was similarly low in both cohorts (0.7 vs. 0.5%, p = 0.811). A significant reduction of post-dilatation rate, fluoroscopy time, and amount of contrast was observed in patients treated with the novel S3U (p < 0.001). The rate of adverse events in the in-hospital course and at 30 days were similarly low. At 30 days more patients receiving S3U improved in NYHA class (improvement ≥2 grades 34.6 vs. 19.9%, p = 0.003). Conclusion: The current study provides evidence that the novel S3U strongly minimizes PVR, thereby demonstrating the efficacy of improved sealing. Further studies will have to address if the observed reduction of PVR with S3U has prognostic significance.

7.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv ; 97(3): E390-E401, 2021 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32531139

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Transcatheter mitral valve repair (TMVR) by edge-to-edge therapy is an established treatment for severe mitral valve regurgitation (MR). BACKGROUND: Symptomatic and prognostic benefit in functional MR has been shown recently; nevertheless, data on long-term outcomes are sparse. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analyzed survival of patients treated with isolated edge-to-edge repair from June 2010 to March 2018 (primarily combined edge-to-edge repair with other mitral valve interventions was excluded) in a retrospective monocentric study. Overall, 627 consecutive patients (47.0% females, 78.6 years in mean) were included. Leading etiology was functional MR (57.4%). Follow-up regarding survival was available in 97.0%. While 97.6% were discharged alive, 75.7% were alive after a 1-year, 54.5% after 3-year, 37.6% after 5-year and 21.7% after 7-year follow-up. Higher logistic Euroscores and comorbidities such as COPD and renal insufficiency were associated with higher in-hospital and 1-year mortality. Importantly, in-hospital survival increased over the years. CONCLUSIONS: With the present study we established high survival rates at discharge and after 1 year of patients treated with TMVR. This goes along with high implantation numbers, increased interventional experience and a better in-hospital survival over the years. Long-term mortality in turn was substantially influenced by comorbidities.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Mitral Valve Insufficiency , Cardiac Catheterization/adverse effects , Female , Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation/adverse effects , Humans , Male , Mitral Valve/diagnostic imaging , Mitral Valve/surgery , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnostic imaging , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/surgery , Retrospective Studies , Treatment Outcome
8.
ESC Heart Fail ; 7(6): 3336-3344, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32915515

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Several approaches for transcatheter mitral valve repair for functional mitral valve regurgitation are established. Interventional direct annuloplasty is a novel trans-venous, trans-septal approach. While feasibility was proven recently, knowledge on its influence on cardiac dimensions, pressures, biomarkers, and clinical outcomes is sparse. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients consecutively treated with direct annuloplasty-only procedures between December 2015 and April 2018 were included in this monocentric analysis. Echocardiographic measurements, biomarker levels, clinical status [New York Heart Association (NYHA) class and 6 min walk test] were assessed at baseline, at discharge, and at a 30 day follow-up. Overall, 18 patients (in mean 77.0 ± 7.4 years, 44.4% women) with initially all high-grade mitral valve regurgitation (MR) were included in this study. Procedural success rate was high (94.4%) without severe complications. Direct annuloplasty resulted in MR-reduction (post-procedural-MR mild or no/trace: 72.2%) and the proportion of patients with severe dyspnoea (NYHA III/IV) was reduced (88.9% vs. 50%, P = 0.008). Clinical results were associated with a relevant diminution of left atrial volumes (-16.5%, P < 0.001) and cardiac pressures [left atrial pressure (-32.3%, P = 0.019) and systolic pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP, -15.8%, P = 0.025)]. Patients with lower baseline levels of PAP (P = 0.022) as well as elevated highly sensitive troponin (P = 0.034) were more likely to archive clinical benefit (improvement in NYHA class ≥1 grade) after 1 month, which could not be correlated with the grade of MR-reduction. CONCLUSIONS: Transcatheter mitral valve repair by direct annuloplasty results in a relevant reduction of intracardiac pressures, left atrial volumes, dyspnoea, and MR. Lower PAP and higher troponin values at baseline could be associated to dyspnoea reduction.

9.
Echocardiography ; 37(9): 1436-1442, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32777134

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Several interventional approaches have been established for the treatment of severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients at elevated risk for surgery. Direct annuloplasty is a relatively novel option in transcatheter mitral valve repair dedicated to reverse pathology in specific subsets of MR. With regard to echocardiographic guidance, this procedure presents with higher efforts in comparison with edge-to-edge therapy to enable safe and exact positioning of the device's anchors; evidence on optimal peri-interventional imaging is sparse. We tested a specific 3D-echo-guidance protocol implementing single-beat multiplanar reconstruction (MPR) and evaluated its feasibility. METHODS: Overall, 16 patients consecutively treated with transcatheter direct annuloplasty for severe MR (87.5% functional/6.3% degenerative/6.3% mixed pathology) were entered in this monocentric analysis. Of these, two patients received a combined procedure including edge-to-edge repair. For all implantations, a 3D-echo-guidance protocol inheriting MPR was employed. RESULTS: Periprocedural device time decreased continuously (overall mean 140 ± 55.1 minutes, 213 ± 38 minutes in the first 4 vs 108 ± 33 minutes in the last 4 procedures, P = .018) using the MPR-based echo protocol, going along with reduced fluoroscopy times and doses. Technical success rate was high (93.8%) without any serious cardiac-related adverse events. MR could be relevantly improved. CONCLUSION: Echocardiographic guidance of transcatheter direct annuloplasty using a real time MPR-based protocol is feasible and safe. Optimized imaging might enable reduced implantation times and potentially increases safety.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Mitral Valve Annuloplasty , Mitral Valve Insufficiency , Cardiac Catheterization , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnostic imaging , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/surgery , Treatment Outcome
10.
J Clin Med ; 9(1)2020 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31936060

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Peri-interventional myocardial injury occurs frequently during transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). We assessed the effect of remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) on myocardial injury, acute kidney injury (AKIN) and 6-month mortality in patients undergoing TAVI. METHODS: We performed a prospective single-center controlled trial. Sixty-six patients treated with RIPC prior to TAVI were enrolled in the study and were matched to a control group by propensity-score. RIPC was applied to the upper extremity using a conventional tourniquet. Myocardial injury was assessed using high-sensitive troponin-T (hsTnT), and kidney injury was assessed using serum creatinine levels. Data were compared with the Wilcoxon-Rank and McNemar tests. Mortality was analysed with the log-rank test. RESULTS: TAVI led to a significant rise of hsTnT across all patients (p < 0.001). No significant inter-group difference in maximum troponin release or areas-under-the-curve was detected. Medtronic CoreValve and Edwards Sapien valves showed similar peri-interventional troponin kinetics and patients receiving neither valve did benefit from RIPC. AKIN occurred in one RIPC patient and four non-RIPC patients (p = 0.250). No significant difference in 6-month mortality was observed. No adverse events related to RIPC were recorded. CONCLUSION: Our data do not show a beneficial role of RIPC in TAVI patients for cardio- or renoprotection, or improved survival.

11.
J Am Soc Echocardiogr ; 32(10): 1359-1365, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31320267

ABSTRACT

Transcatheter direct annuloplasty has been introduced as a novel interventional treatment option for severe mitral valve regurgitation. Until now, only one direct annuloplasty device (Edwards Cardioband) has been commercially available, being implanted in more than 250 patients worldwide. Yet this procedure poses greater challenges regarding optimal fluoroscopic and echocardiographic guidance compared with edge-to-edge repair: correct localization and orientation of the anchors upon penetration into the fibrous mitral annulus tissue and the basal left ventricular myocardium are preconditions for an optimal result and essential to avoid damage of the neighboring structures (atrioventricular node, circumflex artery, coronary sinus). Real-time single-beat multiplanar reconstruction has become available as an additional imaging tool for three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography in most recent echo machines. In this review, we introduce a three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography-based imaging protocol implementing real-time multiplanar reconstruction for transcatheter direct annuloplasty procedures, which optimizes and also simplifies echocardiographic guidance during the implantation. The advanced echocardiographic protocol might also help to expedite implantation times and potentially increase the safety of the procedure. In this "how-to" article, we describe in detail this novel approach for optimized guidance and compare its advantages and challenges to "conventional" echocardiographic imaging for transcatheter mitral valve repair.


Subject(s)
Cardiac Catheterization/methods , Echocardiography, Three-Dimensional , Echocardiography, Transesophageal , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Mitral Valve Annuloplasty/methods , Mitral Valve Insufficiency/surgery , Surgery, Computer-Assisted , Humans
12.
Clin Invest Med ; 32(3): E219-28, 2009 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19480738

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Increased flux of glucose via the polyol pathway, oxidative stress and ischaemia lead to the upregulation of the aldose reductase (AR), the key enzyme of the polyol pathway. This adversely affects the organism and can in part be reduced by inhibition of the enzyme. METHODS: In this study, we examined the effect of the HMG-CoA-reductase inhibitor atorvastatin on the expression of aldose reductase (AR, AKR1B1), aldehyde reductase (AldR, AKR1A1) and small intestine reductase (SIR, AKR1B10) in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and human proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTEC) by RT-PCR. RESULTS: In HUVEC, atorvastatin reduces the expression of aldehyde reductase and aldose reductase compared with control medium (-20% and -12% respectively, P < 0.05), while small intestine reductase is not expressed. In PTEC no regulation of aldehyde reductase and aldose reductase by atorvastatin could be measured, while the expression of small intestine reductase was reduced by 37% compared with control medium (P < 0.05). The reduction observed was not abolished by the addition of mevalonic acid. CONCLUSION: The reduction of members of the aldo-keto-reductase family by atorvastatin is a novel way to influence the polyol pathway and a new pleiotropic effect of atorvastatin.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Oxidoreductases/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic/drug effects , Heptanoic Acids/pharmacology , Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Polymers/metabolism , Pyrroles/pharmacology , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Aldehyde Reductase/genetics , Aldo-Keto Reductases , Atorvastatin , Cells, Cultured , Humans , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Signal Transduction/genetics
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