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530 result(s) for "Y-Hassan, S."
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Effect of Myocardial Infarction With Nonobstructive Coronary Arteries on Physical Capacity and Quality-of-Life
Patients with myocardial infarction with nonobstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA), including Takotsubo syndrome (TS), are considered to have a better survival compared with those with coronary heart disease (CHD). Studies of patients with MINOCA measuring physical and mental function including matched control groups are lacking. The aim of this study was to determine the physical capacity and quality of life in patients with MINOCA. One-hundred patients with MINOCA along with TS (25%) were investigated from 2007 to 2011. A bicycle exercise stress test was performed 6 weeks after hospitalization and QoL was investigated by the Short Form Survey 36 at 3 months' follow-up. Both a healthy and a CHD group that were age and gender matched were used as controls. The MINOCA group had a lower physical capacity (139 ± 42 W) compared with the healthy control group (167 ± 53 W, p <0.001) but better than the CHD control group (124 ± 39 W, p = 0.023). Patients with MINOCA had lower physical and mental component summary scores compared with the healthy controls (p <0.001) and lower mental component summary (p = 0.012), mental health (p = 0.016), and vitality (p = 0.008) scores compared with the CHD controls. In conclusion, the findings of this first study on exercise capacity and QoL in patients with MINOCA showed both physical and mental distress from 6 weeks to 3 months after the acute event similar to CHD controls and in some perspectives even lower scores especially in the mental component of QoL.
The value of a new cardiac magnetic resonance imaging protocol in Myocardial Infarction with Non-obstructive Coronary Arteries (MINOCA) – a case-control study using historical controls from a previous study with similar inclusion criteria
Background Myocardial Infarction with Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries (MINOCA) is common with a prevalence of 6% of all patients fulfilling the diagnosis of myocardial infarction. MINOCA should be considered a working diagnosis. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) imaging has recently been suggested to be of great value to determine the cause behind MINOCA. The objectives of this paper are to describe the rationale behind the second Stockholm Myocardial Infarction with Normal Coronaries (SMINC-2) study and to discuss the protocol for investigation of MINOCA patients in the light of the recently published position paper from the European Society of Cardiology. Methods The SMINC-2 study is an open non-randomised study using historical controls for comparison. The primary aim is to prove that MINOCA patients investigated with the latest CMR imaging technique can achieve a diagnosis in 70% of all cases entirely by imaging. By including 150 patients we will have >80% chance to prove that the diagnostic accuracy can be improved by 20 absolute % with a p -value of less than 0.05 when compared with CMR imaging in the SMINC-1 study. Furthermore, in addition to invasive coronary angiography, coronary arteries are evaluated by computed tomography angiography to investigate coronary causes and questionnaires are used to describe Quality-of-Life (QoL). By January 1st 2017, 75 patients have been included. Discussion Whether CMR imaging can provide a diagnosis to an adequate proportion of MINOCA patients is unknown. Well-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria will be used to compare a MINOCA cohort from the population with an appropriate control group. Positive results are likely to influence future guidelines of the management of MINOCA. Furthermore, the study will give mechanistic insights into MINOCA in particular in patients with “true” myocardial infarction and describe QoL in this vulnerable group of patients. Trial registration Clinical Trials NCT02318498 .
STABILITY ANALYSIS AND ESTIMATION SOME GENETIC PARAAMETERS FOR GRAIN YIELD AND ITS COMPONENTS FOR SOME DURUM WHEAT GENOTYPES
Four durum wheat genotypes exotic from ICARDA and local variety were sown in agricultural season of 2015-2016, 2016-2017, and 2017-2018, using Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD) with three replications. The result of the combined analysis of variance exhibited that the mean square of environments, genotypes and to evaluate their stability for genotypes x environment interaction (G X E) were significant for all traits, suggesting differential response of genotypes due to environment. When by partitioning G X E interaction in to the linear and non-linear (pooled deviation) components, that differences between environments (environment linear) were highly significant for all traits. For the GXE interaction linear, the results indicated that all traits were not significant except 1000-grain weight, The result also indicated that the durum wheat genotypes produced homogeneity for the most studied traits and much variation was noted in plant height and days to maturity. The genotype Miki-3 was superior in hectoliter and plant height and grain yield which gave 84.88 kgL/1000 87 and 2.37 T/ha respectively. The results exhibited that the phenotypic variation was more than the genotypic variation indicating that, the characters more affected by environments. For heritability in broad sense, the results showed moderate value for plant height and days to flowering and low for the rest traits. The genetic advance as the mean was low for all traits with the values ranged between 1.20 to 7.52 for hectoliter and 1000-grain weight. The lowest differences in genotypic and phenotypic coefficient of variability in the three seasons, this indicated that large amount of variation was contributed by environmental influence and low by genetic components. For stability analysis, the results indicated that the genotypes Miki3 and Simeto gave the best stability according to all parameters of stability with other genotypes and these genotypes gave highest value of grain yield 2.37 and 2.18.
Quality characteristics of Turkish delight enriched with different cooked pulses
The objective of the current study was to assess the effect of incorporating cooked pulses (white, red, and brown beans, hulled lentils, and green pea seeds) into the Turkish delight formula as natural colorants and high sources of protein and to evaluate their physicochemical, textural, microbiological, and sensory characteristics. The results revealed that enriching Turkish delights with cooked pulses significantly improved their nutritional quality, with protein content ranging from 4.53 to 6.53%, crude fiber from 0.25 to 0.54%, and antioxidant activity from 18.50 to 32.59%. Phenolic content increased up to 47.82 mg/100 g as gallic acid equivalents (GAE). Hardness (10.90–14.30 N) and gumminess (7.40–8.93 N) increased without compromising cohesiveness or springiness. During the four-week storage period at 25 ± 2 °C, the total sugars, hardness, and gumminess of Turkish delight increased with the addition of cooked pulses, while lightness, yellowness, titratable acidity, and water activity values decreased compared to the control. Sensory evaluations highlighted the high acceptability of sensorial parameters for Turkish delights containing hulled lentils, green peas, and brown beans. During a four-week storage period, microbial counts gradually increased, with a slight decrease in growth at the end of the storage period, and remained within acceptable limits. These findings demonstrated that cooked pulses could serve as natural colorants and protein-rich ingredients in confectionery products, offering a healthier alternative to artificial additives while enhancing nutritional value, maintaining sensory appeal, and meeting consumer needs.
Epidemiology, pathogenesis, and management of takotsubo syndrome
Takotsubo syndrome is a recently recognized acute cardiac disease entity with a clinical presentation resembling that of an acute coronary syndrome. The typical takotsubo syndrome patient has a unique circumferential left (bi-) ventricular contraction abnormality profile that extends beyond a coronary artery supply territory and appears to follow the anatomical cardiac sympathetic innervation. The syndrome predominantly affects postmenopausal women and is often preceded by emotional or physical stress. Patients with predisposing factors such as malignancy and other chronic comorbidities are more prone to suffer from takotsubo syndrome. The pathogenesis of takotsubo syndrome is elusive. Several pathophysiological mechanisms involving myocardial ischemia (multivessel coronary artery spasm, microvascular dysfunction, aborted myocardial infarction), left ventricular outlet tract obstruction, blood-borne catecholamine myocardial toxicity, epinephrine-induced switch in signal trafficking, and autonomic nervous system dysfunction have been proposed. The syndrome is usually reversible; nevertheless, during the acute stage, a substantial number of patients develop severe complications such as arrhythmias, heart failure including pulmonary edema and cardiogenic shock, thromboembolism, cardiac arrest, and rupture. Treatment of precipitating factors, predisposing diseases, and complications is fundamental during the acute stage of the disease. The epidemiology, pathogenesis, and management of takotsubo syndrome are reviewed in this paper.
Cardiovascular Manifestations and Complications of Pheochromocytomas and Paragangliomas
Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) are rare neuro-endocrine tumors. The catecholamine surge causes paroxysmal or chronic secondary hypertension. PPGLs may present as hypertensive- or PPGL-crisis with severe life-threatening cardiac and cerebrovascular complications. PPGLs-induced cardiac manifestations have been reported with diagnoses as PPGLs-induced electrocardiogram (ECG) changes “mimicking acute myocardial infarction”, arrhythmias, myocarditis, acute coronary syndrome, dilated cardiomyopathy, and lately as takotsubo syndrome. Critical analysis of these reports reveals that most of these cardiac manifestations have certain features in common. They have a dramatic clinical presentation and are reversible if the disease is treated with appropriate medical therapy and surgical resection of the PPGL tumor. They may have the same repolarization ECG changes irrespective of the clinical cardiac diagnosis, usually associated with mild to moderate elevations of myocardial biomarkers as troponins and normal coronary arteries. The histopathological findings are usually focal or multifocal in the form hypercontracted sarcomeres and contraction band necrosis (myofibrillar degeneration) with subsequent secondary mononuclear cell infiltration. Evidences argue the PPGL caused surge of catecholamines triggers hyperactivation of the sympathetic nervous system with cardiac sympathetic nerve terminal disruption with norepinephrine spillover causing the cardiac complications. A comprehensive review of various reported cardiovascular manifestations and complications of PPGLs are presented.
Clinical features, complications, and outcomes of exogenous and endogenous catecholamine‐triggered Takotsubo syndrome: A systematic review and meta‐analysis of 156 published cases
Innumerable physical stress factors including externally administered catecholamines, and pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) have been reported to trigger Takotsubo syndrome (TS). A systematic search of PubMed/MEDLINE identified 156 patients with catecholamine‐induced TS up to December 2017. Data were compared within the catecholamine‐induced TS cohort, but some comparisons were also done to a previously published large all‐TS cohort (n = 1750). The mean age was 46.4 ± 16.4 years (72.3% women). The clinical presentation was dramatic with high complication rates in (68.2%, n = 103; multiple complications 34.6%, n = 54). The most common TS ballooning pattern was apical or mid‐apical (45.2%, n = 69), followed by basal pattern (28.8%, n = 45), global pattern (16.0%, n = 25), mid‐ventricular (8.3%, n = 13), focal (0.6%, n = 1), and unidentified pattern (1.9%, n = 3). There was an increase in the prevalence of apical sparing ballooning pattern compared to all‐TS population (37.7% vs 18.3%, P < .00001). Higher complication rates were observed in TS with global ballooning pattern compared to apical ballooning pattern (23/25, 92% vs 38/65, 58.5%; P = .0022). Higher complication rates were observed in patients with age < 50 years than patients >50 years (73/92, 79.3% vs 29/56, 51.8%, P = 0.0009). Recurrence occurred exclusively in patients with PPGL‐induced TS (18/107 patients, 16.8%). PPGL‐induced TS was characterized by more global ballooning's pattern (22/104, 21.2% vs 3/49, 6.1%, P = 0.02), and lower left ventricular ejection fraction (25.54 ± 11.3 vs 31.82 ± 9.93, P = 0.0072) compared to exogenous catecholamine‐induced TS. In conclusion, catecholamine‐induced TS was characterized by a dramatic clinical presentation with extensive left ventricular dysfunction, and high complication rate.
Thrombo‐embolic complications in takotsubo syndrome: Review and demonstration of an illustrative case
Thrombo‐embolism is one of the serious complications of takotsubo syndrome (TS) in addition to heart failure, pulmonary edema, cardiogenic shock, cardiac arrest, life‐threatening arrhythmias, left ventricular outlet tract obstruction, mitral regurgitation, cardiac rupture, and death. The most common cardio‐embolic events in TS are cerebral, renal, and peripheral embolism. Approximately, one‐third of patients with left ventricular thrombus (LVT) in TS develop embolic complications. Cardio‐embolism in TS may occur with or without the presence of detectable LVT. In the present report, the thrombo‐embolic complications in TS with the emphasis on the association of TS to both acute coronary syndrome (ACS) including coronary embolism and ischemic stroke including cerebral embolism are reviewed. This serious complication is elucidated by demonstration of the case of a 67‐year‐woman with mid‐apical TS complicated by LVT, left anterior descending artery (LAD) and left middle cerebral artery (segment M2) thrombo‐embolic occlusions. The cerebral artery thrombotic occlusion was treated successfully with endovascular thrombectomy with complete resolution of the neurological deficits. There was spontaneous recanalization of the apical LAD occlusion verified by cardiac computed tomography angiography.
Plasma catecholamine levels in the acute and subacute stages of takotsubo syndrome: Results from the Stockholm myocardial infarction with normal coronaries 2 study
Aims It is well‐accepted that takotsubo syndrome (TS) is characterized by a massive surge of plasma catecholamines despite lack of solid evidence. The objective of this study was to examine the hypothesis of a massive catecholamine elevation in TS by studying plasma‐free catecholamine metabolites in patients participating in the Stockholm myocardial infarction (MI) with normal coronaries 2 (SMINC‐2) study where TS constituted more than one third of the patients. Methods and results The patients included in the SMINC‐2 study were classified, according to cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging findings (148 patients), which was performed at a median of 3 days after hospital admission. Plasma‐free catecholamine metabolites; metanephrine, normetanephrine, and methoxy‐tyramine were measured on day 2–4 after admission. Catecholamine metabolite levels were available in 125 patients. One hundred and ten (88%) of the 125 patients included in SMINC‐2 study, and 38 (86.4%) of the 44 patients with TS had completely normal plasma metanephrine and normetanephrine levels. All patients had normal plasma methoxy‐tyramine levels. Fourteen (11.2%) of the 125 patients included in SMINC‐2 study, and 5 (11.6%) of the 43 patients with TS had mild elevations (approximately 1.2 times the upper normal limits) of either plasma metanephrine or normetanephrine. One patient with pheochromocytoma‐triggered TS had marked elevation of plasma metanephrine and mild elevation of plasma normetanephrine. There were no significant differences between the number or degree of catecholamine metabolite elevations between the different groups of patients with CMR imaging diagnosis included in SMINC‐2 study. Conclusion There was no evidence of massive catecholamine elevations in the acute and subacute stages of TS apart from one patient with pheochromocytoma‐induced TS. Most of the TS patients had normal catecholamine metabolites indicating that blood‐borne catecholamines do not play a direct role in the pathogenesis of TS.