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14,848
result(s) for
"cardiovascular defects"
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Germline variants in HEY2 functional domains lead to congenital heart defects and thoracic aortic aneurysms
by
Wilsdon, Anna
,
Dombrowsky, Gregor
,
Christoffels, Vincent M.
in
Aneurysms
,
Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic - genetics
,
Aortic aneurysms
2021
In this study we aimed to establish the genetic cause of a myriad of cardiovascular defects prevalent in individuals from a genetically isolated population, who were found to share a common ancestor in 1728.
Trio genome sequencing was carried out in an index patient with critical congenital heart disease (CHD); family members had either exome or Sanger sequencing. To confirm enrichment, we performed a gene-based association test and meta-analysis in two independent validation cohorts: one with 2685 CHD cases versus 4370 . These controls were also ancestry-matched (same as FTAA controls), and the other with 326 cases with familial thoracic aortic aneurysms (FTAA) and dissections versus 570 ancestry-matched controls. Functional consequences of identified variants were evaluated using expression studies.
We identified a loss-of-function variant in the Notch target transcription factor-encoding gene HEY2. The homozygous state (n = 3) causes life-threatening congenital heart defects, while 80% of heterozygous carriers (n = 20) had cardiovascular defects, mainly CHD and FTAA of the ascending aorta. We confirm enrichment of rare risk variants in HEY2 functional domains after meta-analysis (MetaSKAT p = 0.018). Furthermore, we show that several identified variants lead to dysregulation of repression by HEY2.
A homozygous germline loss-of-function variant in HEY2 leads to critical CHD. The majority of heterozygotes show a myriad of cardiovascular defects.
Journal Article
Broad Spectrum epidemiological contribution of cannabis and other substances to the teratological profile of northern New South Wales: geospatial and causal inference analysis
by
Reece, Albert Stuart
,
Hulse, Gary Kenneth
in
Alcohols
,
Atrial septal defect
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2020
Background
Whilst cannabis commercialization is occurring rapidly guided by highly individualistic public narratives, evidence that all congenital anomalies (CA) increase alongside cannabis use in Canada, a link with 21 CA’s in Hawaii, and rising CA’s in Colorado indicate that transgenerational effects can be significant and impact public health. It was therefore important to study Northern New South Wales (NNSW) where cannabis use is high.
Methods
Design: Cohort. 2008–2015. Setting: NNSW and Queensland (QLD), Australia. Participants. Whole populations. Exposures. Tobacco, alcohol, cannabis. Source: National Drug Strategy Household Surveys 2010, 2013. Main Outcomes. CA Rates. NNSW-QLD comparisons. Geospatial and causal regression.
Results
Cardiovascular, respiratory and gastrointestinal anomalies rose with falling tobacco and alcohol but rising cannabis use rates across Queensland. Maternal age NNSW-QLD was not different (2008–2015: 4265/22084 v. 96,473/490514 > 35 years/total, Chi.Sq. = 1.687,
P
= 0.194). A higher rate of NNSW cannabis-related than cannabis-unrelated defects occurred (prevalence ratio (PR) = 2.13, 95%C.I. 1.80–2.52,
P
= 3.24 × 10
− 19
). CA’s rose more potently with rising cannabis than with rising tobacco or alcohol use. Exomphalos and gastroschisis had the highest NNSW:QLD PR (6.29(2.94–13.48) and 5.85(3.54–9.67)) and attributable fraction in the exposed (84.11%(65.95–92.58%) and 82.91%(71.75–89.66%),
P
= 2.83 × 10
− 8
and
P
= 5.62 × 10
− 15
). In multivariable geospatial models cannabis was significantly linked with cardiovascular (atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, tetralogy of Fallot, patent ductus arteriosus), genetic (chromosomal defects, Downs syndrome), gastrointestinal (small intestinal atresia), body wall (gastroschisis, diaphragmatic hernia) and other (hypospadias) (AVTPCDSGDH) CA’s. In linear modelling cannabis use was significantly linked with anal stenosis, congenital hydrocephalus and Turner syndrome (ACT) and was significantly linked in borderline significant models (model
P
< 0.1) with microtia, microphthalmia, and transposition of the great vessels. At robust and mixed effects inverse probability weighted multivariable regression cannabis was related to 18 defects. 16/17 E-Values in spatial models were > 1.25 ranging up to 5.2 × 10
13
making uncontrolled confounding unlikely.
Conclusions
These results suggest that population level CA’s react more strongly to small rises in cannabis use than tobacco or alcohol; cardiovascular, chromosomal, body wall and gastrointestinal CA’s rise significantly with small increases in cannabis use; that cannabis is a bivariate correlate of AVTPCDSGDH and ACT anomalies, is robust to adjustment for other substances; and is causal.
Journal Article
Maternal use of antihypertensive drugs in early pregnancy and delivery outcome, notably the presence of congenital heart defects in the infants
by
Källén, Bengt
,
Otterblad Olausson, Petra
,
Lennestål, Roland
in
ACE inhibitors
,
Antihypertensive agents
,
Antihypertensive Agents - adverse effects
2009
Purpose To investigate the association between maternal use of antihypertensives in early pregnancy and delivery outcome, notably infant congenital malformations. Methods A cohort study of 1,418 women who had used antihypertensive drugs in early pregnancy but had no diabetes diagnosis were identified from the Swedish Medical Birth Register. Results There was an excess risk for placental abruption, caesarean section, delivery induction, and post-delivery hemorrhage in women taking hypertensives. Infants were more often than expected born preterm, were small for gestational age, and had an excess of various neonatal symptoms. Cardiovascular defects occurred with an adjusted odds ratio of 2.59 (95% CI 1.92-3.51). The results were similar when the woman had used ACE inhibitors or other antihypertensives, notably beta blockers. Stillbirth rate was increased (risk ratio 1.87, 95% CI 1.02-3.02), again without any clear drug specificity. Conclusions There seems to be little drug specificity in the association between maternal use of antihypertensives and an increased risk for infant cardiovascular defects.
Journal Article
Fetal safety of erythromycin. An update of Swedish data
by
Källén, Bengt
,
Danielsson, Bengt R.
in
Anti-Bacterial Agents - administration & dosage
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - adverse effects
,
Antibiotics
2014
Purpose
In previous studies from the Swedish Medical Birth Register, a possible association between erythromycin therapy and an increased risk for cardiovascular defects was found. Other studies using different methodology have not verified this observation. The finding resulted in a warning for the use of erythromycin in early pregnancy, followed by a marked decline in such use. The present study was conducted to follow up on the previous observations and to find methodological explanations for the variation in results in these different published studies.
Methods
Data on Swedish women who gave birth during the period 1996–2011 were studied using the drug information in the Medical Birth Registry, obtained from midwife interviews conducted toward the end of the first trimester. Data on the presence of congenital malformations were ascertained from national health registers. Odds ratios were then determined using the Mantel-Haenszel methodology.
Results
A persistent association was seen between erythromycin use and the occurrence of cardiovascular defects, with a risk estimate of 1.70 (95 % confidence interval (CI): 1.26-2.39), of similar strength during the first and last 8 years of observation. We discussed the contradictory findings of the other published studies and pointed out possible methodological problems that may explain the absence of an effect in studies based on prescription registers.
Conclusions
Our study verified an association between early pregnancy erythromycin use and infant cardiovascular defects; most defects were mild. The cause of this association is unclear.
Journal Article
The Epidemiology of Cardiovascular Defects, Part I: A Study Based on Data from Three Large Registries of Congenital Malformations
by
Pradat, P.
,
Francannet, C.
,
Robert, E.
in
Age Factors
,
California - epidemiology
,
Clinical Medicine
2003
To analyze complex and noncomplex cardiac malformations regarding prevalence and in relation to demographic variables, we pooled data on infants (age 1 year or younger) with congenital cardiovascular defects from three large birth defect registries in California, Sweden, and France. Altogether, 12,932 infants had one or more congenital heart defects out of 4.4 million live births and stillbirths. The registries in Sweden and France obtained data through reporting from various sources; in California, medical records were reviewed. As expected, definitions and ascertained conditions differed among each of the registries. The total rates for severe defects were similar (1.43 per 1,000), but differed for specific defects. Clear differences in epidemiological characteristics existed for specific defects; for example, severe cardiac defects sex ratios were significantly high for hypoplastic left heart syndrome, d-transposition of great vessels, double outlet right ventricle, total anoralous pulmonary venous return, tetralogy of Fallot, and significantly low for pulmonary atresia without ventricular septal defect and endocardial cushion defect. Few defects were similar for several epidemiological characteristics, but, for example, the combination of ventricular and atrial septal defects appeared equivalent with endocardial cushion defect under some circumstances, yet behaved differently with regard to associated noncardiovascular defects.
Journal Article
Severe phenotypes of B3GAT3-related disorder caused by two heterozygous variants: a case report and literature review
2022
Background
Linkeropathies refers to a series of extremely rare hereditary connective tissue diseases affected by various glycosyltransferases in the biosynthesis of proteoglycans. We report for the first time two heterozygous variants of
B3GAT3
in a Chinese infant, in whom Marfan syndrome was suspected at birth.
Case presentation
A 2-month-old boy from a non-consanguineous Chinese family without a family history presented severe phenotypes of joint dislocation, obvious flexion contractures of the elbow, arachnodactyly with slightly adducted thumbs, cranial dysplasia, foot abnormalities and aortic root dilation; Marfan syndrome was suspected at birth. Our patient was the youngest, at the age of 2 months, to experience aortic root dilation. Two
B3GAT3
variants, NM_012200.2, c.752T>C, p.V251A and c.47C>A, p.S16*, with heterozygosity were identified in the patient by whole-exome sequencing; the variants were inherited from his parents. During close follow-up, significant changes in the cranial profile and obvious external hydrocephalus were present at the age of 7 months, which differs from previously reported cases.
Conclusion
We diagnosed a patient with congenital heart defects at an early age with a
B3GAT3
-related disorder instead of Marfan syndrome and expanded the spectrum of
B3GAT3
-related disorders. We also provide a literature review of reported
B3GAT3
cases; for at least one of the variants, this is the first report of genotype–phenotype correlations in individuals with cardiovascular defects being related to the acceptor substrate-binding subdomain of
B3GAT3.
Journal Article
Long-Term Cardiovascular Findings in Williams Syndrome: A Single Medical Center Experience in Taiwan
2022
Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare genetic disorder caused by the microdeletion of chromosome 7q11.23. Cardiovascular defects (CVDs) are the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in patients with WS. The most common CVD in patients with WS is supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS), which recovers spontaneously similar to branch pulmonary stenosis (PS). Recently, conventional beliefs, such as SVAS improving rather than worsening in WS, have been challenged. This study thoroughly reviews the medical records of 30 patients with a molecular diagnosis of WS. We followed up these patients at Taipei MacKay Memorial Hospital from January 1999 to December 2021. The long-term outcomes of cardiovascular lesions as well as the change in peak pressure gradient in obstructive cardiovascular lesions over time were studied. Among these 30 patients, the most common cardiovascular lesion was SVAS (50.0%), followed by branch PS (36.7%). During the follow-up period, severe SVAS was aggravated (p = 0.021). The peak pressure gradient decreased from 38.4 to 25.3 mmHg (p = 0.001) in patients with branch PS. Among patients with WS, those with severe SVAS deteriorated over time, whereas those with branch PS improved on their own. In patients with WS who presented with branch PS, no disease-specific intervention was needed.
Journal Article
Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Complications and the Risk Factors: A Single-Center Study
by
Gharib, Behdad
,
Nematian, Hossein
,
Mirzaaghayan, Mohammadreza
in
Bypass
,
Complications
,
Demographics
2024
This study aimed to determine postoperative cardiac and noncardiac complications and their association with the use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), surgical outcomes (length of hospital and ICU stays), dependence on mechanical ventilation, and mortality.
This retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted on pediatric patients aged 0 to 18 who underwent open or closed cardiac surgery over a 1-year period. The use of CPB support, CPB duration, cardiac surgery complexity according to the risk-adjusted classification for congenital heart surgery (RACHS-1), and demographics were examined as potential risk factors associated with an increased number of postoperative complications. The study was performed at the Children's Medical Center, a teaching hospital affiliated with Tehran University of Medical Sciences in Iran.
A total of 283 surgeries were included in our study. Seventy-six (26.9%) of the study population experienced at least 1 complication. Our analysis revealed that increased CPB durations were associated with higher odds of cardiac complications, with an odds ratio of 1.02 (P=0.002). Moreover, higher RACHS-1 levels were significantly associated with greater numbers of cardiac and noncardiac complications. Additionally, prolonged mechanical ventilation and open-heart surgery intensive care unit (OH-ICU) stays were significantly associated with cardiac and noncardiac complications. Our logistic regression analysis found no association between demographic and clinical risk factors, the number of complications, and mortality.
Postoperative complications occurred in 27% of pediatric heart surgeries. Prolonged mechanical ventilation and OH-ICU stays were significantly associated with cardiac and noncardiac complications. However, no significant association was found between postoperative complications and mortality.
Journal Article
The Epidemiology of Cardiovascular Defects, Part 2: A Study Based on Data from Three Large Registries of Congenital Malformations
by
Pradat, P.
,
Francannet, C.
,
Robert, E.
in
Abnormalities, Drug-Induced - etiology
,
Adult
,
Anticonvulsants - adverse effects
2003
There were three objectives of this study: to investigate possible specificity in the association between specific cardiac defects and chromosomal anomalies; to evaluate ways of categorizing cardiac defects into larger groups with epidemiological similarities that could indicate similarities in etiology or pathogenesis; and to analyze the relationship between specific cardiac defects and diabetes. We pooled data on infants (aged 1 year or younger) with congenital cardiovascular defects from three large birth defect registries in California, Sweden, and France. The registries in Sweden and France obtained data through reporting from various sources; in California, medical records were reviewed. For severe congenital heart defects, the percentage of infants with identified chromosomal anomalies varied between 0.9% for d-TGV to 68.4% for ECD. In general, specific cardiac conditions have different risk factors. For example, conotruncal defects have been traditionally grouped, but the data presented in this paper indicates more differences for risk factors for the components of conotruncal defects: tetralogy of Fallot, d-TGV, common truncus, and DORV. In general, we suggest the strategy of \"splitting\" rather than \"lumping\" when searching for specific genetic factors and/or teratogens. Adequate analysis thus requires large registries or collaboration among registries. The findings did not support constellations between mothers' diabetes and specific defects.
Journal Article
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance in women with cardiovascular disease: position statement from the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR)
by
Jeanette Schulz-Menger
,
Purvi Parwani
,
Lilia M. Sierra-Galan
in
Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases
,
Cardiovascular disease
,
Cardiovascular disease; Cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Position statement; Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance; Women; Female; Humans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Male; Predictive Value of Tests; Cardiovascular Diseases; Heart Defects, Congenital
2021
Journal Article