Unresectable HEHE, without extrahepatic metastases is an excellent indication for liver transplantation. Long-term survival is very good and much better than in HCC patients and the entire group of OLTx patients.
Preeclampsia is a multisystem disorder of pregnancy that remains a leading cause of maternal and foetal morbidity and mortality. It is still an underestimated risk factor for future cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and kidney disease, developing often in the perimenopausal period of a woman’s life. It remains unclear whether preeclampsia is an individual risk factor for future cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and renal events or an early marker of women with high-risk profiles for these diseases. Risk factors for cardiovascular disorders and preeclampsia are very similar and include the following: obesity, dyslipidaemia, insulin resistance, pro-inflammatory and hypercoagulable state, and endothelial dysfunction. Thus, the pregnancy can only be a trigger for cardiovascular alterations that manifest in development of preeclampsia. On the other hand, there is strong evidence that changes in cardiovascular, endothelial, and metabolic systems occurring in the course of preeclampsia may not fully recover after delivery and can be a cause of future disease, especially in the presence of other metabolic risk factors regarding, for example, perimenopause. In this review the authors present current knowledge about short- and long-term maternal consequences of preeclampsia, such as: cardiovascular disease, cerebrovascular incidents (posterior reversible encephalopathy and stroke), kidney injury (including the risk of end-stage renal disease), liver failure, and coagulopathy (thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation).
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(56.6 ± 11.0 vs. 59.1 ± 10.8; p = 0.019) and the time of the index hospitalization was shorter (3.75 ± 2.16 vs. 4.45 ± 3.26; p = 0.03). Within 30 days 194 (9.6%) patients were hospitalized and 747 (36.9%) in 1-year follow-up. All-cause mortality was 0. 1% and 1.4% in 30-day and 1-year follow-up, respectively. In a 1-year follow-up patients hospitalized from AF/AFl recurrence were more frequently hospitalized due to cardiovascular diseases other than AF/AFl (9.6% vs. 6.7%; p = 0.026), especially due to hypertension (2.9% vs. 0.7%; p < 0.001). Conclusions: Over 1 out of 4 patients who underwent AF/AFl ablation were hospitalized due to arrhythmia recurrence in 1 year. (Cardiol J 2015; 22, 6: 630-636)
BackgroundHypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy is the main determinant of clinical outcome after cardiac arrest. The study was designed to determine long-term neurological and psychological status in cardiac arrest survivors, as well as to compare neuropsychological outcomes between patients treated with mild therapeutic hypothermia (MTH) and patients who did not undergo hypothermia treatment.MethodsThe article describes a single-center, retrospective, observational study on 28 post-cardiac arrest adult patients treated in the cardiac intensive care unit who qualified for MTH vs. 37 control group patients, hospitalized at the same center following cardiac arrest in the preceding years and fulfilling criteria for induced hypothermia, but who were not treated due to unavailability of the method at that time. Disability Rating Scale (DRS), Barthel Index and RAND-36 were used to assess performance status and quality of life in both study groups after hospital discharge.ResultsThere were no statistically significant differences in physical functioning found between groups either at the end of hospital treatment or at long-term follow-up (DRS: p = 0.11; Barthel Index: p = 0.83). In long-term follow-up, MTH patients showed higher vitality (p = 0.02) and reported fewer complaints on role limitations due to emotional problems (p = 0.04) compared to the control group. No significant differences were shown between study groups in terms of physical capacity and independent functioning.ConclusionTo conclude, in long-term follow-up, MTH patients showed higher vitality and reported fewer complaints on role limitations due to emotional problems compared to the control group. This suggest that MTH helps to preserve global brain function in cardiac arrest survivors. However, the results can be biased by a small sample size and variable observation periods.
IntroductIon Multiple factors that affect the prognosis of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) have been identified. There are scarce data on the effect of the blood group on prognosis in this patient group.objectIves We investigated the effect of ABO and Rh (D antigen) status on the prognosis of ACS. PatIents and methods A group of 418 consecutive hospitalized patients with ACS were analyzed. The follow-up period was 2075 ±794 days. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. A statistical analysis was performed for the following subgroups: ABO blood group, ABO blood group including Rhesus (Rh) factor (D antigen), Rh-positive vs. Rh-negative blood group, O blood group vs. non-0 blood group, blood group with vs. without the B antigen, and blood group with vs. without the A antigen. resuLts A total of 348 patients (83.25%) were Rh-positive, while 70 (16.75%) were Rh-negative. The Kaplan-Meier survival plots showed 7-year mortality of 22.7% in patients with blood groups with Rh antigen and of 10% in patients without Rh antigen (P = 0.014). Other comparisons were not statistically significant. A multivariable Cox proportional hazards model identified blood group with D antigen as an independent predictor of mortality (hazard ratio, 7.758; 95% confidence interval, 1.748-34.417; P = 0.007).concLusIons Of all blood groups, only the Rh -positive blood group was an independent predictor of mortality in patients with ACS.
In the 3rd trimester of physiological pregnancy, there is a 244% increase in expression of miR-101a and a decrease by 73% in expression of miR-328. Both of these changes can protect against fibrosis during volume overload occurring in physiological pregnancy.
The aim of the present study was to analyze the profiles of cardiac microRNAs (miRNAs/miRs) in healthy pregnant women and non-pregnant controls. A total of 61 healthy women >18 years of age with singleton pregnancies in the third trimester were compared with 19 non-pregnant controls. Specifically, expression of miRNAs associated with cardiac hypertrophy (miR-1, miR-17-5, miR-22, miR-34a, miR-124, miR-133a, miR-195, miR-199a-3p, miR-199b, miR-210, miR-222 and miR-1249) and miRNAs associated with cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis (miR-15b, miR-21, miR-26a, miR-29-a, miR-29c, miR-30c, miR-101, miR-146a, miR-191, miR-208a-5p and miR-328) were analyzed and compared with echocardiographic examination results. Both groups had similar cardiac miRNA expression profiles, but differed in quantitative evaluation. Women in the third trimester of physiological pregnancy exhibited downregulation of certain profibrotic miRNAs (miR-21, miR-30c and miR-328), decreased expression of a hypertrophic and antimetabolic miRNAs (miR-146a), downregulation of an antifibrotic miRNA (miR-222), and downregulation of a hypertrophic miRNA (miR-195). In pregnant women, the indices of systolic function were associated with miR-195 expression, and an interplay between miR-17-5p and diastolic function was observed. While the profiles of cardiac miRNAs expressed in healthy pregnant women and healthy non-pregnant controls were similar, these two groups differed in terms of expression of specific miRNAs. In the third trimester of physiological pregnancy, a downregulation of miR-17-5p, miR-21, miR-30c, miR-146a, miR-195, miR-222 and miR-328 was observed. The differences in the association between echocardiographic indices with miRNAs in pregnant and non-pregnant women suggest that miRNAs regulate both the structure and function of the pregnant heart, influencing cardiac muscle thickness as well as systolic and diastolic function.
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