Elderly patients with a V592fs/8 mutation in the MyBPC gene may evolve into the "end-stage" HCM, characterized by left ventricular systolic dysfunction, cavity dilation, and irreversible heart failure. The clinical course in patients with this mutation is not benign in the long run, with progressive left ventricular remodeling with advancing age.
With aging, arterial stiffness increases and results in cardiovascular diseases. Recently, high brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV), measured using a new noninvasive device to estimate arterial stiffness, was reported to be associated with the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases. The purpose of this study was to clarify the association between baPWV with 3-year mortality in community-dwelling older adults and to determine the cutoff value of baPWV in terms of mortality. A total of 530 subjects aged 65 years or older (men/women, 207:323; mean age, 76 years) participated. They were dichotomized by the median value of baPWV. Within 3 years, 30 deaths occurred, including 11 cardiovascular deaths. The high-baPWV group had a higher incidence of total deaths (high-baPWV group vs. low-baPWV group, 8.3 vs. 3.0%, respectively) and cardiovascular deaths (high-baPWV group vs. lowbaPWV group, 3.8 vs. 0.4%, respectively). A high-baPWV level was associated with an increased risk of 3-year total mortality after adjustment for age, sex and systolic blood pressure (hazard ratio for high baPWV vs. low baPWV¼2.98, 95% CI¼1.25-7.07) and with an increased risk of 3-year cardiovascular mortality (hazard ratio for high baPWV vs. low baPWV¼10.01, 95% CI¼1.21-82.49). A receiver-operating characteristic curve showed that the optimal cutoff value of baPWV for total mortality was 19.63 m s À1 , and for cardiovascular mortality it was 19.63 m s À1 . This study provides a preliminary finding that assessment of arterial stiffness by baPWV might be a useful method to predict mortality risk in community-dwelling older adults. Large longitudinal studies for extended periods of time are necessary to confirm the association.
HESS J0632+057 is the only gamma-ray binary that has been detected at TeV energies, but not at GeV energies yet. Based on nearly nine years of Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) Pass 8 data, we report here on a deep search for the gammaray emission from HESS J0632+057 in the 0.1-300 GeV energy range. We find a previously unknown gamma-ray source, Fermi J0632.6+0548, spatially coincident with HESS J0632+057. The measured flux of Fermi J0632.6+0548 is consistent with the previous flux upper limit on HESS J0632+057 and shows variability that can be related to the HESS J0632+057 orbital phase. We propose that Fermi J0632.6+0548 is the GeV counterpart of HESS J0632+057. Considering the Very High Energy (VHE) spectrum of HESS J0632+057, a possible spectral turnover above 10 GeV may exist in Fermi J0632.6+0548, as appears to be common in other established gamma-ray binaries.
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