TRH secretion from heart slices has attributes of regulated secretion--depending on the stimulus it could be either stimulated or inhibited. Renin positively affects prepro-TRH expression in the heart. Angiotensin II inhibits TRH secretion from heart tissue by a mechanism involving AT1 receptors. Swelling-induced TRH secretion overrides inhibitory effect of angiotensin II. Swelling could be a useful tool when natural or pharmacological secretagogue is unknown. Peptides and proteins released by swelling could be mediators of local and remote ischaemic preconditioning protecting from subsequent ischaemia.
INTRODUCTION: Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have shorter life expectancy and their risk of cardiovascular death is more than 50 % higher than the rest of the population. Early myocardial dysfunction in RA patients may be detectable sooner using speckle-tracking echocardiography. METHOD: Cross-sectional study enrolled 55 patients with RA (mean age 44.1 years) without known cardiovascular disease and 31 healthy controls. All subjects underwent a standard echocardiographic examination: indexed left ventricular mass, left ventricle ejection fraction, isovolumic contraction and relaxation times (IVCT and IVRT), mitral valve infl ow curve (E/A), septal mitral annular motion (e'), and E/e' ratio as well as the speckle tracking assessment of left ventricle longitudinal, radial and circular strain and strain rate. (-19.51 % vs -21.46 %, p=0.049). Radial, circular, and transversal strains and strain rates were same in both groups. Global longitudinal epicardial strain correlated with IVCT and IVRT, disease duration, and markers of myocardial damage NTproBNP. CONCLUSIONS: Standard echocardiographic assessment of myocardial function is examiner-and angle-dependent method with considerable limitations for evaluation of minimal subclinical changes. Speckle-tracking echocardiography signifi cantly revealed incipient myocardial dysfunction in RA patients without overt cardiovascular diseases. This correlates with clinical RA characteristics and markers of cardiac damage (Tab. 4, Ref. 48). Text in PDF www.elis.sk.
Background and Objectives
Potential of using the T-peak to T-end (TpTe) interval as an electrocardiographic parameter reflecting the transmural dispersion of ventricular repolarization (TDR) to identify patients (pts.) with higher risk of malignant ventricular arrhythmias (MVA) for better selection of candidates for implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) in primary prevention (PP) of sudden cardiac death (SCD) remains controversial. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between the TpTe interval in patient’s preimplantation resting 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) and the incidence of MVA resulting in appropriate ICD intervention (AI). The secondary objective was to assess its relationship to overall mortality.
Methods
A total of 243 consecutive pts. with severe left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction after myocardial infarction (MI) with a single-chamber ICD for PP of SCD from one implantation center were included. Excluded were all pts. with any other disease that could interfere with the indication of ICD implantation. Primarily investigated intervals were measured manually in accordance with accepted methodology. Data on ICD interventions were acquired from device interrogation during regular outpatient visits. Survival data were collected from the databases of health insurance and regulatory authorities.
Results
We did not find a significant relationship between the duration of the TpTe interval and the incidence of MVA (71.5 ms in pts. with MVA vs. 70 ms in pts. without MVA;
p
= 0.408). Similar results were obtained for the corrected TpTe interval (TpTec) and the ratio of TpTe to QT interval (76.3 ms vs. 76.5 ms;
p
= 0.539 and 0.178 vs. 0.181;
p
= 0.547, respectively). There was also no significant difference between the duration of TpTe, TpTec and TpTe/QT ratio in pts. groups by overall mortality (71.5 ms in the deceased group vs. 70 ms in the survivors group; HR 1.01; 95% CI, 0.99–1.02;
p
= 0.715, 76.3 ms vs. 76.5 ms; HR 1.01; 95% CI, 0.99–1.02;
p
= 0.208 and 0.178 vs. 0.186;
p
= 0.116, respectively).
Conclusion
This study suggests no significant association of overall or MVA-free survival with ECG parameters reflecting TDR (TpTe, TpTec) in patients with systolic dysfunction after MI and ICD implanted for primary prevention.
Normal ejection fraction does not truly mean normal systolic function of the myocardium. The ejection mechanism is a complex motion consisting of many shears and rotation. The deformation in longitudinal direction is the most vulnerable part of this complex move. The initial impairment of longitudinal strain is not truly visible by simple, eyeballing, in the echocardiographic examination. The speckle tracking method is an appropriate method to detect such small impairments. In the last 15 years this method has became standard, the reference values have been set up and finally it has found clinical applications. It seems to be useful in cases in which it is necessary to evaluate if the systolic function is already subclinically damaged: typically in severe asymptomatic aortic stenosis, in cardiooncology or in differential diagnosis of thick wall myocardium. The speckle tracking option will soon be a standard part of the software package of every ultrasound machine so it is good to emphasize some practical aspects of dataset aquisition. Tab. 1, Fig. 5, Ref. 42, on-line full text (Free, PDF) www.cardiologyletters.sk
Background: Potential of using the T-peak to Tend (TpTe) interval as an electrocardiographic parameter reflecting the transmural dispersion of ventricular repolarization (TDR) to identify patients (pts.) with higher risk of malignant ventricular arrhythmias (MVA) for better selection of candidates for implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) in primary prevention (PP) of sudden cardiac death (SCD) remains controversial. Objective: The primary objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between the TpTe interval on a resting 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) and the incidence of MVA resulting in appropriate ICD intervention (AI). The secondary objective was to assess its relationship to overall mortality and analyze other clinical mortality predictors. Methods: A total of 243 consecutive pts. with severe left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction after myocardial infarction (MI) with a single chamber ICD in PP of SCD from one implantation center were included. We excluded all pts. with any other disease that could interfere with the indication of ICD implantation. Primarily investigated intervals were measured manually in accordance with accepted methodology. Data on ICD interventions were acquired from device interrogation during regular outpatient controls. Mortality data were collected from the database of insurance and regulatory authorities. Results: We did not find a significant relationship between the duration of the TpTe interval and the incidence of MVA (71.5 ms in pts. with MVA vs. 70 ms in pts. without MVA; p=0.408). Similar results were obtained for the corrected TpTe interval (TpTec) and the ratio of TpTe to QT interval (76.3 ms vs. 76.5 ms; p=0.539 and 0.178 vs. 0.181; p=0.547, respectively). There was also no significant difference between the duration of TpTe, TpTec and TpTe/QT ratio in pts. groups by overall mortality (71.5 ms in the deceased group vs. 70 ms in the survivors group; HR 1.
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