The new coronavirus disease outbreak in 2019 (COVID-19) represents a dramatic challenge for healthcare systems worldwide. As to viral tropism, lungs are not the only COVID-19 target but also the heart may be involved in a not negligible percentage of the infected patients. Myocarditis-related cardiac dysfunction and potentially life-threatening arrhythmias are the main aftermaths. A few studies showed that myocardial injury in adult patients is often linked with a fatal outcome. Conversely, scientific evidence in children is sparse, although several reports were published with the description of a cardiac involvement in COVID-19 paediatric patients. In these young subjects, a background of surgically treated congenital heart disease seems to be a predisposing factor. Conclusion: This systematic review is aimed at summarizing all COVID-19 cases with a cardiac involvement published in paediatric age and trying to explain the underlying mechanisms responsible for COVID-19-related myocardial damage. What is Known: • Coronaviruses proved to be able to jump from animals to humans. • The outbreak of COVID-19 started from China (Dec 2019) and became pandemic. What is New: • Even in childhood, COVID-19 is not without the risk of cardiac involvement. • Myocarditis, heart failure, and arrhythmias are among the possible manifestations.
Atherosclerosis involving the carotid arteries has a high prevalence in the population worldwide. This condition is significant because accidents of the carotid artery plaque are associated with the development of cerebrovascular events. For this reason, carotid atherosclerotic disease needs to be diagnosed and those determinants that are associated to an increased risk of stroke need to be identified. The degree of stenosis typically has been considered the parameter of choice to determine the therapeutical approach, but several recently published investigations have demonstrated that the degree of luminal stenosis is only an indirect indicator of the atherosclerotic process and that direct assessment of the plaque structure and composition may be key to predict the development of future cerebrovascular ischemic events. The concept of ''vulnerable plaque'' was born, referring to those plaque's parameters that concur to the instability of the plaque making it more prone to the rupture and distal embolization. The purpose of this review is to describe the imaging characteristics of ''vulnerable carotid plaques.''
The results of this preliminary study suggest that CT can be used to identify the presence of intraplaque hemorrhage according to the attenuation. A threshold of 25 HU in the volume acquired after the administration of contrast medium is associated with an optimal sensitivity and specificity. Special care should be given to the correct identification of the ROI.
The aim of the present study was to test the contribution of stroke volume (SV) in hemodynamic response to muscle metaboreflex activation in healthy individuals. We hypothesized that an acute decrease in cardiac afterload and preload due to the administration of a vasodilating agent could reduce postexercise muscle ischemia (PEMI)-induced SV response. Ten healthy males (age 33.6 ± 1.3 yr) were enrolled and randomly assigned to the following study protocol: 1) PEMI session, 2) control exercise recovery (CER) session, 3) PEMI after sublingual administration of 5 mg of isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN), and 4) CER after ISDN. Central hemodynamics were evaluated by means of impedance cardiography. The main findings were a blunted SV response during metaboreflex following acute arterial and venous vasodilation, associated with a reduction in cardiac diastolic time and filling, and a decrement of systemic vascular resistance. These hemodynamic changes restrain blood pressure response during metaboreflex activation. Our results indicate that hemodynamic response to metaboreflex activation is a highly integrated phenomenon encompassing complex interplay between heart rate, cardiac performance, preload, and afterload and that impairment of one or more of these parameters leads to altered hemodynamic response to metaboreflex.
A reduction in catecholamine levels during exercise has been described in young subjects with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1). It has been suggested that type 1 diabetes per se is associated with the loss of sympathetic response before any clinical evidence. Considering that an increase in sympathetic drive is required for normal cardiovascular response to muscle metaboreflex, the aim of this study was to assess the hemodynamics during metaboreflex in DM1 patients. Impedance cardiography was used to measure hemodynamics during metaboreflex activation, obtained through postexercise ischemia in 14 DM1 patients and in 11 healthy controls (CTL). Principal results were: 1) blunted blood pressure response during metaboreflex was observed in DM1 patients compared with the CTL; 2) reduced capacity to increase systemic vascular resistance was also witnessed in DM1 subjects; 3) DM1 subjects reported higher stroke volumes as a consequence of reduced cardiac afterload compared with the CTL, which led to a more evident cardiac output response, which partially compensated for the lack of vasoconstriction. These facts suggest that cardiovascular regulation was altered in DM1 patients and that there was a reduced capacity to increase sympathetic tone, even in the absence of any overt clinical sign. The metaboreflex test appears to be a valid tool to detect early signs of this cardiovascular dysregulation.
The Sardinian Hypertensive Adolescents Research Programme Study, which for the sake of simplicity we will describe as SHARP, was aimed at detecting the prevalence of hypertension in a number of Southern Italian students, using a process of longitudinal screening lasting 3 years, hoping to answer the question whether it is better to use tables charting values established in the United States of America, or to use charts specific for the Italian population.In all, we studied 839 children, of whom 52.6% were male. We defined hypertension as the average blood pressure exceeding the 95th percentile according to previous tables prepared by the United States Task Force, and previous Italian references. Use of the American tables identified very high proportions of hypertensive subjects if compared with the distribution curves from our own study (p less than 0.00001), albeit that our findings correlated well with previous Italian charts as reference (no statistical significance).In short, notwithstanding a little difference in millimetres of mercury about the same percentiles, the tables prepared in the United States of America overestimate the prevalence of hypertension, specific Italian material being more suitable for our needs. Our study emphasises the need to integrate these standards with more up-to-date and representative reports on Italian children, as is done periodically in the United States of America. Even using the Italian specific charts, nonetheless, hypertension was more common in Sardinian children than would be expected from international studies, with one-tenth of the sample being hypertensive.
Although the survival rate for preterm subjects has improved considerably, due to the progress in the field of perinatal medicine, preterm birth is frequently the cause underlying a series of notorious complications: morphological, neurological, ophthalmological, and renal alterations. In addition, it has recently been demonstrated how low gestational age and reduced foetal growth contribute towards an increased cardiovascular risk in preterm neonates. In fact, cardiovascular mortality is higher among former preterm adults than those born at term. This condition is referred to as cardiovascular perinatal programming. In the light of the above, an early, constant, and prolonged cardiological followup programme should be implemented in former preterm individuals. The aim of this paper was to perform a comprehensive literature review about two new emerging conditions predisposing to an increased cardiovascular risk: prematurity and low weight at birth.
Although fatigue is a common non-motor symptom in patients affected by Parkinson's disease (PD), its association with motor and other non-motor symptoms is still largely unclear. We assessed fatigue in PD patients studying the possible association with motor and non-motor symptoms. Eighty-one PD patients were included in the study. The PD Fatigue Scale (PFS) and the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) scale were used to measure fatigue. Non-motor symptoms were assessed with the Non-Motor Symptoms Scale (NMSS). Motor impairment was assessed using the modified Hoehn and Yahr (HY) staging and the Unified PD Rating Scale (UPDRS) part-III and IV. Bivariate tests comparing all independent variables between patients with our without fatigue were used. Significant predictors of presence and severity of fatigue were determined with different models of logistic regression analyses. Fatigue severity was significantly higher in female patients. Bivariate test showed significant higher NMSS score in fatigued patients according to PFS (p < 0.00001) and FFS (p < 0.001), while HY was higher only in fatigued patients according to FSS (p < 0.022). Significant correlations between severity of fatigue and HY stage (p < 0.002) and UPDRS-III score (p < 0.001) were found, while, among specific non-motor symptoms, anhedonia presented with the most significant correlation (p < 0.003). Binary logistic regression confirmed NMSS as the main variable predicting presence of fatigue, while HY was significant as predicting variable only in the FSS model. Strongest non-motor symptoms predictors of severity were those included in Domain 3 (mood/anxiety) and Domain 2 (sleep disorders) of the NMSS. A significant increase in severity of fatigue related to the burden of non-motor symptoms (mainly affective and sleep disorders) was observed. Our findings indicate a moderate discrepancy in the ratings of the two fatigue scales, with PFS principally directed towards the burden of non-motor symptoms. Finally, the accurate individuation of the factors underlying fatigue, assessed with the systematic administration of holistic evaluation scales such as the NMSS, might improve current strategies used in the treatment of this disabling condition.
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