Corynebacterium diphtheriae endocarditis was thought to be a rare disease. We reviewed our experience in four cases of this disease treated over a period of 10 years. Seventy cases reported in literature were reviewed. The outcome is good if cases are carefully selected for medical or surgical treatment. We conclude that infective endocarditis due to C. diphtheriae, is perhaps more common than expected. It may be recognized more frequently and on occasion may be an aggressive disease. Those patients with an abnormal valve (including prosthetic valves) should be subjected to surgery at the earliest available opportunity, whereas patients with normal valves may be carefully watched during the course of medical treatment as long as immediate surgery can occur if needed.
AimsThe Warfarin Self-Management Anticoagulation Research Trial (Warfarin SMART) was designed to determine whether patients self-managing warfarin (PSM) using the CoaguChek device and a dosing algorithm developed for the trial could keep the INR (International Normalised Ratio) test in target range at least as often as patients managed by usual care by the family doctor or hospital clinic.
Methods and Results310 patients were randomly assigned to PSM or usual care. The PSM group was trained to perform home INR testing and warfarin dosing using a validated ColourChart algorithm. The primary endpoint was the proportion of times over 12 months that a monthly, blinded "outcome INR test", measured in a central laboratory, was outside the patients' target therapeutic range.The rate of out-of-range outcome INRs was lower in PSM, and non-inferior to the usual care group (PSM: 36% vs. usual care: 41%, P<0.0001 for non-inferiority; P=0.08 for superiority in closed-loop testing). The deviations from the patients' midpoint of target INR range (P=0.02) and number of extreme INRs (P=0.03) were significantly less in the PSM group than the usual-care group. There was no significant difference between groups in rates of bleeding or thrombotic adverse events.
ConclusionPatient self-management performed at least as well as usual care in maintaining the INR within the target range, without any safety concerns. This treatment modality for the long-term use of warfarin has the potential to change current local and international practice.Warfarin SMART 8-Jul-13 3
Background. Cardiac surgery results in complications for some patients that lead to a longer hospital stay and higher costs. This study identified the presurgery characteristics of patients that were associated with the cost of their hospital stay and estimated how much of that cost could be attributed to a bleeding event, defined as requiring 3 units or more of packed red blood cells or returning to the operating room for bleeding. We also identified the presurgery characteristics that were associated with the bleeding event.Methods. This prospective cohort of patients (n [ 1459) underwent cardiac surgery at 3 tertiary referral hospitals in Australia during 2014 and 2015. Clinical data included the variables held by the Australian and New Zealand Society of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgeons registry. Cost data were collected as part of a state-level hospital data collection.
Endothelium-mediated relaxation and smooth muscle function in large coronary arteries are resistant to prolonged global ischemia. We used a small-vessel myograph to test the hypothesis that small intramyocardial artery endothelium and smooth muscle function have greater sensitivity to ischemic injury than large artery endothelium and smooth muscle. Normothermic global ischemia was induced in 15 porcine hearts. Intramyocardial arterial ring segments were assessed at 0, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes of ischemia in vitro with a small-vessel myograph. Potassium determined smooth muscle contraction, bradykinin endothelium-mediated relaxation, and sodium nitroprusside direct smooth muscle relaxation. Endothelium-mediated relaxation after 30 minutes of ischemia was similar to control (56% versus 66%) but was impaired at 60, 90, and 120 minutes of ischemia (32%, 11%, and 6%). Smooth muscle contraction was unchanged at 30 and 60 minutes compared with control (56 and 53 versus 63 mm Hg) but was significantly decreased at 90 and 120 minutes (33 and 13 mm Hg). Direct smooth muscle relaxation was significantly decreased at 120 minutes of ischemia compared with control (58% versus 95%). In a previous study, epicardial coronary artery endothelium-mediated smooth muscle vasodilation and direct smooth muscle vasodilation were preserved until 160 minutes of ischemia. After 160 minutes of ischemia, endothelium-mediated relaxation was lost and only direct smooth muscle vasodilation was preserved. In contrast to vasodilation, vasoconstriction was significantly reduced at 140 minutes of ischemia. These data indicate a greater and earlier adverse effect of ischemia on intramyocardial arterial endothelium-mediated relaxation than smooth muscle contraction or relaxation. These data support the hypothesis that there is an early functional endothelial cell injury associated with global ischemia. Relaxation that is endothelium-dependent in intramyocardial arteries is more sensitive to ischemic injury than in epicardial arteries. Unique to this study was the evaluation of small intramyocardial arteries (281 +/- 29 microns) that are the primary sites of coronary vascular resistance. Microvascular endothelial dysfunction after ischemia, therefore, may contribute to the "no-reflow phenomenon" seen during reperfusion injury.
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