The use of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) has risen steadily, yet the rate of card... more The use of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) has risen steadily, yet the rate of cardiac device infections (CDI) has disproportionately increased. Amongst all cardiac device infections, the pocket infection is the most challenging diagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to improve diagnosis of such pocket infection by identifying relevant biomarkers. We enrolled 25 consecutive patients with invasively and microbiologically confirmed pocket infection. None of the patients had any confounding conditions. Pre-operative levels of 14 biomarkers were compared in infected and control (n = 50) patients. Our selected biomarkers included white blood cell count (WBC), C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), lipopolysaccharide binding protein, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (HS-CRP), polymorphonuclear-elastase, presepsin, various interleukins, tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Of the 25 patients with isolated pocket in...
Background— Interstitial collagen plays a crucial structural role in arteries. Matrix metalloprot... more Background— Interstitial collagen plays a crucial structural role in arteries. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), including MMP-13/collagenase-3, likely contribute to collagen catabolism in atherosclerotic plaques. Methods and Results— To test the hypothesis that a specific MMP-collagenase influences the development and structure of atherosclerotic plaques, this study used atherosclerosis-susceptible apolipoprotein E–deficient mice that lack MMP-13/collagenase-3 ( Mmp-13 −/− /apoE −/− ) or express wild-type MMP-13/collagenase-3 ( Mmp-13 +/+ /apoE −/− ). Both groups consumed an atherogenic diet for 5 (n=8) or 10 weeks (n=9). Histological analyses of the aortic root of both groups revealed similar plaque size and accumulation of smooth muscle cells (a collagen-producing cell type) and macrophages (a major source of plaque collagenases) after 5 and 10 weeks of atherogenic diet. By 10 weeks, the plaques of Mmp-13 −/− /apoE −/− mice contained significantly more interstitial collagen than ...
Dose-response : a publication of International Hormesis Society, 2014
Thousands of articles have been published on the topic of ischemic conditioning. Nevertheless, re... more Thousands of articles have been published on the topic of ischemic conditioning. Nevertheless, relatively little attention has been given to assessment of conditioning's dose-response characteristics. Specifically, the consequences of multiple conditioning episodes, what we will term "hyperconditioning", have seldom been examined. We propose that hyperconditioning warrants investigation because it; (1) may be of clinical importance, (2) could provide insight into conditioning mechanisms, and (3) might result in development of novel models of human disease. The prevalence of angina pectoris and intermittent claudication is sufficiently high and the potential for daily ischemia-reperfusion episodes sufficiently large that hyperconditioning is a clinically relevant phenomenon. In basic science, attenuation of conditioning-mediated infarct size reduction found in some studies after hyperconditioning offers a possible means to facilitate further discernment of cardioprotect...
To better understand the healing process after permanent coronary artery occlusion in a canine mo... more To better understand the healing process after permanent coronary artery occlusion in a canine model, the authors used polarized light microscopy. At 6 weeks after occlusion the scar collagen was mainly type I. Some regions of the scar contained a fiber lattice which appeared to be type III collagen. Collagen orientation was measured using a universal stage; subepicardial collagen was obliquely aligned (-14.0 +/- 3.5 degrees), midmyocardial collagen circumferentially aligned (1.4 +/- 0.4 degrees) and subendocardial collagen obliquely aligned (12.7 +/- 2.1 degrees). The molecular organization of scar collagen increased from 1 to 6 weeks after occlusion. Muscle cell disarray, similar to that in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, was seen in the viable muscle adjacent to the scar. Such abnormal organization extended as far as 1 cm from the edge of the scar. The ability of polarized light microscopy to assess these different parameters from histologic sections demonstrates that it is a useful...
Background— The long-term effects of cardiac cell transplantation on cardiac function are unknown... more Background— The long-term effects of cardiac cell transplantation on cardiac function are unknown. Therefore, we tested the survival and functional impact of rat neonatal cardiac myocytes up to 6 months after transplantation into infarcted hearts. Methods and Results— Cardiomyocytes from male neonatal Fischer 344 rats (1 to 2 days, 3 to 5×10 6 ) or medium was injected into the infarcts of adult syngeneic female animals 1 week after left coronary artery ligation. Six months later, implanted cardiomyocytes were still present by quantitative TaqMan polymerase chain reaction and histology. In all treated hearts, discrete lumps of cells were present within the infarct scar, which was not observed in media-injected hearts typified by a transmural infarct scar. Infarct thickness was greater in treated animals versus control animals (909±97 versus 619±43 μm, P <0.02), whereas infarct size and left ventricular volumes were similar. By biplane angiography, left ventricular ejection fractio...
Background —Recent studies suggest that patients with angina before myocardial infarction exhibit... more Background —Recent studies suggest that patients with angina before myocardial infarction exhibit improved recovery of coronary perfusion after thrombolysis by an as-yet-unknown mechanism. We therefore proposed that brief antecedent ischemia/reperfusion may, via release of adenosine, improve vessel patency in damaged and stenotic coronary arteries. Methods and Results —Anesthetized dogs underwent coronary injury+stenosis, resulting in repeated cyclic variations in coronary blood flow (CFVs) caused by the formation/dislodgment of platelet-rich thrombi. Vessel patency was assessed for 3 hours after stenosis by quantification of the nadir of the CFVs, duration of total thrombotic occlusion (flow=0), and area of the flow-time profile (expressed as percent of baseline flow×180 minutes). In protocol 1, dogs received 10 minutes of coronary occlusion+10 minutes of reflow or a comparable 20-minute control period before injury+stenosis. The median nadir of the CFVs was higher (4.0 versus 0.3 ...
Background —Clinical studies have implicated preinfarct angina (brief antecedent ischemia/reperfu... more Background —Clinical studies have implicated preinfarct angina (brief antecedent ischemia/reperfusion [I/R]) as a predictor of more rapid thrombolysis and lower rates of reocclusion. However, the effects of antecedent ischemia on the efficacy of thrombolysis have not been rigorously assessed. Using a canine model of coronary thrombosis, we aimed to (1) reproduce these clinical findings and (2) determine whether release of adenosine (a potent inhibitor of platelet aggregation via stimulation of platelet A 2 receptors) during brief I/R contributes to this improved patency. Methods and Results —To address our first objective, we compared the time required to achieve lysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator and patency during the first 2 hours after lysis in dogs in which 1-hour thrombotic occlusion was preceded by brief I/R (10-minute coronary occlusion/10-minute reperfusion) versus 20-minute uninterrupted perfusion (controls). Time to lysis was accelerated in the I/R group ...
The use of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) has risen steadily, yet the rate of card... more The use of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) has risen steadily, yet the rate of cardiac device infections (CDI) has disproportionately increased. Amongst all cardiac device infections, the pocket infection is the most challenging diagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to improve diagnosis of such pocket infection by identifying relevant biomarkers. We enrolled 25 consecutive patients with invasively and microbiologically confirmed pocket infection. None of the patients had any confounding conditions. Pre-operative levels of 14 biomarkers were compared in infected and control (n = 50) patients. Our selected biomarkers included white blood cell count (WBC), C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), lipopolysaccharide binding protein, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (HS-CRP), polymorphonuclear-elastase, presepsin, various interleukins, tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), and granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Of the 25 patients with isolated pocket in...
Background— Interstitial collagen plays a crucial structural role in arteries. Matrix metalloprot... more Background— Interstitial collagen plays a crucial structural role in arteries. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), including MMP-13/collagenase-3, likely contribute to collagen catabolism in atherosclerotic plaques. Methods and Results— To test the hypothesis that a specific MMP-collagenase influences the development and structure of atherosclerotic plaques, this study used atherosclerosis-susceptible apolipoprotein E–deficient mice that lack MMP-13/collagenase-3 ( Mmp-13 −/− /apoE −/− ) or express wild-type MMP-13/collagenase-3 ( Mmp-13 +/+ /apoE −/− ). Both groups consumed an atherogenic diet for 5 (n=8) or 10 weeks (n=9). Histological analyses of the aortic root of both groups revealed similar plaque size and accumulation of smooth muscle cells (a collagen-producing cell type) and macrophages (a major source of plaque collagenases) after 5 and 10 weeks of atherogenic diet. By 10 weeks, the plaques of Mmp-13 −/− /apoE −/− mice contained significantly more interstitial collagen than ...
Dose-response : a publication of International Hormesis Society, 2014
Thousands of articles have been published on the topic of ischemic conditioning. Nevertheless, re... more Thousands of articles have been published on the topic of ischemic conditioning. Nevertheless, relatively little attention has been given to assessment of conditioning's dose-response characteristics. Specifically, the consequences of multiple conditioning episodes, what we will term "hyperconditioning", have seldom been examined. We propose that hyperconditioning warrants investigation because it; (1) may be of clinical importance, (2) could provide insight into conditioning mechanisms, and (3) might result in development of novel models of human disease. The prevalence of angina pectoris and intermittent claudication is sufficiently high and the potential for daily ischemia-reperfusion episodes sufficiently large that hyperconditioning is a clinically relevant phenomenon. In basic science, attenuation of conditioning-mediated infarct size reduction found in some studies after hyperconditioning offers a possible means to facilitate further discernment of cardioprotect...
To better understand the healing process after permanent coronary artery occlusion in a canine mo... more To better understand the healing process after permanent coronary artery occlusion in a canine model, the authors used polarized light microscopy. At 6 weeks after occlusion the scar collagen was mainly type I. Some regions of the scar contained a fiber lattice which appeared to be type III collagen. Collagen orientation was measured using a universal stage; subepicardial collagen was obliquely aligned (-14.0 +/- 3.5 degrees), midmyocardial collagen circumferentially aligned (1.4 +/- 0.4 degrees) and subendocardial collagen obliquely aligned (12.7 +/- 2.1 degrees). The molecular organization of scar collagen increased from 1 to 6 weeks after occlusion. Muscle cell disarray, similar to that in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, was seen in the viable muscle adjacent to the scar. Such abnormal organization extended as far as 1 cm from the edge of the scar. The ability of polarized light microscopy to assess these different parameters from histologic sections demonstrates that it is a useful...
Background— The long-term effects of cardiac cell transplantation on cardiac function are unknown... more Background— The long-term effects of cardiac cell transplantation on cardiac function are unknown. Therefore, we tested the survival and functional impact of rat neonatal cardiac myocytes up to 6 months after transplantation into infarcted hearts. Methods and Results— Cardiomyocytes from male neonatal Fischer 344 rats (1 to 2 days, 3 to 5×10 6 ) or medium was injected into the infarcts of adult syngeneic female animals 1 week after left coronary artery ligation. Six months later, implanted cardiomyocytes were still present by quantitative TaqMan polymerase chain reaction and histology. In all treated hearts, discrete lumps of cells were present within the infarct scar, which was not observed in media-injected hearts typified by a transmural infarct scar. Infarct thickness was greater in treated animals versus control animals (909±97 versus 619±43 μm, P <0.02), whereas infarct size and left ventricular volumes were similar. By biplane angiography, left ventricular ejection fractio...
Background —Recent studies suggest that patients with angina before myocardial infarction exhibit... more Background —Recent studies suggest that patients with angina before myocardial infarction exhibit improved recovery of coronary perfusion after thrombolysis by an as-yet-unknown mechanism. We therefore proposed that brief antecedent ischemia/reperfusion may, via release of adenosine, improve vessel patency in damaged and stenotic coronary arteries. Methods and Results —Anesthetized dogs underwent coronary injury+stenosis, resulting in repeated cyclic variations in coronary blood flow (CFVs) caused by the formation/dislodgment of platelet-rich thrombi. Vessel patency was assessed for 3 hours after stenosis by quantification of the nadir of the CFVs, duration of total thrombotic occlusion (flow=0), and area of the flow-time profile (expressed as percent of baseline flow×180 minutes). In protocol 1, dogs received 10 minutes of coronary occlusion+10 minutes of reflow or a comparable 20-minute control period before injury+stenosis. The median nadir of the CFVs was higher (4.0 versus 0.3 ...
Background —Clinical studies have implicated preinfarct angina (brief antecedent ischemia/reperfu... more Background —Clinical studies have implicated preinfarct angina (brief antecedent ischemia/reperfusion [I/R]) as a predictor of more rapid thrombolysis and lower rates of reocclusion. However, the effects of antecedent ischemia on the efficacy of thrombolysis have not been rigorously assessed. Using a canine model of coronary thrombosis, we aimed to (1) reproduce these clinical findings and (2) determine whether release of adenosine (a potent inhibitor of platelet aggregation via stimulation of platelet A 2 receptors) during brief I/R contributes to this improved patency. Methods and Results —To address our first objective, we compared the time required to achieve lysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator and patency during the first 2 hours after lysis in dogs in which 1-hour thrombotic occlusion was preceded by brief I/R (10-minute coronary occlusion/10-minute reperfusion) versus 20-minute uninterrupted perfusion (controls). Time to lysis was accelerated in the I/R group ...
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