Growing interest lies in the assessment of the metabolic status of patients with a univentricular circulation after Fontan operation, especially in changes of amino acid metabolism. Using targeted metabolomic examinations, we investigated amino acid metabolism in a homogeneous adult Fontanpatient group with a dominant left ventricle, seeking biomarker patterns that might permit better understanding of fontan pathophysiology and early detection of subtle ventricular or circulatory dysfunction. We compared serum amino acid levels (42 analytes; AbsoluteIDQ p180 kit, Biocrates Life Sciences, Innsbruck, Austria) in 20 adult Fontan patients with a dominant left ventricle and those in age-and sex-matched biventricular controls. Serum concentrations of asymmetric dimethylarginine, methionine sulfoxide, glutamic acid, and trans-4-hydroxyproline and the methionine sulfoxide/ methionine ratio (Met-SO/Met) were significantly higher and serum concentrations of asparagine, histidine, taurine, and threonine were significantly lower in patients than in controls. Met-SO/ Met values exhibited a significant negative correlation with oxygen uptake during exercise. The alterations in amino acid metabolome that we found in fontan patients suggest links between fontan pathophysiology, altered cell energy metabolism, oxidative stress, and endothelial dysfunction like those found in biventricular patients with congestive heart failure. Studies of extended amino acid metabolism may allow better understanding of fontan pathophysiology that will permit early detection of subtle ventricular or circulatory dysfunction in Fontan patients. Ventricular dysfunction and circulatory failure with progressing end-organ impairment like renal or liver dysfunction are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in adults with complex congenital heart disease (CHD), especially in patients with single-ventricle types of CHD and Fontan circulation 1,2. Besides limited cardiac output, alterations that mark Fontan hemodynamics are passive flow to the lungs, chronically elevated venous pressures, and congestion. Unfortunately, the clinical use of traditional markers such as N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels for non-invasive diagnostics and monitoring in such patients is limited 3,4. Thus, for early detection of cardiac and circulatory derangement and for evaluation and tailoring of treatment options, regular functional assessment of these patients is crucial, with complete clinical examination, electrocardiogram, imaging studies, determination of values for traditional laboratory markers, or exercise capacity testing.
Background: Patients with a Fontan circulation have altered cholesterol and lipoprotein values. We analysed small organic molecules in extended phopsholipid and acylcarnitine metabolic pathways (‘metabolomes’) in adult Fontan patients with a dominant left ventricle, seeking differences between profiles in baseline and Fontan circulations. Methods: In an observational matched cross-sectional study, we compared phosphatidylcholine (PC), sphingomyelin (SM), and acylcarnitine metabolomes (105 analytes; AbsoluteIDQ® p180 kit (Biocrates Life Sciences AG, Innsbruck, Austria) in 20 adult Fontan patients having a dominant left ventricle with those in 20 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Results: Serum levels of total PC ( q-value 0.01), total SM ( q-value 0.0002) were significantly lower, and total acylcarnitines ( q-value 0.02) were significantly higher in patients than in controls. After normalisation of data, serum levels of 12 PC and 1 SM Fontan patients were significantly lower ( q-values <0.05), and concentrations of 3 acylcarnitines were significantly higher than those in controls ( q-values <0.05). Conclusion: Metabolomic profiling can use small specimens to identify biomarker patterns that track derangement in multiple metabolic pathways. The striking alterations in the phospholipid and acylcarnitine metabolome that we found in Fontan patients may reflect altered cell signalling and metabolism as found in heart failure in biventricular patients, chronic low-level inflammation, and alteration of functional or structural properties of lymphatic or blood vessels. Trial registration number: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03886935
BackgroundThe aim of the study was to evaluate the effects of universal mass vaccination (UMV) against rotavirus (RV) on the hospitalization rates, nosocomial RV infections and RV-gastroenteritis (GE)-associated secondary blood stream infections (BSI).MethodsThe retrospective evaluation (2002–2009) by chart analysis included all clinically diagnosed and microbiologically confirmed RV-GE cases in a large tertiary care hospital in Austria. The pre-vaccination period (2002–2005) was compared with the recommended and early funded (2006–2007) and the funded (2008–2009) vaccination periods. Primary outcomes were RV-GE-associated hospitalizations, secondary outcomes nosocomial RV disease, secondary BSI and direct hospitalization costs for children and their accompanying persons.ResultsIn 1,532 children with RV-GE, a significant reduction by 73.9% of hospitalized RV-GE cases per year could be observed between the pre-vaccination and the funded vaccination period, which was most pronounced in the age groups 0–11 months (by 87.8%), 6–10 years (by 84.2%) and 11–18 years (88.9%). In the funded vaccination period, a reduction by 71.9% of nosocomial RV-GE cases per year was found compared to the pre-vaccination period. Fatalities due to nosocomial RV-GE were only observed in the pre-vaccination period (3 cases). Direct costs of hospitalized, community-acquired RV-GE cases per year were reduced by 72.7% in the funded vaccination period. The reduction of direct costs for patients (by 86.9%) and accompanying persons (86.2%) was most pronounced in the age group 0–11 months.ConclusionsUMV may have contributed to the significant decrease of RV-GE-associated hospitalizations, to a reduction in nosocomial RV infections and RV-associated morbidity due to secondary BSI and reduced direct hospitalization costs. The reduction in nosocomial cases is an important aspect considering severe disease courses in hospitalized patients with co-morbidities and death due to nosocomial RV-GE.
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