Hypocalcaemic cardiomyopathy is a rare form of dilated cardiomyopathy. The authors here present two cases in which symptomatic dilated cardiomyopathy was the result of severe hypocalcaemia. First, we report about a 26-year-old woman with primary hypoparathyroidism and then about a 74-year-old man with secondary hypoparathyroidism following a thyroidectomy. In both cases, the left ventricular systolic function improved after calcium supplementation. In the first case, a lack of compliance led to a repeated decrease of both serum calcium level and left ventricular systolic function. The authors also present a comprehensive summary of all cases of hypocalcaemic dilated cardiomyopathy that have been described in literature to date. The mean age of the affected patients was 48.3 years, of which 62% were female patients. The most common causes of hypocalcaemic cardiomyopathy are primary hypoparathyroidism (50%) and post-thyroidectomy hypoparathyroidism (26%). In the post-thyroidectomy subgroup, the median time for the development of hypocalcaemic cardiomyopathy is 10 years (range: 1.5 months to 36 years). Hypocalcaemic cardiomyopathy leads to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction in 87% of patients. Generally, the most common complications of hypoparathyroidism and/or hypocalcaemia are cerebral calcifications, cognitive deficit, and cataracts. Once calcium supplementation is administered, the disease has a good prognosis and, in most individuals, a significant improvement (21%) or even normalization (74%) of the left ventricular systolic function occurs.
The aim of this study was to investigate an association between vascular access blood flow (QVA), cardiac output(CO), and load of left ventricle (LLV) using a simple physical model calculation based on real data, specifically inpatients with high access blood flow arteriovenous fistula(AVF). Vascular access blood flow, CO, and peripheral vascular resistance (PR) were determined by ultrasound dilution technique (HD01; Transonic Systems, Inc., Ithaca, NY). Load of left ventricle was calculated using simplified formula: LLV x PR CO2. This total load was computationally divided into the part spent to run the flow QVA through the AVF (LLVAVF) and that part ensuring the flow (CO-QVA) through the vascular system. The model calculation was first performed in a selected group of 15 patients with high access blood flow (QVA >1,300 ml/min, group 1) and later extended for comparison by another group of 40 unselected patients with access blood flow in lower range (QVA range 200-1,400 ml/min, group 2).Mean LLV in group 1 was 2.10 +/- 0.68 W. LLV(AVF) was 21.8% of total LLV. Mean LLV in group 2 was 1.2 +/- 0.5 W.LLVAVF was 11.1% of total LLV. Our computational results suggest that AVF in typical range of QVA shall not increase heart load significantly.
The article discusses the issue of suitable parameters (pressures, recirculation and access flow) to assess hemodialysis vascular access quality (VAQ), available methods to measure those parameters and the setup of the entire VAQ surveillance system (VAQS) in a dialysis facility. Special attention is paid to factors which need some standardization to enable evaluation of VAQ trends in an individual as well as comparison of data from different patients and different dialysis facilities. The discussed procedures are documented with the authors’ own measurement results and the results of the VAQS implemented in their unit. Both dynamic and static pressures exhibit insufficient sensitivity in detecting stenoses in native arteriovenous fistulas. Access recirculation is a late finding because with its non-zero value dialysis quality is already compromised. Timely and reliable detection of a deteriorating access condition is enabled by access flow (QVA) only. No standardization is needed in extracorporeal blood flow used in QVA evaluation by ultrasonic dilution. Multiple measurements may increase the reliability of thermodilutional measurements and are a must in optodilutional ones. Timing of the measurement during dialysis should be standardized. Measurement frequency should take into account access type, QVA value and access history. Shortened intervals are needed in the immediate post-intervention period with regard to risk of re-stenosis incidence and strongly nonlinear QVA decreases in such cases. A significant shift-over from surgical interventions to balloon angioplasties is to be expected with the introduction of a VAQS, and appropriate measures must be taken to ensure their quick availability.
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