Some forms of early ECG repolarization QRS pattern (ERp) with J‐point elevation of 0.1 mV in two contiguous inferior and/or lateral leads with or without ST‐elevation are potentially associated with a higher arrhythmic risk in adults. We assessed the prevalence of ERp among non‐professional adolescent athletes and correlated it with age, sex, ethnicity, and structural and electric cardiac parameters. We retrospectively analyzed 414 ECGs obtained from young athletes referred to our center from 2006 to 2017. We found ERp in 22% of cases. In the ERp group, we found a greater percentage of black athletes, a higher systolic blood pressure, and lower heart rate (HR) compared with the group without ERp. This pattern was less frequent in female athletes. In athletes with ERp, the occurrence of ventricular ectopic beats was less frequent and QRS‐duration was shorter. They also exhibited greater (a) ECG‐based left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), (b) left ventricular mass, and (c) relative wall thickness (RWT), suggesting a tendency to concentric geometry. At logistic regression analysis, we found that HR (OR 0.98 [0.96‐0.99] P = .013), QRS‐duration (OR 0.96 [0.94‐0.99], P = .003), LVH (OR 1.09 [1.05‐1.12], P < .001), and RWT (OR 1.08 [1.01‐1.16] P = .032) were significant predictors of ERp incidence. ERp is quite common in adolescent athletes and correlates with concentric LV remodeling. Specific clinical and ECG‐findings related to training such as lower HR, LVH, and QRS‐duration are also predictors of ERp. In adolescent non‐professional athletes, ERp is a benign finding associated with some structural and electric cardiac modifications induced by training.
Aims The presence of severe calcific atherosclerosis at the iliofemoral axis may preclude transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) by transfemoral (TF) approach. Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) is a novel technology that fractures intimal/medial calcium and increases vessel compliance allowing TF-TAVI in selected patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). To report on the safety and efficacy of IVL-assisted TF-TAVI in an all-comers population. Methods and results Clinical, imaging and procedural data on all consecutive patients treated by IVL-assisted TF-TAVI in six high-volume European centres (2018–2020) were collected in this prospective, real-world, multicentre registry. IVL-assisted TF-TAVI was performed in 108 patients, increasing from 2.4% to 6.5% of all TAVI in 2018 to 2020, respectively. The target lesion was most often localized at the common and/or external iliac artery (93.5% of cases; average TL-MLD 4.6 ± 0.9 mm with 318 degrees of calcium arc). Transfemoral aortic valve delivery was successful in 100% of cases; final procedural success in 98.2% (two conversion to cardiac open surgery for annular rupture and valve migration). Complications of the IVL-treated segments consisted of one perforation and three major dissections requiring stent implantation (two covered stents and two BMS). Access site related complication included three major bleedings. Three in-hospital deaths were recorded (2.8%, one failed surgical conversion after annular rupture, one cardiac arrest after initial valvuloplasty, one late hyperkalaemia in renal dysfunction). Conclusions IVL-assisted TF-TAVI proved to be a safe and effective approach, which helps expanding the indications for TF-TAVI in patients with severe calcific PAD. Still, these patients maintain a higher than average incidence of peri-procedural complication.
Aims Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The multicentre, prospective Lipid-Rich Plaque trial (LRP) examined non-culprit (NC) non-obstructive coronary segments with a combined near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)-intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) catheter. This study assessed the differences in NC plaque characteristics and their influence on major adverse cardiac events (MACE) in diabetic and non-diabetic patients. Methods and results Patients with known DM status were divided into no diabetes, diabetes not treated with insulin (non-ITDM), and insulin-treated diabetes (ITDM). The association between presence and type of DM and NC-MACE was assessed at both the patient and coronary segment levels by Cox proportional regression modelling. Out of 1552 patients enrolled, 1266 who had their diabetes status recorded were followed through 24 months. Female sex, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, peripheral vascular disease, and high body mass index were significantly more frequent in diabetic patients. The ITDM group had more diseased vessels, at least one NC segment with a maxLCBI4 mm ≥400 in 46.2% of patients, and maxLCBI4 mm ≥400 in nearly one out of six Ware segments (15.2%, 125/824 segments). The average maxLCBI4 mm significantly increased from non-diabetic patients (NoDM) to non-insulin-treated diabetic patients (non-ITDM) to insulin-treated diabetic patients (ITDM; 137.7 ± 161.9, 154.8 ± 173.6, 182.9 ± 193.2, P < 0.001, respectively). In patients assigned to follow-up (692 ± 129 days), ITDM doubled the incidence of NC-MACE compared with the absence of diabetes (15.7% vs. 6.9%, P = 0.0008). The presence of maxLCBI4 mm>400 further increased the NC-MACE rate to 21.6% (Kaplan–Meier estimate). Conclusion Cholesterol-rich NC plaques detected by NIRS-IVUS were significantly more frequent in diabetic patients, especially those who were insulin-treated, and were associated with an increased NC-MACE during follow-up.
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