In the emergency admission due to worsening heart failure (HF) in patients on maintenance hemodialysis, emergent dialysis may be indicated, which increases personnel expenses. To clarify the characteristics and in‐hospital management of the patients, we conducted a multicenter retrospective study including 142 patients on maintenance hemodialysis emergently admitted for worsening HF (71.6 ± 9.2 years, 69.0% male, 44.4% HF with preserved [≥50%] ejection fraction). The interval between last hemodialysis and admission was long (median 55 h), suggesting that fluid accumulation triggered HF events. Although most patients (73.9%) were admitted in the nighttime (5 p.m. to 9 a.m.), only 17.9% of them needed nighttime dialysis and were managed medically until the first in‐hospital dialysis, with the use of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation in 45.1% and oxygen supplementation in 95.8%. While patients on hemodialysis with worsening HF were frequently admitted in the nighttime, nighttime dialysis was indicated in a limited population.
Cardiac reactive fibrosis is a fibroblast-derived maladaptive process to tissue injury that exacerbates an uncontrolled deposition of large amounts of extracellular matrix (ECM) around cardiomyocytes and vascular cells, being recognized as a pathological entity of morbidity and mortality. Cardiac fibrosis is partially controlled through the sustained activation of TGF-β1 through IL-11 in fibroblasts. Yet, preclinical studies on fibrosis treatment require human physiological approaches due to the multicellular crosstalk between cells and tissues in the heart. Here, we leveraged an iPSC-derived multi-lineage human heart organoid (hHO) platform composed of different cardiac cell types to set the basis of a preclinical model for evaluating drug cardiotoxicity and assessing cardiac fibrosis phenotypes. We found that the inhibition of the p38-MAPK pathway significantly reduces COL1A1 depositions. Yet, concomitant treatment with organ-rejection immunosuppressant drugs Tacrolimus or Sirolimus reverts this effect, opening new questions on the clinical considerations of combined therapies in reducing fibrosis after organ transplantation.
Background: Several factors associated with atrial functional mitral regurgitation development have been reported; however, geometric changes in the mitral apparatus after catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation have not been sufficiently investigated. This study aimed to clarify what determines improvements in atrial functional mitral regurgitation after sinus rhythm restoration in patients who underwent catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation by using multislice computed tomography.Methods: We analysed volumetric multislice computed tomography images of 44 atrial fibrillation patients with significant atrial functional mitral regurgitation (moderate or worse) before and after catheter ablation. We measured the threedimensional geometry of the mitral apparatus including the mitral annular area and interpapillary muscle distance. We calculated the differences before and after catheter ablation (Δmitral annular area, Δinterpapillary muscle distance) and assessed mitral regurgitation severity based on the mitral regurgitant jet area and its changes before and after catheter ablation (Δjet area) using transthoracic echocardiography.Results: After catheter ablation, the jet area was significantly decreased. The left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly increased and the left ventricular volume had a decreasing trend. The Δjet area was significantly correlated with the Δinterpapillary muscle distance (r = .43; p = .004). The Δinterpapillary muscle distance was the strongest determinant of improvements in atrial functional mitral regurgitation severity (p = .026).Conclusions: Decreased interpapillary muscle distance was strongly associated with improvements in atrial functional mitral regurgitation. Amelioration of left ventricular dysfunction by sinus rhythm restoration might be related to improvements in atrial functional mitral regurgitation after catheter ablation.
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