Herz
-
Remodelling is the adaptive or maladaptive response to cardiac overload or injury resulting in changes of size and function of the heart. The final pathway of maladaptive or adverse cardiac remodelling is the evolution of heart failure or sudden cardiac death. ⋯ During the last three decades, potential therapeutic concepts have been established and reversal of adverse remodelling could be demonstrated in up-to end-stage disease. A further understanding of the underlying cellular, extracellular, molecular and genetic alterations in ischemic remodelling should reveal other promising targets for prevention and reversal of remodelling.
-
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is one of the major problems in the western world with approximately 70.000-100.000 SCD patients (pts) in Germany and 450.000 SCD victims in the US. SCD is not caused by a single factor but is a multifactorial problem. ⋯ There is general agreement that early defibrillation with automated external defibrillators (AED) is an effective tool to treat pts with ventricular fibrillation. Nevertheless, further stragies on cardiopulmonary resuscitation and AED therapy are necessary to improve survival of patients with cardiac arrest.
-
Comparative Study Controlled Clinical Trial
[The length of hospital stay in patients with acute coronary syndrome is reduced by establishing a chest pain unit].
Providing prompt and appropriate therapy, combined with the increased economic requirements of treating patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), places high demands on the emergency department. The aim of the present analysis is to evaluate to what extent establishing a dedicated chest pain unit (CPU) influences the length of hospital stay in ACS patients. ⋯ Establishing a chest pain unit with optimized diagnostic and structural processes is associated with reduced lengths of hospital stay in patients with ACS treated according to current guidelines and recommendations.
-
The goal of cardiac rehabilitation is to support heart patients using a multidisciplinary team in order to obtain the best possible physical and mental health and achieve long-term social reintegration. In addition to improving physical fitness, cardiac rehabilitation restores self-confidence, thus better equipping patients to deal with mental illness and improving their social reintegration ("participation"). Once the causes of disease have been identified and treated as effectively as possible, drug and lifestyle changes form the focus of cardiac rehabilitation measures. ⋯ Both settings should be possible for an individual patient. Cardiac rehabilitation is already focusing on older, sicker and polymorbid patients; this will become ever more the case in the future. There is still a need for future clinical research for these patients.
-
Non-invasive tomographic imaging modalities have recently contributed to identifying aortic intramural hematoma, a variant form of classic dissection, which is characterized by the absence of an intimal tear and thus the absence of direct flow communication, and which represents an important disease entity in acute aortic syndrome. Clinical investigations have revealed that intramural hematoma has characteristic clinical features and that the natural remodeling process of hematoma is different from that of classic aortic dissection. These findings suggest that intramural hematoma is not just a precursor to aortic dissection, but may be a unique disease entity with a more favorable prognosis compared to aortic dissection. ⋯ Due to favorable outcomes with medical treatment in Asian patients with type A intramural hematoma, a tailored or individualized approach based on risk stratification using initial clinical information and including imaging studies and timely surgical repair has been suggested in hemodynamically stable patients; however, these results need to be confirmed in other patient populations. The concept of a "micro-tear" which cannot be easily visualized using conventional imaging modalities has been raised: "echo-free space" on transesophageal echocardiography and "focal contrast enhancement" on ultra-fast computerized tomography have drawn many physicians' attention, and the possibility of a pathophysiologic link between classic aortic dissection and intramural hematoma has been discussed. Further investigations are needed to test whether intramural hematoma begins with an initial intimal tear and a different aortic status--characterized by a more rigid and non-compliant aorta associated with old age or long-standing hypertension--and results in an apparently absent intimal flap.