The American journal of medicine
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The 2023 American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology Multisociety Guideline for the Management of Patients with Chronic Coronary Disease provides updated recommendations for the management of chronic coronary disease. The term "chronic coronary disease" reflects the lifelong nature of the disease and diverse disease etiologies that come under the chronic coronary disease umbrella, beyond the presence of epicardial coronary stenosis, which require targeted lifestyle recommendations, serial optimization of medications, and involvement of multiple care team members. In this review, we highlight several areas where a collaborative approach between cardiologists, primary care clinicians, and internists is essential to optimize the care of patients with chronic coronary disease.
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We aimed to evaluate the applicability of the eligibility criteria of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) cited in guideline recommendations in a real-world cohort of patients receiving secondary prevention after acute myocardial infarction from the EPICOR registries. ⋯ Most real-world acute myocardial infarction patients are eligible for secondary prevention therapy in both general and specific guideline recommendations, and the percentage of those on beta blockers and ACEI/ARB at hospital discharge is high. There are large regional variations in the proportion of patients receiving recommended therapies. Local targeted interventions are needed for quality improvement.
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Sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have emerged as an important approach for the treatment of heart failure in patients with or without diabetes. Although the precise mechanisms underpinning their clinical impact remain incompletely resolved, mechanistic studies and insights from major clinical trials have demonstrated the impact of SGLT2 inhibitors on numerous cardio-renal-metabolic pathways of relevance to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), which, in the contemporary era, constitutes approximately half of all patients with heart failure. Despite rates of morbidity and mortality that are commensurate with those of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, disease-modifying therapies have comparatively been severely lacking. ⋯ Within the past decade, HFpEF has been established as a highly integrated disorder, involving not only the cardiovascular system, but also the lungs, kidneys, skeletal muscle, and adipose tissue. Given their multisystem impact, SGLT2i offer unique promise in addressing the complex pathophysiology of HFpEF, and in recent randomized controlled trials, were shown to significantly reduce heart failure events and cardiovascular death in patients with HFpEF. Herein, we discuss several proposed mechanisms of clinical benefit of SGLT2i in HFpEF.
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In the United States, ongoing efforts to increase individual- and population-level physical activity have made little to no progress over the past decade in reducing the percentage of individuals who report no leisure-time physical activity. The purpose of the current study is to further assess the relationship between social vulnerability and the prevalence of physical inactivity at the county level. ⋯ On a national level, physical inactivity prevalence is unacceptably high and has not appreciably improved over the past decade. Within the United States, high levels of social vulnerability and physical inactivity are concentrated within specific geographic regions that need tailored solutions to resolve health disparities.