International journal of cardiology
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Depression is an important risk factor of cardiovascular disease (CVD), a leading cause of death worldwide. One of the reasons underlying this association may be that depression modifies the association between treatable cardiovascular risk factors and cardiac events (angina pectoris or myocardial infarction). We tested this hypothesis in a cohort study of middle-aged men and women in France followed for 20 years. ⋯ The association between depression and cardiac events is unlikely to be explained by a heightened impact of hypertension, diabetes or dyslipidemia.
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Editorial Comment
Administrative database, observational research and the Tower of Babel.
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The approach suggested by the 2018 ESC GL is the main road for achieving the ambitious goal "zero admission for syncope". This document has in fact introduced a clear-cut distinction between syncope associated with a definite diagnosis, which shall be managed according to the underlying condition, and the really undetermined cases, which shall be managed with prognostic stratification. ⋯ Moreover, they provide a table of non-syncopal causes of TLOC to be excluded, indicating the clinical features distinguishing them from syncope, clearly define the indications for additional examinations to be made after the initial evaluation and include a detailed table contains features for stratifying patients as being at high- and low-risk. However, we believe that this approach could be further improved, by especially defining criteria to identify patient neither high nor low risk, to be called at "intermediate-risk", making the prognostic stratification table easier to remember and use, by clarifying the role of laboratory tests to support the clinical judgment and by defining protocol for managing patients ED observation unit.
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Multicenter Study
External validation of two Framingham cardiovascular risk equations and the Pooled Cohort equations: A nationwide registry analysis.
Cardiovascular prevention guidelines advocate the use of statistical risk equations to predict individual cardiovascular risk. However, predictive accuracy and clinical value of existing equations may differ in populations other than the one used for their development. Using baseline and follow-up data of the Austrian health-screening program, we assessed discrimination, calibration, and clinical utility of three widely recommended equations-the Framingham 1991 and 2008 general cardiovascular disease (CVD) equations, and the Pooled Cohort equations predicting atherosclerotic CVD. ⋯ The equations can discriminate high-risk from low-risk individuals, but predictive accuracy (especially for high-risk individuals) might be improved by recalibration. The Framingham 1991 equation yielded the most accurate predictions.
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Observational Study
Management of idiopathic recurrent pericarditis during pregnancy.
Data concerning idiopathic recurrent pericarditis in pregnancy are scarce. ⋯ General outcomes of pregnancy in patients with idiopathic recurrent pericarditis is good, especially when patients are carefully followed by multidisciplinary teams according to standardized protocols.