J Clin Med
February 2024
Background: Congestion is an essential issue in patients with heart failure (HF). Standard treatments do not usually achieve decongestion, and various strategies have been proposed to guide treatment, such as determination of natriuresis. After starting treatment with loop diuretics, we postulate that initial natriuresis might help treatment titration, decongestion, and improve prognosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) could be a common cause of heart failure (HF). The objective of the study was to estimate the prevalence of CA in patients with HF.
Methods: Observational, prospective, and multicenter study involving 30 Spanish hospitals.
Background: Lung ultrasound is feasible for assessing lung injury caused by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). However, the prognostic meaning and time-line changes of lung injury assessed by lung ultrasound in COVID-19 hospitalised patients are unknown.
Methods: Prospective cohort study designed to analyse prognostic value of lung ultrasound in COVID-19 patients by using a quantitative scale (lung ultrasound Zaragoza (LUZ)-score) during the first 72 h after admission.
Microscopic polyangiitis is a systemic vasculitis that affects small caliber vessels, with renal and lung compromise. We present the case of a patient with an atypical presentation of this disease and an onset characterized by central nervous system affection in the form of a motor deficit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdvanced hypertension (HT), associated with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), impairs myocardial microvascular function and structure and leads to increased myocardial hypoxia and growth factor activation. However, the effect of HT on microvascular architecture and its relation to microvascular function, before the development of LVH (early HT), remains unclear. By way of method, pigs were studied after 12 wk of renovascular HT (n = 7) or control (n = 7) animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperimental hypercholesterolemia (HC) may lead to microvascular neovascularization, but the underlying pathogenic mechanism remains unclear. We tested the hypothesis that HC-induced intra-renal neovascularization is associated with inflammation and increased oxidative stress, and would be prevented by chronic antioxidant intervention. Kidneys were excised from pigs after a 12-wk normal (n = 10) or HC diet (n = 8), or HC diet supplemented daily with antioxidant vitamins C (1 g) and E (100 IU/kg) (HC + vitamins, n = 7).
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