Publications by authors named "Mariell Jessup"

Article Synopsis
  • Home-time is the time patients spend alive and at home after being treated for heart failure, and it hasn't been studied much before. * -
  • The study looked at 66,019 older patients who had heart failure from 2019 to 2021 and found that many didn’t get to spend all their time at home; only 22% spent a full year at home after leaving the hospital. * -
  • A lot of older patients, especially Black patients, had less time at home, and many faced high rates of returning to the hospital or dying within a year after their discharge.*
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Background: Cardiogenic shock is a morbid complication of heart disease that claims the lives of more than 1 in 3 patients presenting with this syndrome. Supporting a unique collaboration across clinical specialties, federal regulators, payors, and industry, the American Heart Association volunteers and staff have launched a quality improvement registry to better understand the clinical manifestations of shock phenotypes, and to benchmark the management patterns, and outcomes of patients presenting with cardiogenic shock to hospitals across the United States.

Methods: Participating hospitals will enroll consecutive hospitalized patients with cardiogenic shock, regardless of etiology or severity.

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Article Synopsis
  • There is a significant lack of diversity among participants in cardiovascular trials, which undermines the generalizability of results and ultimately affects health outcomes across different populations.
  • The Cardiothoracic Surgical Trials Network (CTSN) has acknowledged this issue and initiated a plan to improve representation among both investigators and trial participants, especially focusing on gender and racial diversity.
  • Results from CTSN trials reveal disparities in enrollment, with efforts now aimed at addressing barriers to participation, enhancing awareness of social determinants of health, and implementing active recruitment strategies to ensure a more representative sample in future trials.
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In 1924, the founders of the American Heart Association (AHA) envisioned an international society focused on the heart and aimed at facilitating research, disseminating information, increasing public awareness, and developing public health policy related to heart disease. This presidential advisory provides a comprehensive review of the past century of cardiovascular and stroke science, with a focus on the AHA's contributions, as well as informed speculation about the future of cardiovascular science into the next century of the organization's history. The AHA is a leader in fundamental, translational, clinical, and population science, and it promotes the concept of the "learning health system," in which a continuous cycle of evidence-based practice leads to practice-based evidence, permitting an iterative refinement in clinical evidence and care.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Heart failure (HF) is usually classified based on left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), but this method relies on arbitrary cutpoints that might not reflect the physiological complexities of the condition.
  • - A recent review by the Heart Failure Collaboratory analyzed various clinical trials and found that many HF treatments work effectively across a wide range of LVEF values, although their specific effects can differ depending on the LVEF level.
  • - Moving forward, it is proposed that HF classification focuses on whether LVEF is reduced or not, while promoting further research to test new treatments across the entire LVEF spectrum.
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  • Large-scale clinical trials in cardiology need fast and precise publication to effectively share results, but traditional methods like conference presentations lack detail and can lead to misinterpretation.
  • Preprint servers offer quicker access to research but aren't peer-reviewed, and major journal publications can be expedited with checklists, though rejection poses challenges that could be eased by certain procedural adjustments.
  • Wider dissemination of trial results is crucial for impacting clinical practice, which can be aided by simplified summaries and various media, highlighting the need for accurate, accessible, and trustworthy information.
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We aimed to identify a simple metric accounting for peri-procedural hemoglobin changes, independent of blood product transfusion strategies, and assess its correlation with outcomes in patients undergoing left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation We included consecutive patients undergoing LVAD implantation at a single center between 10/1/2008 and 6/1/2014. The anemia stress index (ASI), defined as the sum of number of packed red blood cells transfused and the hemoglobin changes after LVAD implantation, was calculated for each patient at 24 h, discharge, and 3 months after LVAD implantation. Our cohort included 166 patients (80.

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Importance: Intimal hyperplasia and subsequent saphenous vein graft failure may have significant adverse clinical effects in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. External support of saphenous vein grafts has the potential to prevent vein graft dilation and hence slow the rate of intimal hyperplasia and increase long-term vein patency.

Objective: To determine efficacy, as measured by intimal hyperplasia, and safety of an external saphenous vein graft support device in patients undergoing a coronary bypass graft procedure.

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Importance: Despite bearing a disproportionate burden of heart failure (HF), Black and Hispanic individuals have been poorly represented in HF clinical trials. Underrepresentation in clinical trials limits the generalizability of the findings to these populations and may even introduce uncertainties and hesitancy when translating trial data to the care of people from underrepresented groups. The Heart Failure Collaboratory, a consortium of stakeholders convened to enhance HF therapeutic development, has been dedicated to improving recruitment strategies for patients from diverse and historically underrepresented groups.

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  • Cardiovascular disease is the top cause of death among women, highlighting the need for personalized research that addresses risk factors influenced by sex and race inequities.
  • The Research Goes Red (RGR) registry, launched by the American Heart Association and Verily in 2019, is an online platform that collects data to improve understanding and management of cardiovascular issues in women.
  • As of July 2021, RGR has engaged over 15,000 participants, primarily women, and is conducting studies focused on perimenopausal weight gain and increasing awareness of cardiovascular health among underrepresented groups.
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Background: Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is the most common revascularization approach for the treatment of multi-vessel coronary artery disease. While the internal mammary artery is nearly universally used to bypass the left anterior descending coronary artery, autologous saphenous vein grafts (SVGs) are still the most frequently used conduits to grafts the remaining coronary artery targets. Long-term failure of these grafts, however, continues to limit the benefits of surgery.

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Background: Tricuspid regurgitation is common in patients with severe degenerative mitral regurgitation. However, the evidence base is insufficient to inform a decision about whether to perform tricuspid-valve repair during mitral-valve surgery in patients who have moderate tricuspid regurgitation or less-than-moderate regurgitation with annular dilatation.

Methods: We randomly assigned 401 patients who were undergoing mitral-valve surgery for degenerative mitral regurgitation to receive a procedure with or without tricuspid annuloplasty (TA).

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The liver is not the exclusive site of glucose production in humans in the postabsorptive state. Robust data support that the kidney is capable of gluconeogenesis and studies have demonstrated that renal glucose production can increase systemic glucose production. The kidney has a role in maintaining glucose body balance, not only as an organ for gluconeogenesis but by using glucose as a metabolic substrate.

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Background: Gender disparities in authorship of heart failure (HF) guideline citations and clinical trials have not been examined.

Methods: We identified authors of publications referenced in Class I Recommendations in United States (n=173) and European (n=100) HF guidelines and of publications of all HF trials with >400 participants (n=118) published between 2001 and 2016. Authors' genders were determined, and changes in authorship patterns over time were evaluated with linear regression and nonparametric testing.

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Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted healthcare delivery, significantly affecting heart failure (HF) patients, both those infected with the virus and those with other cardiovascular issues.
  • Hearts with HF are at greater risk for severe complications from COVID-19, and the virus can lead to new heart problems like myocarditis and cardiomyopathy.
  • Special considerations are necessary for advanced HF patients, especially those with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) or heart transplants, and this review focuses on emerging data regarding HF related to COVID-19 and care for uninfected HF patients.
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Acute heart failure (AHF) is a syndrome defined as the new onset (de novo heart failure (HF)) or worsening (acutely decompensated heart failure (ADHF)) of symptoms and signs of HF, mostly related to systemic congestion. In the presence of an underlying structural or functional cardiac dysfunction (whether chronic in ADHF or undiagnosed in de novo HF), one or more precipitating factors can induce AHF, although sometimes de novo HF can result directly from the onset of a new cardiac dysfunction, most frequently an acute coronary syndrome. Despite leading to similar clinical presentations, the underlying cardiac disease and precipitating factors may vary greatly and, therefore, the pathophysiology of AHF is highly heterogeneous.

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