Publications by authors named "Miguel Cortes-Morichetti"

The introduction of speckle tracking imaging (STI) allowed the quantification of the regional myocardial function in the right ventricular (RV) free wall using deformation parameters. We sought to evaluate the potential utility of STI at rest and after stress to predict arrhythmogenic RV dysplasia (ARVD). We studied 19 patients with ARVD (diagnosed according to the task force criteria) and 19 healthy age- and gender-matched subjects.

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Adenosine and inosine are both key intracellular energy substrates for nucleotide synthesis by salvage pathways, especially during ischemic stress conditions. Additionally they both possess cell protective and cell repair properties. The objective of this study is to detect potential advantages of the combination of adenosine and inosine versus each drug alone, in terms of ventricular function, infarct size reduction and angiogenesis.

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Background: Until now, cell therapy has constituted a passive therapeutic approach; the only effects seem to be related to the reduction of the myocardial fibrosis and the limitation of the adverse ventricular remodeling. Cardiac resynchronization therapy is indicated in patients with heart failure to correct conduction disorders associated with chronic systolic and diastolic dysfunction. The association of electrostimulation with cellular cardiomyoplasty could be a way to transform passive cell therapy into "dynamic cellular support.

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Cell transplantation for the regeneration of ischemic myocardium is limited by poor graft viability and low cell retention. In ischemic cardiomyopathy the extracellular matrix is deeply altered; therefore, it could be important to associate a procedure aiming at regenerating myocardial cells and restoring the extracellular matrix function. We evaluated intrainfarct cell therapy associated with a cell-seeded collagen scaffold grafted onto infarcted ventricles.

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Background: Cell transplantation for the regeneration of ischemic myocardium is limited by poor graft viability and low cell retention. In ischemic cardiomyopathy, the extracellular matrix is deeply altered; therefore, it could be important to associate a procedure aiming at regenerating myocardial cells and restoring the extracellular matrix function. We evaluated the feasibility and safety of intrainfarct cell therapy associated with a cell-seeded collagen scaffold grafted onto infarcted ventricles.

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Ischemic myocardial disease, the main cause of heart failure, is a major public health and economic problem. Given the aging population, heart failure is becoming an increasing clinical issue and a substantial financial burden. Thus, research in heart failure is of relevant interest and importance, involving specialties such as cellular and molecular biology, tissue engineering, genetics, biophysics and electrophysiology.

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The objective of cellular cardiomyoplasty is to regenerate the myocardium using implantation of living cells. Because the extracellular myocardial matrix is deeply altered in ischemic cardiomyopathies, it could be important to create a procedure aiming at regenerating both myocardial cells and the extracellular matrix. We evaluated the potential of a collagen matrix seeded with cells and grafted onto infarcted ventricles.

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Aims: We compared two procedures for local myocardial treatment: transepicardial versus transendocardial catheter injection. Transepicardial injections were performed under direct surgical visualization whereas transendocardial injections were performed using electrophysiological guidance.

Methods: A left ventricle (LV) myocardial infarction (MI) was surgically created in 14 sheep.

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Several studies have reported that patients (pts) with severe aortic stenosis and similar pressure gradients or even similar aortic valve areas may have quite different symptomatic status and clinical outcomes suggesting that other factors might have a significant impact on the pathophysiology of this disease. Our purpose was to assess the severity of subendocardial wall dysfunction in symptomatic and asymptomatic pts with aortic stenosis using tissue Doppler imaging (TDI), strain rate imaging (SRI) and cyclic variation of integrated backscatter (IB). We studied 68 pts with aortic valvar stenosis and 46 subjects with no signs of heart disease.

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Objectives: This study was designed to assess whether post-myocardial infarction (MI) in-scar transplantation of skeletal myoblasts (SM) could reduce chronic ischemic mitral regurgitation (MR) by decreasing left ventricular (LV) remodeling.

Background: Extensive work has confirmed the relationship between ischemic MR and post-myocardial infarction (MI) remodeling of the LV.

Methods: An infero-posterior MI was created in 13 sheep, thereby resulting in increasing MR.

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Ventricular dyssynchrony is a relatively common problem in patients with heart failure, in particular those with wide QRS complex, and appears to have a deleterious effect on the natural history of heart failure, as it has been associated with increased mortality. Mechanistic studies, observational evaluations, and randomized trials have consistently demonstrated the beneficial effects of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in patients with moderate-to-severe chronic systolic heart failure and ventricular dyssynchrony who have failed optimal medical treatment. However, despite the promising results, it is estimated that in approximately 30% of patients undergoing CRT, the symptoms of heart failure do not improve or become even worse.

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Background: Heart failure develops after myocardial infarction and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. The ability to direct differentiation of embryonic stem cells (ESC) towards a cardiomyogenic phenotype makes them an attractive therapeutic option for cardiac repair, but species-specific and individual-specific immunological imprinting remains a hurdle. Our aim was to ascertain whether the purported immune privilege of ESC allows for their cross-species engraftment in a clinically relevant large-animal model.

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Aims: This study was designed to assess the functional effects of a transvenous coronary sinus technique of skeletal myoblast delivery in infarcted myocardium.

Methods And Results: An anterior myocardial infarction was created percutaneously in 14 sheep. Simultaneously, a muscle biopsy was harvested and expanded.

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