Publications by authors named "Stafford Warren"

Background: Dormant coronary collaterals are highly prevalent and clinically beneficial in cases of coronary occlusion. However, the magnitude of myocardial perfusion provided by immediate coronary collateral recruitment during acute occlusion is unknown. We aimed to quantify collateral myocardial perfusion during balloon occlusion in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD).

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This review considers antiviral nucleoside analog drugs, including ribavirin, favipiravir, and molnupiravir, which induce genome error catastrophe in SARS-CoV or SARS-CoV-2 via lethal mutagenesis as a mode of action. In vitro data indicate that molnupiravir may be 100 times more potent as an antiviral agent than ribavirin or favipiravir. Molnupiravir has recently demonstrated efficacy in a phase 3 clinical trial.

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The scientific STAFF and MALT meetings were created around the turn of the century for scientists engaged in enhancing the role of the 12-lead ECG for detection and quantification of involved myocardium in patients with acute coronary syndrome. These meetings were initially focused on computer processing of data from two single-center databases. The STAFF database was collected in the mid-nineties on patients with prolonged total coronary occlusion; high-resolution 12-lead ECGs were collected before, during, and after 5 minutes of occlusion.

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The Staff Studies comprise a database of 228 patients undergoing elective 5 minute coronary artery balloon occlusion angioplasty at a single center in the pre-stent era in whom standard and high-frequency electrocardiographic and nuclear information was obtained immediately before, during and after balloon occlusion. The data were then analyzed by multiple investigators at different international academic centers from different perspectives. Simulating in a clinical setting the first 5 minutes of a heart attack, this database, now in digital format, is the largest database to date documenting standard and high-frequency ECG changes from the onset and for 5 minutes during acute coronary artery occlusion, with resting and occlusion imaging in a subset of these patients.

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Background And Aims: The electrocardiogram (ECG) based Sclarovsky-Birnbaum Ischemia Grade may be used to determine the prognosis of patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). However, application of the method is based on assumption of the baseline QRS morphology. Thus, the aims of this study were to determine if the baseline QRS morphology was correctly assumed based on an ECG recorded during induced ischemia, and if reference to the baseline ECG altered the designated Ischemia Grade.

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Ischemic preconditioning is a form of intrinsic cardioprotection where an episode of sublethal ischemia protects against subsequent episodes of ischemia. Identifying a clinical biomarker of preconditioning could have important clinical implications, and prior work has focused on the electrocardiographic ST segment. However, the electrophysiology biomarker of preconditioning is increased action potential duration (APD) shortening with subsequent ischemic episodes, and APD shortening should primarily alter the T wave, not the ST segment.

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Background: The ECG is important in the diagnosis and triage of the acute coronary syndrome (ACS), especially in the hyperacute phase, the "golden hours," during which myocardial salvage possibilities are largest. An important triaging decision to be taken is whether or not a patient requires primary PCI, for which, as mentioned in the guidelines, the presence of an ST elevation (STE) pattern in the ECG is a major criterion. However, preexisting non-zero ST amplitudes (diagnostic, but also non-diagnostic) can obscure or even preclude this diagnosis.

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Excess weight is a known risk factor for coronary artery disease (CAD) and a large percentage of overweight and obese individuals ultimately develop CAD. The objective of this study was to identify human genes associated with CAD in a subgroup of overweight and obese individuals using population-based association methods. Logistic regression analyses were used to test the association between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 34 candidate genes and the CAD phenotype with age, gender, and BMI as covariates.

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Introduction: In the presence of coronary artery obstruction, complex cardiovascular reflexes may lead to changes in heart rate and even to the precipitation of malignant arrhythmias. The autonomic nervous system (ANS) has traditionally been considered to be "balanced" between continuously interacting sympathetic and parasympathetic outflows. The purpose of this study was to assess ANS control of the heart during prolonged coronary balloon occlusion procedures of one of the major coronary arteries.

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Background: Resting conventional 12-lead ECG has low sensitivity for detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and low positive predictive value (PPV) for prediction of left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD). We hypothesized that a approximately 5-min resting 12-lead advanced ECG test ("A-ECG") that combined results from both the advanced and conventional ECG could more accurately screen for these conditions than strictly conventional ECG.

Methods: Results from nearly every conventional and advanced resting ECG parameter known from the literature to have diagnostic or predictive value were first retrospectively evaluated in 418 healthy controls and 290 patients with imaging-proven CAD, LVH and/or LVSD.

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Objective: This study tests the ability of high-frequency components of the depolarization phase (HF-QRS) vs conventional ST-elevation criteria to detect and quantify myocardial ischemia.

Methods: Twenty-one patients admitted for elective percutaneous coronary intervention were included. Quantification of the ischemia was made by myocardial scintigraphy.

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Background: The ubiquitous use of less invasive therapeutic angiographic procedures has created the milieu for long-term occupational risk of cancer and genetic defects. This study set out to determine the relative effectiveness of redundant radiation protective barriers and their impact on operator total-body-ionizing radiation exposure in the catheterization suite.

Methods: Thermolucent dosimeter x-irradiation was measured inside and outside personal and movable protective barriers used concurrently during 50 consecutive procedures by a single operator.

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Background: Electrocardiogram (ECG)-based detection of ischemia is typically dependent on identifying changes in repolarization. Analysis of high-frequency QRS (HFQRS) components, related to the depolarization phase of the cardiac action potential, has been reported to better identify ischemia. Our aim was to test the hypothesis that HFQRS analysis is both more sensitive and specific than standard ECG for detecting exercise-induced ischemia in patients undergoing exercise myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI).

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Background: Delay in treatment of patients with ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI) has an adverse effect on patient outcomes. Limited data are available on the effectiveness of hospital care improvement strategies (HCIS) to reduce time to reperfusion by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). This study evaluated the combined effect of HCIS implementation to reduce door-to-balloon time in patients with STEMI.

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Introduction: ECG stress testing is an inexpensive and non-invasive detector of myocardial ischemia; addition of high-frequency QRS analysis (HFQRS) may improve accuracy. This study compared HFQRS during exercise in patients with and without ischemia as defined by multiple criteria.

Material And Methods: High-resolution ECGs were recorded for 139 patients undergoing T99-sestamibi/T201-thallium stress testing.

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Calcific aortic valve stenosis is the most common valvular disease in developed countries, and the major reason for operative valve replacement. In the US, the current annual cost of this surgery is approximately 1 billion dollars. Despite increasing morbidity and mortality, little is known of the cellular basis of the calcifications, which occur in high-perfusion zones of the heart.

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Coronary artery occlusions related to myocardial ischemia drive cardiac control system reactions that may lead to heart failure. The purpose of this study was to assess the autonomic nervous system (ANS) response during prolonged percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Continuous ECG data were acquired from 50 patients before and during PTCA, with occlusions in the left anterior descending, left circumflex or right coronary artery.

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This article introduces a novel concept of abnormal intra-QRS potentials (AIQPs) associated with myocardial ischemia. AIQPs are microvolt-level potentials--subtle alterations in the QRS of the high-resolution electrocardiogram (ECG)--isolated from the unfiltered signal-averaged ECG (SAECG) by a method of mathematical modeling. The aims of the study were (1) to determine the characteristics of potentials in the SAECG related to ischemically altered activation during percutaneous transluminal coronary angiography (PTCA), (2) to determine their relationship with standard 12-lead ECG variables, and (3) to investigate whether AIQPs have a specific pathophysiologic basis in myocardial ischemia.

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This study compared ST-segment changes during acute coronary artery occlusion with measurements of ischemia by myocardial scintigraphy. Forty patients who were referred for elective prolonged percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty underwent 12-lead electrocardiographic recording before the procedure (baseline) and continuously during the entire balloon inflation (occlusion). For each patient, the summed ST-segment deviation was calculated as the maximal absolute difference, elevation or depression, between baseline and occlusion recordings in all 12 leads.

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