Objective: This study aimed to determine aortic disease severity in patients with Loeys-Dietz syndrome (LDS).
Methods: Thirty-three patients with LDS diagnosed and followed up at our unit were included. After reviewing all family trees, 25 deceased family members with clear clinical suspicion of having had LDS were also included. Clinical presentation, aortic dilation rate by echocardiography and age at aortic surgery, dissection or death were determined.
Results: Median aortic diameter at diagnosis was 36 mm, 43% of the patients aged >40 years had a z-score <2. Median aortic root dilation rate was 0.67 mm/year (maximum 2.0 mm/year) over a median follow-up of 2 years (IQR 1.0-4.0). In the global cohort, 31/58 patients reached a clinical endpoint; 19% death, median age: 52 years; 14% dissection, median age: 36 years; 21% aortic surgery, median age: 53 years. As expected, probands had a higher z-score (2.9 vs 1.5, p=0.019) and more often required aortic surgery (33.4% vs 18.2%, p=0.035) compared with family members. TGFBR2 carriers had a higher z-score compared with TGFBR1 carriers (3.2 vs 1.5, p=0.034) and younger age at aortic surgery (HR 4.9, 95% CI 1.5 to 123, p=0.026). Craniofacial severity index was inversely correlated with age at first event (r=-0.765, p=0.045).
Conclusions: Although paediatric patients were not properly represented in our cohort, our patients with LDS presented a significant heterogeneity in the severity of aortic disease with large intrafamilial and interfamilial variability, aortic root aneurysm were less frequent and aortic complications less premature than previously depicted. Furthermore, aortic dilation rate was similar to that reported in Marfan syndrome and aortic root diameters appear to be larger in TGFBR2 carriers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2015-308535 | DOI Listing |
The zebrafish is a valuable model organism for studying cardiac development and diseases due to its many shared aspects of genetics and anatomy with humans and ease of experimental manipulations. Computational fluid-structure interaction (FSI) simulations are an efficient and highly controllable means to study the function of cardiac valves in development and diseases. Due to their small scales, little is known about the mechanical properties of zebrafish cardiac valves, limiting existing computational studies of zebrafish valves and their interaction with blood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pediatr
December 2024
Pediatric Rheumatology Department, Hospital Para El Niño Poblano, Puebla, Mexico.
A female patient in middle childhood was diagnosed with coarctation of the aorta at one month of age and underwent a successful cortectomy. At 11 years old, she developed re-coarctation, which was managed through interventional cardiology. Shortly after the procedure, she experienced a sudden and severe clinical decline, presenting with hypoperfusion of the lower extremities, gastrointestinal bleeding, acute kidney injury, and pancreatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Cardiol
November 2024
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Humanitas University Milan, Italy.
Front Immunol
December 2024
Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology, Clinic of Internal Medicine III, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic utility of [Ga]Ga-DOTA-Siglec-9 positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT) in assessing disease activity in a patient experiencing a relapse of giant cell arteritis (GCA).
Case Presentation: A 90-year-old male patient with GCA, diagnosed in 2018, was enrolled. Demographic data, disease history, and laboratory parameters, including soluble VAP-1 (sVAP-1) levels, were recorded.
Chest computed tomography (CT) is essential for diagnosing and monitoring thoracic aortic dilations and aneurysms, conditions that place patients at risk of complications such as aortic dissection and rupture. However, aortic measurements in chest CT radiology reports are often embedded in free-text formats, limiting their accessibility for clinical care, quality improvement and research purposes. In this study, we developed a multi-method pipeline to extract structured aortic measurements from radiology reports, and compared the performance of fine-tuned BERT-based models with instruction-tuned Llama large language models (LLMs).
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