6 results match your criteria: "Germany. f.weidemann@katharinen-hospital.de.[Affiliation]"
J Am Heart Assoc
May 2016
Medizinische Klinik I, University Hospital Würzburg, and Comprehensive Heart Failure Center, Würzburg, Germany Innere Klinik II, Katharinen-Hospital, Unna, Germany
Background: High-sensitivity troponin (hs-TNT), a biomarker of myocardial damage, might be useful for assessing fibrosis in Fabry cardiomyopathy. We performed a prospective analysis of hs-TNT as a biomarker for myocardial changes in Fabry patients and a retrospective longitudinal follow-up study to assess longitudinal hs-TNT changes relative to fibrosis and cardiomyopathy progression.
Methods And Results: For the prospective analysis, hs-TNT from 75 consecutive patients with genetically confirmed Fabry disease was analyzed relative to typical Fabry-associated echocardiographic findings and total myocardial fibrosis as measured by late gadolinium enhancement (LE) on magnetic resonance imaging.
Eur J Med Res
May 2016
Comprehensive Heart Failure Center, Würzburg, Germany.
Despite substantial advances in the imaging techniques and pathophysiological understanding over the last decades, identification of the underlying causes of left ventricular hypertrophy by means of echocardiographic examination remains a challenge in current clinical practice. The longitudinal strain bull's eye plot derived from 2D speckle tracking imaging offers an intuitive visual overview of the global and regional left ventricular myocardial function in a single diagram. The bull's eye mapping is clinically feasible and the plot patterns could provide clues to the etiology of cardiomyopathies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Res Cardiol
August 2016
Department of Internal Medicine I, University Hospital Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Objectives: We assessed the prevalence of moderately severe or severe mitral regurgitation (MR) justifying edge-to-edge mitral valve (MV) repair (MitraClip(®)) in patients attending the University Hospital Wuerzburg, a tertiary care centre located in Wuerzburg, Germany.
Background: Transcatheter edge-to-edge MV repair of advanced MR is a non-surgical treatment option in inoperable and high-risk patients. It is unknown how many patients are potentially eligible for MitraClip(®) since several anatomical prerequisites of the MV apparatus have to be met for optimal treatment results.
JIMD Rep
October 2015
Comprehensive Heart Failure Center, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Background: In Fabry cardiomyopathy, little is known about the interaction between its key feature of myocardial replacement fibrosis and changes in resting, Holter, and exercise electrocardiography (-ECG).
Methods And Results: Resting ECG, 24-h Holter ECG, and exercise ECG were performed in 95 patients (50 women) with Fabry disease, staged using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging to measure left ventricular fibrosis. With resting ECG, T alterations were seen in patients with cardiac fibrosis, while time intervals and rhythm were unchanged (except for a longer QRS duration in patients with severe fibrosis).
Eur J Med Res
March 2015
Department of Internal Medicine I - Cardiology, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Right ventricle (RV) dysfunction is a key outcome determinant and a leading cause of death for patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH). In this report, we followed the 5-year clinical journey of a patient with CTEPH. The tricuspid pressure gradient was significantly increased in the early phase of CTEPH and "normalized" at the late phase of this patient's clinical journey, but this "normalized" gradient is not a positive treatment response but rather an ominous sign of advancing right heart failure owing to an exhaustion of RV contractile function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrphanet J Rare Dis
March 2015
Department of Internal Medicine, Division Endocrinology and Metabolism, Academic Medical Center, PO Box 22660, Amsterdam, 1100 DD, The Netherlands.
Introduction: Fabry disease (FD) is a lysosomal storage disorder resulting in progressive nervous system, kidney and heart disease. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) may halt or attenuate disease progression. Since administration is burdensome and expensive, appropriate use is mandatory.
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