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Specialty: Cardiology

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Total 158228 results found since Jan 2013.

Critical Care of the Post –Cardiac Arrest Patient
The post –cardiac arrest syndrome is a highly inflammatory state characterized by organ dysfunction, systemic ischemia and reperfusion injury, and persistent precipitating pathology. Early critical care should focus on identifying and treating arrest etiology and minimizing further injury to the brain and other organs by optimizing perfusion, oxygenation, ventilation, and temperature. Patients should be treated with targeted temperature management, although the exact temperature goal is not clear. No earlier than 72 hours after rewarming, prognostication using a multimodal approach should inform dis cussions with famili...
Source: Cardiology Clinics - July 4, 2018 Category: Cardiology Authors: Amy C. Walker, Nicholas J. Johnson Source Type: research

The Urgency and Impact of Cardiovascular Critical Care.
PMID: 29977463 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Methodist DeBakey Cardiovascular Journal - April 1, 2018 Category: Cardiology Authors: Masud F Tags: Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J Source Type: research

Journal Editors Recognize Faisal Masud, M.D., for his Exceptional Guidance on this Issue Addressing Cardiovascular Critical Care.
PMID: 29977462 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Methodist DeBakey Cardiovascular Journal - April 1, 2018 Category: Cardiology Authors: Masud F Tags: Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J Source Type: research

An Ominous ECG Sign in Critical Care.
PMID: 32568589 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Circulation - June 22, 2020 Category: Cardiology Authors: Crinion D, Abdollah H, Baranchuk A Tags: Circulation Source Type: research

Gender- and race-based utilization and outcomes of pulmonary artery catheterization in the setting of full-time intensivist staffing.
Conclusions: PAC use and in-hospital death were determined not by gender or race but by disease severity. Full-time intensivist staffing and the presence of definitive guidelines may reduce gender- and race-based treatment disparities. PMID: 23215747 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Acute Cardiac Care - December 1, 2012 Category: Cardiology Authors: Iantorno M, Panza JA, Cook NL, Jacobs S, Ritchey MB, O'Callaghan K, Caños D, Cooper HA Tags: Acute Card Care Source Type: research

Academic medicine and care medicine.
PMID: 24618233 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Archivos de Cardiologia de Mexico - March 5, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: de La Fuente JR Tags: Arch Cardiol Mex Source Type: research

Networks for improving care in patients with acute coronary syndrome: A framework.
We present a framework for how to set up and organize an effective ACS network, delivering guideline-based care to improve patient outcomes. PMID: 24654609 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Acute Cardiac Care - March 21, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: Radke PW, Halvorsen S, Jukema JW, Kolh P, Annemans L, Postma MJ, Ardissino D, Kristensen SD, Bassand JP, Collet JP, Morais J, Tuñón J, Halcox J Tags: Acute Card Care Source Type: research

Emergency physician accuracy in interpreting electrocardiograms with potential ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: Is it enough?
CONCLUSION: The accuracy of interpretation of potential STEMI ECGs was modest among emergency physicians. The study supports the notion that ECG interpretation for establishing a STEMI diagnosis lacks the necessary sensitivity and specificity to be considered a reliable 'stand-alone' diagnostic test. PMID: 27759433 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Acute Cardiac Care - October 18, 2016 Category: Cardiology Authors: Veronese G, Germini F, Ingrassia S, Cutuli O, Donati V, Bonacchini L, Marcucci M, Fabbri A, Italian Society of Emergency Medicine (SIMEU) Tags: Acute Card Care Source Type: research

Becoming Your Own Doctor In The Brave New World Of Personalized Medicine
Lately there’s been a lot of talk about personalized medicine. There’s a bold idea going around that people should take control of their own healthcare and manage the flood of new data stemming from a whole bunch of new technologies, including, but hardly limited to, personal genomes, biomarkers, wireless sensors, and iPhone ECGs. Would most should people would benefit if they took a more active role in obtaining this information (for example, by ordering a personal genome from 23andme.com), and then interpreting and acting upon the information? It seems like a great idea, after all…. More…
Source: CardioBrief - January 17, 2013 Category: Cardiology Authors: Larry Husten Tags: Policy & Ethics Prevention, Epidemiology & Outcomes Education health Health care medicine Personalized medicine Public health Vitamin Shoppe Source Type: blogs

Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation as a Bridge to Pediatric Heart Transplantation: Effect on Post-Listing and Post-Transplantation Outcomes Original Articles
Conclusions— Pediatric patients requiring ECMO support before heart Tx have poor outcomes. Prioritization of donor hearts to children waitlisted on ECMO warrants careful consideration because of ECMO’s high pre- and post-Tx mortality.
Source: Circulation: Heart Failure - September 15, 2015 Category: Cardiology Authors: Dipchand, A. I., Mahle, W. T., Tresler, M., Naftel, D. C., Almond, C., Kirklin, J. K., Pruitt, E., Webber, S. A., and the Pediatric Heart Transplant Study Investigators Tags: Other heart failure, CV surgery: transplantation, ventricular assistance, cardiomyopathy, Pediatric and congenital heart disease, including cardiovascular surgery Original Articles Source Type: research

Future research directions in pediatric cardiomyopathy
Cardiomyopathy is a rare but serious disorder of the heart muscle, resulting in some of the worst pediatric cardiology outcomes, and it remains the leading cause of heart transplantation in children over one year of age [1–5]. Nearly 40% of children who present with symptomatic cardiomyopathy receive a heart transplant or die within the first 2years, and the percentage of children receiving transplants has not declined over the past 10years [5,6]. Studies in both the United States and Australia have shown that the incidence of pediatric cardiomyopathy is approximately 1 per 100,000 children and 8–12 times higher in the...
Source: Progress in Pediatric Cardiology - January 18, 2016 Category: Cardiology Authors: Steven E. Lipshultz, Wendy K. Chung, Jeffrey A. Towbin, Elfriede Pahl, Melanie D. Everitt, Charles E. Canter, John L. Jefferies, Joseph W. Rossano, Paul F. Kantor, Steven A. Webber, Daphne T. Hsu, Jason D. Czachor, James D. Wilkinson, for the Pediatric Ca Tags: Review Source Type: research

Mechanical ventilation with high tidal volume and associated mortality in the cardiac intensive care unit.
Conclusion: Mechanical ventilation with high tidal volumes was associated with increased mortality in patients with congestive heart failure and post cardiac arrest in our CICU. PMID: 24552224 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Acute Cardiac Care - February 22, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: Shorofsky M, Jayaraman D, Lellouche F, Husa R, Lipes J Tags: Acute Card Care Source Type: research

A shift in coronary care unit patient population: Ten year experience from an urban tertiary care center.
This study's purpose was to analyze the temporal trends in the principal diagnosis leading to admission to the CCU in a tertiary referral hospital. Over the last 15 years, the CCU has evolved from a medical unit strictly focusing on the care of patients with ACS to an advanced cardiac intensive care unit. The trends observed at our center provide further evidence that today's CCU contains a broader, more complex, critically-ill patient population. PMID: 27494267 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Acute Cardiac Care - August 4, 2016 Category: Cardiology Authors: Krepp JM, Hebsur S, Panza JA, Cooper HA, Asch FM Tags: Acute Card Care Source Type: research

A “ hard talk ” with chat GPT : Evidence vs Experience in medicine
Dr .S.Venkatesan MD Good morning GPT. Let me introduce myself . I am a medical doctor, practicing cardiology, in Chennai India. I have had a long-standing query in very fundamental principles of the practice of medicine. Just wanted to chat and clarify with you. Welcome, I am here to help you Medicine is both art and a science. In recent times the movement of evidence-based medicine (EBM ) is trying to overturn the clinical experience. I have a feeling it is not fair. We can’t create evidence for every decision we make in clinical science right?  My first question is  Can experience-based medical care be...
Source: Dr.S.Venkatesan MD - May 5, 2023 Category: Cardiology Authors: dr s venkatesan Tags: Uncategorized ai in medicine artificial intelligence chat gpt in medicine evidence vs experience based medicine Source Type: blogs

International Evidence-Based Recommendations for Focused Cardiac Ultrasound
Conclusions: This document presents the results of the first International Conference on FoCUS. For the first time, evidence-based clinical recommendations comprehensively address this branch of point-of-care ultrasound, providing a framework for FoCUS to standardize its application in different clinical settings around the world.
Source: Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography - June 19, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: Gabriele Via, Arif Hussain, Mike Wells, Robert Reardon, Mahmoud ElBarbary, Vicki E. Noble, James W. Tsung, Aleksandar N. Neskovic, Susanna Price, Achikam Oren-Grinberg, Andrew Liteplo, Ricardo Cordioli, Nitha Naqvi, Philippe Rola, Jan Poelaert, Tatjana Go Tags: Special Article Source Type: research