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Cardiovascular manifestations of hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and hypermobility spectrum disorders

Rashed, Eman R; Ruiz Maya, Tania; Black, Jennifer; Fettig, Veronica; Kadian-Dodov, Daniella; Olin, Jeffrey W; Mehta, Lakshmi; Gelb, Bruce D; Kontorovich, Amy R
PMID: 35000503
ISSN: 1477-0377
CID: 5167982

Dysautonomia in hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and hypermobility spectrum disorders is associated with exercise intolerance and cardiac atrophy

Ruiz Maya, Tania; Fettig, Veronica; Mehta, Lakshmi; Gelb, Bruce D; Kontorovich, Amy R
Dysautonomia is a recognized manifestation in patients with joint hypermobility (JH) disorders. Symptoms can be highly debilitating and commonly include physical deconditioning and poor aerobic fitness. In this study, the prevalence of dysautonomia, range of associated symptoms, patient-reported physical activity levels, and echocardiographic features were assessed retrospectively in a cohort of 144 patients (94% female) with hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS) or hypermobility spectrum disorder (HSD). Echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular size and function were compared between patients with and without dysautonomia as well as to reported values from healthy controls. Dysautonomia was identified in 65% of female and 44% of male subjects and was associated with a high burden of symptomatology, most commonly exercise intolerance (78%). Exercise capacity was limited by dysautonomia, often postural symptoms, in half of all patients. We observed a reduction in physical activity following the onset or significant flare of hEDS/HSD, most strikingly noting the proportion of dysautonomic patients with sedentary lifestyle, which increased from 44% to 85%. JH-related dysautonomia was associated with smaller cardiac chamber sizes, consistent with the previous reports in positional orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. Dysautonomia is prevalent in patients with hEDS/HSD, and exercise intolerance is a key feature and leads to drastic decline in physical activity. Unfavorable cardiac geometry may underlie dysautonomia symptoms and may be due to cardiac atrophy in the setting of aerobic deconditioning.
PMCID:8595563
PMID: 34331416
ISSN: 1552-4833
CID: 5167972

Atrial Fibrillation in Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19: Incidence, Predictors, Outcomes, and Comparison to Influenza

Musikantow, Daniel R; Turagam, Mohit K; Sartori, Samantha; Chu, Edward; Kawamura, Iwanari; Shivamurthy, Poojita; Bokhari, Mahmoud; Oates, Connor; Zhang, Chi; Pumill, Christopher; Malick, Waqas; Hashemi, Helen; Ruiz-Maya, Tania; Hadley, Michael B; Gandhi, Jonathan; Sperling, Dylan; Whang, William; Koruth, Jacob S; Langan, Marie-Noelle; Sofi, Aamir; Gomes, Anthony; Harcum, Stephanie; Cammack, Sam; Ellsworth, Betsy; Dukkipati, Srinivas R; Bassily-Marcus, Adel; Kohli-Seth, Roopa; Goldman, Martin E; Halperin, Jonathan L; Fuster, Valentin; Reddy, Vivek Y
OBJECTIVES:The goal of this study is to determine the incidence, predictors, and outcomes of atrial fibrillation (AF) or atrial flutter (AFL) in patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). BACKGROUND:COVID-19 results in increased inflammatory markers previously associated with atrial arrhythmias. However, little is known about their incidence or specificity in COVID-19 or their association with outcomes. METHODS:This is a retrospective analysis of 3,970 patients admitted with polymerase chain reaction-positive COVID-19 between February 4 and April 22, 2020, with manual review performed of 1,110. The comparator arm included 1,420 patients with influenza hospitalized between January 1, 2017, and January 1, 2020. RESULTS:Among 3,970 inpatients with COVID-19, the incidence of AF/AFL was 10% (n = 375) and in patients without a history of atrial arrhythmias it was 4% (n = 146). Patients with new-onset AF/AFL were older with increased inflammatory markers including interleukin 6 (93 vs. 68 pg/ml; p < 0.01), and more myocardial injury (troponin-I: 0.2 vs. 0.06 ng/ml; p < 0.01). AF and AFL were associated with increased mortality (46% vs. 26%; p < 0.01). Manual review captured a somewhat higher incidence of AF/AFL (13%, n = 140). Compared to inpatients with COVID-19, patients with influenza (n = 1,420) had similar rates of AF/AFL (12%, n = 163) but lower mortality. The presence of AF/AFL correlated with similarly increased mortality in both COVID-19 (relative risk: 1.77) and influenza (relative risk: 1.78). CONCLUSIONS:AF/AFL occurs in a subset of patients hospitalized with either COVID-19 or influenza and is associated with inflammation and disease severity in both infections. The incidence and associated increase in mortality in both cohorts suggests that AF/AFL is not specific to COVID-19, but is rather a generalized response to the systemic inflammation of severe viral illnesses.
PMID: 33895107
ISSN: 2405-5018
CID: 5167962

Atrial Fibrillation in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19: Incidence, Predictors, Outcomes and Comparison to Patients with Influenza." [Meeting Abstract]

Musikantow, Daniel; Turagam, Mohit; Sartori, Samantha; Chu, Edward; Kawamura, Iwanari; Shivamurthy, Poojita; Bokhari, Mahmoud; Oates, Connor; Zhang, Chi; Pumill, Christopher; Malick, Waqas; Hashemi, Helen; Ruiz-Maya, Tania; Hadley, Michael; Gandhi, Jonathan; Sperling, Dylan; Whang, William; Koruth, Jacob; Langan, Marie-noelle; Sofi, Aamir; Gomes, Anthony; Harcum, Stephanie; Cammack, Sam; Ellsworth, Betsy; Dukkipati, Srinivas; Goldman, Martin; Halperin, Jonathan; Fuster, Valentin; Reddy, Vivek
ISI:000649083000041
ISSN: 1045-3873
CID: 5168002

Headaches in hypermobility syndromes: A pain in the neck?

Malhotra, Anuj; Pace, Anna; Ruiz Maya, Tania; Colman, Rachel; Gelb, Bruce D; Mehta, Lakshmi; Kontorovich, Amy R
Headache and neck pain (cervicalgia) are frequently reported among patients with joint hypermobility but the prevalence and scope of these symptoms has not been studied in the era of contemporary Ehlers-Danlos and hypermobility disorder nosology. We performed a single-center retrospective study on the incidence of head and neck symptoms in 140 patients with hypermobility disorders over a 2-year period. Overall, 93 patients (66%) reported either headache or neck pain with 49 of those (53%) reporting both. Migraine (83%) was the most common headache type among those with headache disorders and cervical spondylosis (61%) the most common pathology among those with neck symptoms. Fifty-nine percent of spondylosis patients who underwent cervical facet procedures reported significant improvement in neck and head symptoms. Of patients with both head and neck complaints, 82% had both migraine and spondylosis, which, when combined with the high response rate to injections raises the possibility of cervicogenic headache. In this large multidisciplinary retrospective study of patients with hypermobility disorders, head and neck symptoms were highly prevalent, with migraine and cervical spondylosis common, often coexisting, and frequently responsive to targeted therapy for the cervical spine suggesting that degenerative spinal pathology may cause or contribute to headache symptoms in some patients with hypermobility disorders.
PMID: 32940405
ISSN: 1552-4833
CID: 5167942

Malignant Arrhythmias in Patients With COVID-19: Incidence, Mechanisms, and Outcomes

Turagam, Mohit K; Musikantow, Daniel; Goldman, Martin E; Bassily-Marcus, Adel; Chu, Edward; Shivamurthy, Poojita; Lampert, Joshua; Kawamura, Iwanari; Bokhari, Mahmoud; Whang, William; Bier, Benjamin Aaron; Malick, Waqas; Hashemi, Helen; Miller, Marc A; Choudry, Subbarao; Pumill, Christopher; Ruiz-Maya, Tania; Hadley, Michael; Giustino, Gennaro; Koruth, Jacob S; Langan, Noelle; Sofi, Aamir; Dukkipati, Srinivas R; Halperin, Jonathan L; Fuster, Valentin; Kohli-Seth, Roopa; Reddy, Vivek Y
BACKGROUND:Patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) who develop cardiac injury are reported to experience higher rates of malignant cardiac arrhythmias. However, little is known about these arrhythmias-their frequency, the underlying mechanisms, and their impact on mortality. METHODS:We extracted data from a registry (NCT04358029) regarding consecutive inpatients with confirmed COVID-19 who were receiving continuous telemetric ECG monitoring and had a definitive disposition of hospital discharge or death. Between patients who died versus discharged, we compared a primary composite end point of cardiac arrest from ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation or bradyarrhythmias such as atrioventricular block. RESULTS:=0.01)-a difference driven by tachyarrhythmias. Fatal tachyarrhythmias invariably occurred in the presence of severe metabolic imbalance, while atrioventricular block was largely an independent primary event. CONCLUSIONS:Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 who die experience malignant cardiac arrhythmias more often than those surviving to discharge. However, these events represent a minority of cardiovascular deaths, and ventricular tachyarrhythmias are mainly associated with severe metabolic derangement. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04358029.
PMCID:7668347
PMID: 33026892
ISSN: 1941-3084
CID: 5167952

COVID-19 Presenting as Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy Complicated with Atrial Fibrillation

Sattar, Yasar; Connerney, Michael; Ullah, Waqas; Philippou, Alicia; Slack, Daniel; McCarthy, Beth; Kroll, Samantha; Luddington, Stephen; Ruiz Maya, Tania; Alraies, M Chadi
PMCID:7348613
PMID: 32685662
ISSN: 2352-9067
CID: 5167932

Diagnosis and Management of a Cardiac Amyloidosis Case Mimicking Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy [Case Report]

Sattar, Yasar; Ruiz Maya, Tania; Zafrullah, Fnu; Patel, Nirav B; Latchana, Sharaad
Cardiac amyloidosis is an acquired heart disease secondary to the deposition of β-pleated amyloid proteins in heart tissue. Amyloid light chain (AL) amyloidosis is usually secondary to multiple myeloma and can rapidly deteriorate cardiac function, with high mortality. Up to 50% of AL patients have cardiac involvement presenting as heart failure, conduction abnormalities, and cardiomyopathies. One of the rare presentations is the likely simulation of disease with hypertrophic cardiomyopathies like left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) obstruction due to the systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve and irregular septal hypertrophy secondary to amyloid deposits. We present a case of cardiac amyloidosis secondary to multiple myeloma who presented with dynamic LVOT obstruction resembling hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and complicated by acute pulmonary edema. These complicated cases can be initially treated for pulmonary edema with an elevation of the head of the bed, furosemide, and nitroglycerin intravenously. For multiple myeloma, chemotherapy was continued. Beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and aldosterone receptor blocker were avoided due to poor tolerability. After symptomatic control, the patient can likely be scheduled for septal myotomy and the placement of a pacemaker or implantable cardiac defibrillator to prevent any arrhythmias causing sudden cardiac death in these subsets of patients.
PMCID:6388819
PMID: 30820370
ISSN: 2168-8184
CID: 5167922

OUTCOMES AFTER TRANSCATHETER MITRAL VALVE REPAIR IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE: AN ANALYSIS OF 5,241 PATIENTS IN THE UNITED STATES [Meeting Abstract]

Shah, Binita; Vemulapalli, Sreekanth; Manandhar, Pratik; Amoroso, Nicholas; Ruiz-Maya, Tania; Staniloae, Cezar; Saric, Muhamed; Williams, Mathew
ISI:000429659704030
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 3055232

Drug Hypersensitivity due to Azathioprine with Elevated Procalcitonin

Ahuja, Tania; Chung, Frank R; Ruiz-Maya, Tania
We present a case of azathioprine hypersensitivity presenting as sepsis with elevated procalcitonin in a 68-year-old man with myasthenia gravis. The patient presented with fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, and headache. He developed numerous 1 cm erythematous papules over his upper torso. Infectious workup including bacteriological tests and microbial cultures was negative and a skin biopsy was performed which revealed suppurative folliculitis with eosinophils, consistent with drug hypersensitivity. Notably, acute phase reactants including C-reactive protein and procalcitonin were elevated upon presentation, likely secondary to drug hypersensitivity.
PMCID:6015696
PMID: 29984007
ISSN: 2090-6463
CID: 3192212