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Intraoperative Two- and Three-Dimensional Transesophageal Echocardiography in Combined Myectomy-Mitral Operations for Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Nampiaparampil, Robert G; Swistel, Daniel G; Schlame, Michael; Saric, Muhamed; Sherrid, Mark V
Transesophageal echocardiography is essential in guiding the surgical approach for patients with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Septal hypertrophy, elongated mitral valve leaflets, and abnormalities of the subvalvular apparatus are prominent features, all of which may contribute to left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. Surgery aims to alleviate the obstruction via an extended myectomy, often with an intervention on the mitral valve and subvalvular apparatus. The goal of intraoperative echocardiography is to assess the anatomic pathology and pathophysiology in order to achieve a safe intraoperative course and a successful repair. This guide summarizes the systematic evaluation of these patients to determine the best surgical plan.
PMID: 29502589
ISSN: 1097-6795
CID: 2974652

Left Atrial structure and function in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy sarcomere mutation carriers with and without left ventricular hypertrophy

Farhad, Hoshang; Seidelmann, Sara B; Vigneault, Davis; Abbasi, Siddique A; Yang, Eunice; Day, Sharlene M; Colan, Steven D; Russell, Mark W; Towbin, Jeffrey; Sherrid, Mark V; Canter, Charles E; Shi, Ling; Jerosch-Herold, Michael; Bluemke, David A; Ho, Carolyn; Neilan, Tomas G
BACKGROUND:Impaired left atrial (LA) function is an early marker of cardiac dysfunction and predictor of adverse cardiac events. Herein, we assess LA structure and function in hypertrophy in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) sarcomere mutation carriers with and without left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). METHOD/METHODS:Seventy-three participants of the HCMNet study who underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging were studied, including mutation carriers with overt HCM (n = 34), preclinical mutation carriers without HCM (n = 24) and healthy, familial controls (n = 15). RESULTS:LA volumes were similar between preclinical, control and overt HCM cohorts after covariate adjustment. However, there was evidence of impaired LA function with decreased LA total emptying function in both preclinical (64 ± 8%) and overt HCM (59 ± 10%), compared with controls (70 ± 7%; p = 0.002 and p = 0.005, respectively). LA passive emptying function was also decreased in overt HCM (35 ± 11%) compared with controls (47 ± 10%; p = 0.006). Both LAtotal emptying function and LA passive emptying function were inversely correlated with the extent of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE; p = 0.005 and p < 0.05, respectively), LV mass (p = 0.02 and p < 0.001) and interventricular septal thickness (p < 0.001 for both) and serum NT-proBNP levels (p < 0.001 for both). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:LA dysfunction is detectable by CMR in preclinical HCM mutation carriers despite non-distinguishable LV wall thickness and LA volume. LA function appears most impaired in subjects with overt HCM and a greater extent of LV fibrosis.
PMCID:5745877
PMID: 29284499
ISSN: 1532-429x
CID: 2895392

Why we need more septal myectomy surgeons: An emerging recognition [Editorial]

Maron, Barry J; Dearani, Joseph A; Maron, Martin S; Ommen, Steve R; Rastegar, Hassan; Nishimura, Rick A; Swistel, Daniel G; Sherrid, Mark V; Ralph-Edwards, Anthony; Rakowski, Harry; Smedira, Nicholas G; Rowin, Ethan J; Desai, Milind Y; Lever, Harry M; Spirito, Paolo; Ferrazzi, Paolo; Schaff, Hartzell V
PMID: 28268009
ISSN: 1097-685x
CID: 2477022

The surgical management of obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: the RPR procedure-resection, plication, release

Swistel, Daniel G; Sherrid, Mark V
PMCID:5602207
PMID: 28944186
ISSN: 2225-319x
CID: 2717772

State Requirements for Automated External Defibrillators in American Schools: Framing the Debate About Legislative Action

Sherrid, Mark V; Aagaard, Philip; Serrato, Stephanie; Arabadjian, Milla E; Lium, John M; Lium, John D; Greenberg, Henry M
Installation of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) in schools has been associated with increased survival after sudden cardiac arrest. An authoritative academic research database was interrogated to identify all current state statutes pertaining to AEDs in schools. As of February 2016, 17 of 50 U.S. states (34%) require AED installation in at least some of their schools; the remaining states have no legislation. However, requirements are far from comprehensive in these 17 states. Only 5 states offer unequivocal funding to schools for purchasing AEDs. A minority of U.S. states have legislation requiring AED placement in schools, and even fewer provide funding. State legislatures that have not yet enacted legislation requiring AEDs in schools may look to neighboring states for examples of child and adult lifesaving law. Placement of an AED in schools should be implemented with an emergency response plan that trains staff in the recognition and response to cardiac arrest.
PMID: 28359520
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 2508992

The Burden of Early Phenotypes and the Influence of Wall Thickness in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Mutation Carriers: Findings From the HCMNet Study

Ho, Carolyn Y; Day, Sharlene M; Colan, Steven D; Russell, Mark W; Towbin, Jeffrey A; Sherrid, Mark V; Canter, Charles E; Jefferies, John L; Murphy, Anne M; Cirino, Allison L; Abraham, Theodore P; Taylor, Matthew; Mestroni, Luisa; Bluemke, David A; Jarolim, Petr; Shi, Ling; Sleeper, Lynn A; Seidman, Christine E; Orav, E John
Importance: Sarcomere mutations and left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (LVH) are cardinal features of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). However, little is known about the full spectrum of phenotypic manifestations or how LVH influences disease expression. Objectives: (1) To characterize and assess phenotypic burden in sarcomere mutation carriers (genotype positive [G+]) and (2) to investigate the correlation between LV wall thickness (LVWT) and other disease features in mutation carriers. Design, Setting, and Participants: This investigation was a cross-sectional, multicenter observational study in the setting of the HCMNet network of HCM clinical centers. Mutation carriers with LVH (G+/LVH+), mutation carriers without LVH (G+/LVH-), and healthy related control individuals (G-/LVH-) were enrolled through HCMNet sites. A total of 193 participants were enrolled and underwent study procedures. Participants were enrolled between April 9, 2010, and January 30, 2012. Study analysis was performed between June 2015 and May 2016. Exposures: The primary stratifying variables were the presence of a sarcomere mutation and measures of LVWT. Main Outcomes and Measures: Variables from standardized exercise testing, echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, serum biomarker measurement, and electrocardiography were compared across study cohorts. Results: Analyses were performed in 178 participants, including 81 G+/LVH+ (mean [SD] age at baseline, 27 [14] years), 55 G+/LVH- (20 [10] years), and 42 G-/LVH- (18 [8] years). All mutation carriers had smaller LV cavity, higher ratio of LVWT to diastolic diameter, and higher echocardiographic LV ejection fraction than controls. A phenotypic burden score was evaluated as the cumulative number of 7 traits (changes on electrocardiography; decreased LV systolic, diastolic diameter, or septal E' velocity; higher ratio of LVWT to diastolic diameter; serum troponin level; and natriuretic peptide level) in each individual. The mean (SE) phenotypic burden was 4.9 (0.2) phenotypes per individual in G+/LVH+, 2.4 (0.2) in G+/LVH-, and 1.3 (0.2) in controls (P < .001). Classification and regression tree analysis identified an LV end-diastolic dimension z score less than -1.85 or the combination of an LV end-diastolic dimension z score of -1.85 or higher and a septal E' velocity z score less than -0.52 as having 74% accuracy in discriminating G+/LVH- participants from controls. In mutation carriers, clinical variables demonstrated a continuous correlation with LVWT, generally without a clear cutoff signifying pathologic transition. Conclusions and Relevance: G+/LVH- individuals demonstrated altered cardiac dimensions and function and a higher burden of early phenotypes than healthy G- controls. Two methods discriminated phenotypic subgroups, namely, a sum across 7 traits and a regression tree-based rule that identifies constellations of distinguishing factors. Greater LVWT is associated with more prominent cardiac abnormalities in a continuous, although not always linear, manner. A single value of LVWT could not dichotomize the presence or absence of disease.
PMCID:5541992
PMID: 28241245
ISSN: 2380-6591
CID: 2471422

Mitral valve coaptation and its relationship to late diastolic flow: A color Doppler and vector flow map echocardiographic study in normal subjects

Sherrid, Mark V; Kushner, Josef; Yang, Georgiana; Ro, Richard
BACKGROUND: Three competing theories about the mechanism of mitral coaptation in normal subjects were evaluated by color Doppler and vector flow mapping (VFM): (1) beginning of ventricular (LV) ejection, (2) "breaking of the jet" of diastolic LV inflow, and (3) returning diastolic vortices impacting the leaflets on their LV surfaces. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analyzed 80 color Doppler frames and 320 VFM measurements. In all 20 normal subjects, coaptation occurred before LV ejection, 78+/-16 ms before onset. On color Doppler frames the larger anterior, and smaller posterior vortices circle back and, in all cases, strike the ventricular surfaces of the leaflets. On the first closing-begins frame, for the first time, vortex velocity normal to the ventricular surface of the anterior leaflet (AML) is greater than that in the mitral orifice, and the angle of attack of LV vortical flow onto the AML is twice as high as the angle of flow onto the valve in orifice. Thus, at the moment coaptation begins, vortical flow strikes the mitral leaflet with higher velocity, and higher angle of attack than orifice flow, and thus with greater force. According to the "breaking of the jet" theory, one would expect to see de novo LV flow perpendicular to the leaflets beginning after transmitral flow terminates. Instead, the returning continuous LV vortical flow that impacts the valve builds continuously after the P-wave. CONCLUSIONS: Late diastolic vortices strike the ventricular surfaces of the mitral leaflets and contribute to valve coaptation, permitted by concomitant decline in transmitral flow.
PMID: 28247433
ISSN: 1540-8175
CID: 2471272

Biomarkers of cardiovascular stress and fibrosis in preclinical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Ho, Jennifer E; Shi, Ling; Day, Sharlene M; Colan, Steven D; Russell, Mark W; Towbin, Jeffrey A; Sherrid, Mark V; Canter, Charles E; Jefferies, John Lynn; Murphy, Anne; Taylor, Matthew; Mestroni, Luisa; Cirino, Allison L; Sleeper, Lynn A; Jarolim, Peter; Lopez, Begona; Gonzalez, Arantxa; Diez, Javier; Orav, E John; Ho, Carolyn Y
Objective: Sarcomeric gene mutation carriers without overt left ventricular hypertrophy (G+/LVH-) can harbour subclinical changes in cardiovascular structure and function that precede the development of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). We sought to investigate if circulating biomarkers of cardiovascular stress and collagen metabolism among G+/LVH- individuals, measured at rest and following exercise provocation, yield further insights into the underlying biology of HCM. Methods: We studied 76 individuals with overt HCM, 50 G+/LVH- individuals and 41 genotype-negative related controls enrolled in a cross-sectional, multicentre observational study (HCMNet). Biomarkers of cardiac stress (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide, NT-proBNP; high-sensitivity troponin I, hsTnI; soluble ST2) and fibrosis (carboxy-terminal propeptide of procollagen type I; C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; galectin-3; periostin) were measured. Results: Individuals with overt HCM had elevated NT-proBNP and hsTnI compared with G+/LVH- subjects and controls at rest, along with an exaggerated increase in NT-proBNP and hsTnI in response to exercise. We found no detectable differences in resting or exercise-provoked biomarker profiles of cardiovascular stress and fibrosis among G+/LVH- individuals compared with healthy controls despite subtle echocardiographic differences in cardiac structure and function. Conclusion: Dynamic exercise testing exaggerated resting differences in natriuretic peptides and troponin elevations among individuals with overt HCM. In contrast, we found no differences in biomarker profiles of cardiovascular stress and fibrosis among G+/LVH- individuals compared with controls even after maximal exercise provocation. Our findings highlight the need for continued investigation into early phenotypes of sarcomeric gene mutations and the evolution of HCM.
PMCID:5687543
PMID: 29177058
ISSN: 2053-3624
CID: 2797222

Myocardial energy depletion and dynamic systolic dysfunction in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Ormerod, Julian O M; Frenneaux, Michael P; Sherrid, Mark V
Evidence indicates that anatomical and physiological phenotypes of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) stem from genetically mediated, inefficient cardiomyocyte energy utilization, and subsequent cellular energy depletion. However, HCM often presents clinically with normal left ventricular (LV) systolic function or hyperkinesia. If energy inefficiency is a feature of HCM, why is it not manifest as resting LV systolic dysfunction? In this Perspectives article, we focus on an idiosyncratic form of reversible systolic dysfunction provoked by LV obstruction that we have previously termed the 'lobster claw abnormality' - a mid-systolic drop in LV Doppler ejection velocities. In obstructive HCM, this drop explains the mid-systolic closure of the aortic valve, the bifid aortic pressure trace, and why patients cannot increase stroke volume with exercise. This phenomenon is characteristic of a broader phenomenon in HCM that we have termed dynamic systolic dysfunction. It underlies the development of apical aneurysms, and rare occurrence of cardiogenic shock after obstruction. We posit that dynamic systolic dysfunction is a manifestation of inefficient cardiomyocyte energy utilization. Systolic dysfunction is clinically inapparent at rest; however, it becomes overt through the mechanism of afterload mismatch when LV outflow obstruction is imposed. Energetic insufficiency is also present in nonobstructive HCM. This paradigm might suggest novel therapies. Other pathways that might be central to HCM, such as myofilament Ca2+ hypersensitivity, and enhanced late Na+ current, are discussed.
PMID: 27411403
ISSN: 1759-5010
CID: 2180202

The Mitral Valve in Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: A Test in Context

Sherrid, Mark V; Balaram, Sandhya; Kim, Bette; Axel, Leon; Swistel, Daniel G
Mitral valve abnormalities were not part of modern pathological and clinical descriptions of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the 1950s, which focused on left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and myocyte fiber disarray. Although systolic anterior motion (SAM) of the mitral valve was discovered as the cause of LV outflow tract obstruction in the M-mode echocardiography era, in the 1990s structural abnormalities of the mitral valve became appreciated as contributing to SAM pathophysiology. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mitral malformations have been identified at all levels. They occur in the leaflets, usually elongating them, and also in the submitral apparatus, with a wide array of malformations of the papillary muscles and chordae, that can be detected by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography and by cardiac magnetic resonance. Because they participate fundamentally in the predisposition to SAM, they have increasingly been repaired surgically. This review critically assesses imaging and measurement of mitral abnormalities and discusses their surgical relief.
PMID: 27081025
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 2078502