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Mechanisms of Myocardial Infarction in Women Without Angiographically Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease

Reynolds HR; Srichai MB; Iqbal SN; Slater JN; Mancini GB; Feit F; Pena-Sing I; Axel L; Attubato MJ; Yatskar L; Kalhorn RT; Wood DA; Lobach IV; Hochman JS
BACKGROUND: . Unique identifier: NCT00798122
PMCID:3619391
PMID: 21900087
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 137093

ESC working group position paper on myocardial infarction with non-obstructive coronary arteries

Agewall, Stefan; Beltrame, John F; Reynolds, Harmony R; Niessner, Alexander; Rosano, Giuseppe; Caforio, Alida L P; De Caterina, Raffaele; Zimarino, Marco; Roffi, Marco; Kjeldsen, Keld; Atar, Dan; Kaski, Juan C; Sechtem, Udo; Tornvall, Per
PMID: 28158518
ISSN: 1522-9645
CID: 2435942

Autonomic Findings in Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy

Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Kaufmann, Horacio; Martinez, Jose; Katz, Stuart D; Tully, Lisa; Reynolds, Harmony R
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TC) often occurs after emotional or physical stress. Norepinephrine levels are unusually high in the acute phase, suggesting a hyperadrenergic mechanism. Comparatively little is known about parasympathetic function in patients with TC. We sought to characterize autonomic function at rest and in response to physical and emotional stimuli in 10 women with a confirmed history of TC and 10 age-matched healthy women. Sympathetic and parasympathetic activity was assessed at rest and during baroreflex stimulation (Valsalva maneuver and tilt testing), cognitive stimulation (Stroop test), and emotional stimulation (event recall, patients). Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and measurement of brachial artery flow-mediated vasodilation were also performed. TC women (tested an average of 37 months after the event) had excessive pressor responses to cognitive stress (Stroop test: p <0.001 vs baseline and p = 0.03 vs controls) and emotional arousal (recall of TC event: p = 0.03 vs baseline). Pressor responses to hemodynamic stimuli were also amplified (Valsalva overshoot: p <0.05) and prolonged (duration: p <0.01) in the TC women compared with controls. Plasma catecholamine levels did not differ between TC women and controls. Indexes of parasympathetic (vagal) modulation of heart rate induced by respiration and cardiovagal baroreflex gain were significantly decreased in the TC women versus controls. In conclusion, even long after the initial episode, women with previous episode of TC have excessive sympathetic responsiveness and reduced parasympathetic modulation of heart rate. Impaired baroreflex control may therefore play a role in TC.
PMID: 26743349
ISSN: 1879-1913
CID: 1901192

Author Correction: Optical coherence tomography in coronary atherosclerosis assessment and intervention

Araki, Makoto; Park, Seung-Jung; Dauerman, Harold L; Uemura, Shiro; Kim, Jung-Sun; Di Mario, Carlo; Johnson, Thomas W; Guagliumi, Giulio; Kastrati, Adnan; Joner, Michael; Holm, Niels Ramsing; Alfonso, Fernando; Wijns, William; Adriaenssens, Tom; Nef, Holger; Rioufol, Gilles; Amabile, Nicolas; Souteyrand, Geraud; Meneveau, Nicolas; Gerbaud, Edouard; Opolski, Maksymilian P; Gonzalo, Nieves; Tearney, Guillermo J; Bouma, Brett; Aguirre, Aaron D; Mintz, Gary S; Stone, Gregg W; Bourantas, Christos V; Räber, Lorenz; Gili, Sebastiano; Mizuno, Kyoichi; Kimura, Shigeki; Shinke, Toshiro; Hong, Myeong-Ki; Jang, Yangsoo; Cho, Jin Man; Yan, Bryan P; Porto, Italo; Niccoli, Giampaolo; Montone, Rocco A; Thondapu, Vikas; Papafaklis, Michail I; Michalis, Lampros K; Reynolds, Harmony; Saw, Jacqueline; Libby, Peter; Weisz, Giora; Iannaccone, Mario; Gori, Tommaso; Toutouzas, Konstantinos; Yonetsu, Taishi; Minami, Yoshiyasu; Takano, Masamichi; Raffel, O Christopher; Kurihara, Osamu; Soeda, Tsunenari; Sugiyama, Tomoyo; Kim, Hyung Oh; Lee, Tetsumin; Higuma, Takumi; Nakajima, Akihiro; Yamamoto, Erika; Bryniarski, Krzysztof L; Di Vito, Luca; Vergallo, Rocco; Fracassi, Francesco; Russo, Michele; Seegers, Lena M; McNulty, Iris; Park, Sangjoon; Feldman, Marc; Escaned, Javier; Prati, Francesco; Arbustini, Eloisa; Pinto, Fausto J; Waksman, Ron; Garcia-Garcia, Hector M; Maehara, Akiko; Ali, Ziad; Finn, Aloke V; Virmani, Renu; Kini, Annapoorna S; Daemen, Joost; Kume, Teruyoshi; Hibi, Kiyoshi; Tanaka, Atsushi; Akasaka, Takashi; Kubo, Takashi; Yasuda, Satoshi; Croce, Kevin; Granada, Juan F; Lerman, Amir; Prasad, Abhiram; Regar, Evelyn; Saito, Yoshihiko; Sankardas, Mullasari Ajit; Subban, Vijayakumar; Weissman, Neil J; Chen, Yundai; Yu, Bo; Nicholls, Stephen J; Barlis, Peter; West, Nick E J; Arbab-Zadeh, Armin; Ye, Jong Chul; Dijkstra, Jouke; Lee, Hang; Narula, Jagat; Crea, Filippo; Nakamura, Sunao; Kakuta, Tsunekazu; Fujimoto, James; Fuster, Valentin; Jang, Ik-Kyung
PMID: 38110566
ISSN: 1759-5010
CID: 5611732

Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction Is Associated With a Proinflammatory Circulating Transcriptome in Patients With Nonobstructive Coronary Arteries

Smilowitz, Nathaniel R; Schlamp, Florencia; Hausvater, Anaïs; Joa, Amanda; Serrano-Gomez, Claudia; Farid, Ayman; Hochman, Judith S; Barrett, Tessa; Reynolds, Harmony R; Berger, Jeffrey S
PMID: 38299358
ISSN: 1524-4636
CID: 5627252

Therapeutic Heparin in non-ICU patients Hospitalized for COVID-19 in the ACTIV-4a Trial: Effect on 3 Month Symptoms and Quality of Life

Greenstein, Yonatan Y; Hubel, Kinsley; Froess, Joshua; Wisniewski, Stephen R; Venugopal, Vidya; Lai, Yu-Hsuan; Berger, Jeff S; Chang, Steven Y; Colovos, Christos; Shah, Faraaz; Kornblith, Lucy Z; Lawler, Patrick R; Gaddh, Manila; Guerrero, Raquel Morillo; Nkemdirim, William; Lopes, Renato D; Reynolds, Harmony R; Amigo, Jose Seijas; Wahid, Lana; Zahra, Ajani; Goligher, Ewan C; Zarychanski, Ryan; Leifer, Eric; Huang, David T; Neal, Matthew D; Hochman, Judith S; Cushman, Mary; Gong, Michelle N
BACKGROUND:Therapeutic-dose heparin decreased days requiring organ support in non-critically ill patients hospitalized for COVID-19 but its impact on persistent symptoms or quality of life (QoL) is unclear. RESEARCH QUESTION/OBJECTIVE:In the ACTIV-4a trial, was randomization of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 illness to therapeutic-dose vs. prophylactic heparin associated with less symptoms and better QoL at 90-days? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS/METHODS:This was an open-label randomized controlled trial at 34 hospitals in the US and Spain. 727 non-critically ill patients hospitalized for COVID-19 from September 2020 to June 2021 were randomized to therapeutic-dose vs. prophylactic heparin. Only patients with 90-day data on symptoms and QoL were analyzed. We ascertained symptoms and QoL by EQ-5D-5L at 90-day follow-up in a pre-planned analysis for the ACTIV-4a trial. Individual domains assessed by the EQ-5D-5L were mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. Univariate and multivariate analysis were performed. RESULTS:Among 571 patients, 288 (50.4%) reported at least one symptom. In 410 patients, 148 (36.1%) reported moderate to severe impairment in one or more domains of EQ-5D-5L. Presence of 90-day symptoms were associated with moderate-severe impairment in the EQ-5D-5L domains of mobility (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 2.37, 95% CI 1.22-4.59), usual activity (aOR 3.66, 95% CI 1.75-7.65), pain (aOR 2.43, 95% CI 1.43-4.12), and anxiety (aOR 4.32, 95% CI 2.06-9.02), compared to patients reporting no symptoms There were no differences in symptoms or the overall EQ-5D-5L index score between treatment groups. Therapeutic-dose heparin was associated with less moderate-severe impairment in all physical functioning domains (mobility, self-care, usual activities) but was independently significant only in the self-care domain (aOR 0.32, CI 0.11-0.96). INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:In a randomized controlled trial of hospitalized non-critically ill patients with COVID-19, therapeutic-dose heparin was associated with less severe impairment in the self-care domain of EQ-5D-5L. However, this type of impairment was uncommon, affecting 23 individuals. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:NCT04505774.
PMID: 37979717
ISSN: 1931-3543
CID: 5608182

Impact of Visit Volume on the Effectiveness of Electronic Tools to Improve Heart Failure Care

Mukhopadhyay, Amrita; Reynolds, Harmony R; King, William C; Phillips, Lawrence M; Nagler, Arielle R; Szerencsy, Adam; Saxena, Archana; Klapheke, Nathan; Katz, Stuart D; Horwitz, Leora I; Blecker, Saul
BACKGROUND:Electronic health record (EHR) tools can improve prescribing of guideline-recommended therapies for heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), but their effectiveness may vary by physician workload. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:This paper aims to assess whether physician workload modifies the effectiveness of EHR tools for HFrEF. METHODS:This was a prespecified subgroup analysis of the BETTER CARE-HF (Building Electronic Tools to Enhance and Reinforce Cardiovascular Recommendations for Heart Failure) cluster-randomized trial, which compared effectiveness of an alert vs message vs usual care on prescribing of mineralocorticoid antagonists (MRAs). The trial included adults with HFrEF seen in cardiology offices who were eligible for and not prescribed MRAs. Visit volume was defined at the cardiologist-level as number of visits per 6-month study period (high = upper tertile vs non-high = remaining). Analysis at the patient-level used likelihood ratio test for interaction with log-binomial models. RESULTS:Among 2,211 patients seen by 174 cardiologists, 932 (42.2%) were seen by high-volume cardiologists (median: 1,853; Q1-Q3: 1,637-2,225 visits/6 mo; and median: 10; Q1-Q3: 9-12 visits/half-day). MRA was prescribed to 5.5% in the high-volume vs 14.8% in the non-high-volume groups in the usual care arm, 10.3% vs 19.6% in the message arm, and 31.2% vs 28.2% in the alert arm, respectively. Visit volume modified treatment effect (P for interaction = 0.02) such that the alert was more effective in the high-volume group (relative risk: 5.16; 95% CI: 2.57-10.4) than the non-high-volume group (relative risk: 1.93; 95% CI: 1.29-2.90). CONCLUSIONS:An EHR-embedded alert increased prescribing by >5-fold among patients seen by high-volume cardiologists. Our findings support use of EHR alerts, especially in busy practice settings. (Building Electronic Tools to Enhance and Reinforce Cardiovascular Recommendations for Heart Failure [BETTER CARE-HF]; NCT05275920).
PMID: 38043045
ISSN: 2213-1787
CID: 5597482

Sex Differences in Revascularization, Treatment Goals, and Outcomes of Patients With Chronic Coronary Disease: Insights From the ISCHEMIA Trial

Reynolds, Harmony R; Cyr, Derek D; Merz, C Noel Bairey; Shaw, Leslee J; Chaitman, Bernard R; Boden, William E; Alexander, Karen P; Rosenberg, Yves D; Bangalore, Sripal; Stone, Gregg W; Held, Claes; Spertus, John; Goetschalckx, Kaatje; Bockeria, Olga; Newman, Jonathan D; Berger, Jeffrey S; Elghamaz, Ahmed; Lopes, Renato D; Min, James K; Berman, Daniel S; Picard, Michael H; Kwong, Raymond Y; Harrington, Robert A; Thomas, Boban; O'Brien, Sean M; Maron, David J; Hochman, Judith S; ,
BACKGROUND:Women with chronic coronary disease are generally older than men and have more comorbidities but less atherosclerosis. We explored sex differences in revascularization, guideline-directed medical therapy, and outcomes among patients with chronic coronary disease with ischemia on stress testing, with and without invasive management. METHODS AND RESULTS/RESULTS:=0.49), with no significant sex-by-treatment-group interactions. CONCLUSIONS:Women had less extensive coronary artery disease and, therefore, lower revascularization rates in the invasive group. Despite lower risk factor goal attainment, women with chronic coronary disease experienced similar risk-adjusted outcomes to men in the ISCHEMIA trial. REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:URL: http://wwwclinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01471522.
PMCID:10944079
PMID: 38410945
ISSN: 2047-9980
CID: 5645612

Global Longitudinal Strain as Predictor of Inducible Ischemia in No Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease in the CIAO-ISCHEMIA Study

Davis, Esther F; Crousillat, Daniela R; Peteiro, Jesus; Lopez-Sendon, Jose; Senior, Roxy; Shapiro, Michael D; Pellikka, Patricia A; Lyubarova, Radmila; Alfakih, Khaled; Abdul-Nour, Khaled; Anthopolos, Rebecca; Xu, Yifan; Kunichoff, Dennis M; Fleg, Jerome L; Spertus, John A; Hochman, Judith; Maron, David; Picard, Michael H; Reynolds, Harmony R; ,
BACKGROUND:Global longitudinal strain (GLS) is a sensitive marker for identifying subclinical myocardial dysfunction in obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). Little is known about the relationship between GLS and ischemia in patients with myocardial ischemia and no obstructive CAD (INOCA). OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To investigate the relationship between resting GLS and ischemia on stress echocardiography (SE) in patients with INOCA. METHODS:Left ventricular GLS was calculated offline on resting SE images at enrollment (n = 144) and 1-year follow-up (n = 120) in the CIAO-ISCHEMIA (Changes in Ischemia and Angina over One year in International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches trial screen failures with no obstructive CAD on computed tomography [CT] angiography) study, which enrolled participants with moderate or severe ischemia by local SE interpretation (≥3 segments with new or worsening wall motion abnormality and no obstructive (<50% stenosis) on coronary computed tomography angiography. RESULTS:Global longitudinal strain values were normal in 83.3% at enrollment and 94.2% at follow-up. Global longitudinal strain values were not associated with a positive SE at enrollment (GLS = -21.5% positive SE vs GLS = -19.9% negative SE, P = .443) or follow-up (GLS = -23.2% positive SE vs GLS = -23.1% negative SE, P = .859). Significant change in GLS was not associated with positive SE in follow-up (P = .401). Regional strain was not associated with colocalizing ischemia at enrollment or follow-up. Changes in GLS and number of ischemic segments from enrollment to follow-up showed a modest but not clinically meaningful correlation (β = 0.41; 95% CI, 0.16, 0.67; P = .002). CONCLUSIONS:In this cohort of INOCA patients, resting GLS values were largely normal and did not associate with the presence, severity, or location of stress-induced ischemia. These findings may suggest the absence of subclinical myocardial dysfunction detectable by echocardiographic strain analysis at rest in INOCA.
PMID: 37722490
ISSN: 1097-6795
CID: 5603252

Reallocating time between device-measured 24-hour activities and cardiovascular risk in Asian American immigrant women: An isotemporal substitution model

Park, Chorong; Larsen, Britta; Kwon, Simona C; Xia, Yuhe; LaNoue, Marianna; Dickson, Victoria V; Reynolds, Harmony R; Spruill, Tanya M
The 24-hour day consists of physical activity (PA), sedentary behavior, and sleep, and changing the time spent on one activity affects the others. Little is known about the impact of such changes on cardiovascular risk, particularly in Asian American immigrant (AAI) women, who not only have a higher cardiovascular risk but also place greater cultural value on family and domestic responsibilities compared to other racial/ethnic groups. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of reallocating 30 minutes of each 24-hour activity component for another on BMI, waist circumference, and blood pressure in AAI women. Seventy-five AAI women completed 7 days of hip and wrist actigraphy monitoring and were included in the analysis (age = 61.5±8.0 years, BMI = 25.5±3.6 kg/m2, waist circumference = 85.9±10.2 cm). Sleep was identified from wrist actigraphy data, and moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA), light PA, and sedentary behavior identified from hip actigraphy data. On average, the women spent 0.5 hours in MVPA, 6.2 hours in light PA, 10 hours in sedentary activities, and 5.3 hours sleeping within a 24-hour day. According to the isotemporal substitution models, replacing 30 minutes of sedentary behavior with MVPA reduced BMI by 1.4 kg/m2 and waist circumference by 4.0 cm. Replacing that same sedentary time with sleep reduced BMI by 0.5 kg/m2 and waist circumference by 1.4 cm. Replacing 30 minutes of light PA with MVPA decreased BMI by 1.6 kg/m2 and waist circumference by 4.3 cm. Replacing 30 minutes of light PA with sleep also reduced BMI by 0.8 kg/m2 and waist circumference by 1.7 cm. However, none of the behavioral substitutions affected blood pressure. Considering AAI women's short sleep duration, replacing their sedentary time with sleep might be a feasible strategy to reduce their BMI and waist circumference.
PMCID:10781047
PMID: 38198483
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 5628652