Internal and emergency medicine
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CardioPulmonary Exercise Test (CPET) is the gold standard to evaluate functional capacity in patients at high risk of heart failure (HF). Few studies with a limited number of subjects and conflicting results, analyzed the role of CPET in patients with systemic amyloidosis. Aims of our study were the assessment of the response to exercise in patients with Transthyretin amyloid (ATTR) cardiomyopathy (CA), and the correlation of clinical, biohumoral and echocardiographic parameters with CPET parameters, such as VO2 peak and VE/VCO2 slope. ⋯ In multivariate analysis, s' tricuspidalic was the only independent predictor of VO2 peak, while in the two test models performed to avoid collinearity, both TAPSE and s' tricuspidalic were the strongest independent predictors of VE/VCO2 slope. Our data demonstrate the role of right ventricular function as an independent predictor of exercise capacity and ventilatory efficiency in ATTR. In CPET evaluation, a significant proportion of patients presented an abnormal arterial pressure response and heart rate variation to exercise.
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Irisin has been considered to reflect oxidative stress. This study aimed to show whether plasma irisin levels are correlated with hemodynamic dysfunction and predict the clinical outcome of patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH). A total of 68 adult IPAH patients were prospectively recruited in the present study. ⋯ Low irisin group predicts adverse hemodynamic status and poor free of event survival rate (P = 0.030, log-rank test). Multivariate analysis indicates plasma irisin levels to be an independent predictor of prognosis in IPAH patients after adjusting for related covariates (HR 0.786; 95% CI 0.584, 0.957; P = 0.038). Plasma irisin levels may serve as a novel biomarker in IPAH patients for hemodynamic severity assessment and clinical outcome evaluation.