Chest
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The role of decreased pulmonary arterial (PA) compliance (C), equivalent to increased PA stiffness (1/C), as a critical determinant of right ventricular dysfunction and prognosis has been emphasized in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). ⋯ In incident idiopathic PAH, PA stiffness was related to mPAP and heart rate, and this finding outperformed the potential influences of age and sex. Baseline PA stiffness did not independently predict outcome. The great dispersion of the PVR × C product implied that PVR and PA stiffness were differently affected by the disease process.
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An obesity paradox, wherein patients who are obese have lower mortality, has been described in cardiopulmonary diseases, including pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Our objective was to determine whether obesity and BMI are associated with mortality in patients with PAH. ⋯ Obesity was not associated with mortality in the overall population, but there was an age-obesity interaction with increased mortality among young patients who were morbidly obese. These results have implications for active weight management in younger patients who are morbidly obese who are otherwise candidates for lung transplantation.
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OSA has emerged as a highly prevalent public health problem that imposes important mid- and long-term consequences, namely cardiovascular, metabolic, cognitive, and cancer-related alterations. OSA is characterized by increased upper airway resistance, alveolar hypoventilation, and recurrent upper airway obstruction during sleep. Recurrent collapse of the upper airway develops with sleep onset and is associated with both intermittent hypoxemia and sleep fragmentation. ⋯ In parallel, diseases previously attributed in part to lifestyle such as obesity, coronary heart disease, depression, and asthma (also associated with OSA) are now claimed as microbiota related. We therefore posit that altered patterns of sleep and oxygenation, as seen in OSA, will promote specific alterations in gut microbiota that in turn will elicit the immunologic alterations that lead to OSA-induced end-organ morbidities. The present article assesses the potential mechanistic links between OSA-induced changes in gut microbiota and its morbid phenotypes.
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As seen in this CME online activity (available at http://courses.elseviercme.com/708e), the various forms of asthma affect > 300 million people globally and > 25 million people in the United States. Asthma-related symptoms and exacerbations result in nearly 2 million ED visits annually, and many of these visits lead to inpatient hospital stays. There is an urgent need to improve the care of the estimated 5% to 15% of patients who have severe asthma. ⋯ During the activity, a panel of expert faculty will discuss and debate a series of topics related to the evaluation and long-term treatment of various severe asthma phenotypes. Activity topics include education regarding (1) The classification of severe asthma to differentially diagnose patients with disease that is uncontrolled despite relatively intensive therapy; (2) potential phenotypes and available biomarkers, including strengths, limitations, and how to translate results into the selection of therapies; and (3) the different mechanisms of action, efficacy, and safety of biologic therapies that target the pathophysiology of severe asthma. The goal is to provide clinician learners with the latest evidence and a fresh perspective on evolving management paradigms for severe asthma.