International journal of cardiology
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The approach suggested by the 2018 ESC GL is the main road for achieving the ambitious goal "zero admission for syncope". This document has in fact introduced a clear-cut distinction between syncope associated with a definite diagnosis, which shall be managed according to the underlying condition, and the really undetermined cases, which shall be managed with prognostic stratification. ⋯ Moreover, they provide a table of non-syncopal causes of TLOC to be excluded, indicating the clinical features distinguishing them from syncope, clearly define the indications for additional examinations to be made after the initial evaluation and include a detailed table contains features for stratifying patients as being at high- and low-risk. However, we believe that this approach could be further improved, by especially defining criteria to identify patient neither high nor low risk, to be called at "intermediate-risk", making the prognostic stratification table easier to remember and use, by clarifying the role of laboratory tests to support the clinical judgment and by defining protocol for managing patients ED observation unit.
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Anticoagulant therapy during the acute phase of non-ST elevation acute coronary syndromes (NSTE-ACS) is strongly recommended by current international guidelines. Evidence supporting the use of anticoagulant therapy in the early phase of NSTE-ACS however, is based on dated trials mostly performed in the nineties and recent randomised clinical trials (RCTs), performed during the last 15 years, clearly evidence a dichotomy in the investigation of antiplatelet and anticoagulant strategies. ⋯ Since a RCT evaluating the efficacy of anticoagulant therapy versus placebo in a contemporary setting of NSTE-ACS management is lacking, we provide a systematic review of 1) the randomised data for ATT in the early phase of NSTE-ACS; 2) modern international guidelines, and 3) contemporary clinical practice data. The results are analysed and potential treatment and research strategies are proposed.
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Meta Analysis
Pulmonary vasodilator therapies are of no benefit in pulmonary hypertension due to left heart disease: A meta-analysis.
Pulmonary hypertension complicating left heart disease (PH-LHD) is the most common cause of PH. Off-label use of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) medications for PH-LHD is prevalent, despite a lack of clinical data supporting their use. ⋯ The current meta-analysis demonstrated that there is no current evidence to support the widespread use of PAH therapy in PH-LHD. On the basis of a numerically increased risk of clinical harm, these agents should not be prescribed in this setting, unless further evidence of benefit arises in the future.
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In the summer of 2016, delegates from the German Respiratory Society, the German Society of Cardiology and the German Society of Pediatric Cardiology met in Cologne, Germany, to define consensus-based practice recommendations for the management of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). These recommendations were built on the 2015 European Pulmonary Hypertension guidelines and included new evidence, where available, and were last updated in the spring of 2018. ⋯ In part 2, the proposed ESC/ERS risk stratification strategy is discussed, together with a review of the recent validation studies from different European registries. Finally, in part 3, the working group of the Cologne Consensus Conference provides recommendations on how risk assessment may be implemented in routine clinical practice and may serve clinical decision making.
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Anticoagulantion therapy (OAT) represents the cornerstone to reduce thromboembolic events for atrial fibrillation (AF). Recent studies suggest that AF catheter ablation on top of OAT may be useful to further reduce the thromboembolic risk in AF patients. The aim of the present study is to compare the long-term risk of thromboembolic events and treatment-related complications in patients with AF treated by OAT strategies and catheter ablation. ⋯ AF catheter ablation significantly reduces the incidence of long-term thromboembolic events compared to both VKA and DOAC. This reduction is maintained in all CHADS2 score clusters and is strengthened by the concomitant reduction in hemorrhagic complications provided by AF ablation.