American heart journal
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American heart journal · Mar 2009
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyIntracoronary administration of bone marrow-derived progenitor cells improves left ventricular function in patients at risk for adverse remodeling after acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: results of the Reinfusion of Enriched Progenitor cells And Infarct Remodeling in Acute Myocardial Infarction study (REPAIR-AMI) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging substudy.
Serial cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) is the reference standard for evaluating left ventricular function, wall motion, and infarct size in patients with acute myocardial infarction, as well as remodeling during follow-up. The cardiac CMR substudy of the randomized multicenter REPAIR-AMI trial (Reinfusion of Enriched Progenitor cells And Infarct Remodeling in Acute Myocardial Infarction study) aimed at gaining insight into postinfarction left ventricular remodeling processes. ⋯ Intracoronary administration of BMC additionally improved left ventricular function in patients with impaired left ventricular function after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction despite optimal "state-of-the-art" reperfusion and pharmacologic treatment on 1-year follow-up and beneficially interfered with adverse postinfarction left ventricular remodeling.
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American heart journal · Mar 2009
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyNitrous oxide and perioperative cardiac morbidity (ENIGMA-II) Trial: rationale and design.
Globally there are >200 million major surgical procedures undertaken annually, and about 20% of these involve patients who have coronary artery disease. Many receive nitrous oxide, which impairs methionine synthase, thus inhibiting folate synthesis and increasing postoperative homocysteine levels. Nitrous oxide anesthesia leads to postoperative endothelial dysfunction, and there is some evidence that it increases myocardial ischemia and, possibly, myocardial infarction. We have initiated the Nitrous oxide and perioperative cardiac morbidity (ENIGMA-II) Trial to test the hypothesis that in inpatients undergoing anesthesia for major noncardiac surgery, avoidance of nitrous oxide will reduce the incidence of death and major cardiovascular events. ⋯ The ENIGMA-II Trial will be the largest study yet conducted to ascertain the benefits and risks of removing nitrous oxide from the gas mixture in anesthesia. The results of this large international trial will guide the clinical care of the hundreds of millions of adults undergoing noncardiac surgery annually.