Users Online: 128
Home
About us
Editorial board
Ahead of print
Current issue
Search
Archives
Submit article
Instructions
Subscribe
Contacts
Reader Login
Export selected to
Endnote
Reference Manager
Procite
Medlars Format
RefWorks Format
BibTex Format
Access statistics : Table of Contents
2017| May-August | Volume 3 | Issue 2
Online since
November 20, 2017
Archives
Previous Issue
Next Issue
Most popular articles
Most cited articles
Show all abstracts
Show selected abstracts
Export selected to
Viewed
PDF
Cited
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - CASE DISCUSSION
Ruptured sinus of valsalva aneurysm: Clinical case presentation and management
Nitin Kumar Parashar, Dinkar Bhasin, Patil Surajkumar Marotrao, Faraz Ahmed Farooqui, Sunil Kumar Verma, Anita Saxena
May-August 2017, 3(2):109-114
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_27_17
A 27-year-old female presented with generalized body swelling and progressive shortness of breath for the past 4 months. On examination, she had a loud continuous murmur, elevated jugular venous pressure, and gross ascites. The examination findings, electrocardiogram, chest radiography, and echocardiogram are discussed in a step-wise manner to arrive at a diagnosis and plan of management of a patient with ruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm is discussed along with review of relevant literature.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[CITATIONS]
16,753
1,610
3
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Heart transplant in India: Lessons learned
Balram Airan, Sarvesh Pal Singh, Sandeep Seth, Milind Padmakar Hote, Manoj Kumar Sahu, Palleti Rajashekar, Velayoudham Devagourou, Sambhunath Das, Neeraj Parakh, Ruma Ray, Sudheer Arava
May-August 2017, 3(2):94-99
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_25_17
Introduction:
Heart Transplant in India started in 1994. We were initially doing 1-2 per year but the numbers have picked up since 2014 and we have done 25 in the past 3 years. We describe our experience of the last 4 years in this paper.
Results:
Initially, we experienced a relatively higher rate of rejections, fungal infections and graft failure. As we changed protocols, stopped using induction therapy except in high risk, maintained higher levels of immune suppression and tapered steroids faster in the first year, the complications reduced. All patients who had rejections and all the later transplants were maintained on a regime of tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and steroids along with six months of valgancyclovir, voriconazole and co-trimoxazole. Steroids were tapered by six months to 0.1 mg/kg per day in all patients.
Conclusions:
In our recent patients, infection was the most common adverse event followed by rejection and PGD. In the latter half of our experience, we found that the complications reduced, suggesting that experience leads to less complications.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[CITATIONS]
13,117
617
4
REVIEW ARTICLES
Cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity: Review and algorithmic approach toward evaluation
K Purkayastha, Rachna Seth, Sandeep Seth, Alex R Lyon
May-August 2017, 3(2):82-93
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_33_17
In pediatric cancer, the overall 5-year survival has increased to more than 80%, but these improvements in cancer outcomes have come at the cost of increased morbidity and mortality. These can occur during or early after treatment, and in others may occur many years after cancer treatment is completed. Survivors of childhood cancers are at an increased risk of developing congestive heart failure and premature death due to cardiac causes (coronary artery disease, stroke, and congestive heart failure). There is a strong dose-dependent relationship between anthracycline chemotherapy exposure and risk of congestive heart failure, and the risk is increased in those who have been exposed to chest radiation. Early detection of myocardial injury, prevention of myocardial dysfunction, strategies to promote quick recovery of myocardial function in case of injury, and monitoring for delayed effects of cancer therapy are areas which both oncologists as well as cardiologists looking after cancer patients need to understand. A subspecialty of cardio-oncology has emerged to allow more focus in these areas.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[CITATIONS]
5,992
850
1
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - STATISTICAL PAGES
Number needed to treat
Amitabh Biswas
May-August 2017, 3(2):106-108
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_31_17
The Number Needed To Treat (NNT) is a measure used in epidemiology to convey the effectiveness of an intervention. It is the average number of patients who need to be treated to prevent one bad outcome. It is the reverse of the Absolute Risk Reduction. The lower the NNT, the more effective the intervention. In this article we discuss the concept and limitations of this measure.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[CITATIONS]
4,653
515
5
HONEY BEE SECTION
Nobel prize for the fruit fly
Soumi Das
May-August 2017, 3(2):68-69
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_42_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
4,291
310
-
REVIEW ARTICLES
Cardiac stem cell therapy: Current status
Sridharan Umapathy
May-August 2017, 3(2):74-78
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_12_17
Cardiac injury due to any cause leads to cardiac cell damage and thereby to ventricular dysfunction. Unlike current medical therapy, cardiac regeneration by stem cell therapy is a promising approach which has a potential to reverse left ventricular dysfunction. It is conceived to complement and potentially transform available therapeutic armamentarium. Early experience in clinical studies support the safety and feasibility of cell therapy and as adjuvants to established practice. This review discusses type of stem cells used, its therapeutic indications, and its current status.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,951
309
-
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - IMAGES
Pectus carinatum (Pigeon Chest)
Madhav Bhargava, Raghav Bhargava
May-August 2017, 3(2):118-119
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_37_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,832
205
-
LETTERS TO EDITOR
DM cardiac surgical intensive care: A new course on the horizon
Sarvesh Pal Singh
May-August 2017, 3(2):125-126
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_43_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,523
219
-
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - JOURNAL CLUB
The Angiotensin II for the treatment of high-output Shock-3 Trial (Athos-3)
Nirmal Ghati
May-August 2017, 3(2):103-105
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_29_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,314
318
-
HONEY BEE SECTION - INNOVATIONS FOR THE HEART
Novel electro-acoustic technology for the screening and management of heart failure
A Vijayasimha
May-August 2017, 3(2):70-73
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_41_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,055
294
-
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - HISTORY OF MEDICINE
“Vulnerato corde homo vivere non potest” (“Man can not live with a wounded heart”)
V Devagourou
May-August 2017, 3(2):115-117
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_40_17
The first ever successful cardiac surgery was a repair of a stab wound of the right ventricle by Dr Ludwig Rehn from Frankfurt, Germany on 7
th
September 1896. It required Dwight Harken to successfully operate on bomb victims of world war II and to save more than 100 soldiers to open the heart to surgical techniques. He operated on 130 soldiers without a single fatality. This article recalls these two moments of cardiac surgery.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
3,042
196
-
REVIEW ARTICLES
Cardiology update 2017: The second quarter
Sunil Kumar Verma, S Umapathy
May-August 2017, 3(2):79-81
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_38_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,802
264
-
EDITORIAL
The road less travelled
Sandeep Seth, Shyamal K Goswami
May-August 2017, 3(2):67-67
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_47_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,824
226
-
CURRICULUM IN CARDIOLOGY - BOOK REVIEW
Being mortal: Medicine and what matters in the end
Udbhav Seth
May-August 2017, 3(2):120-121
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_34_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,768
276
-
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Epidemiologic surveillance on quality of life in patients with systolic heart failure after treatment with the selective heart rate inhibitor ivabradine
M Srinivasa Rao, Sankar Chandra Mandal
May-August 2017, 3(2):100-102
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_8_17
Background:
Patients with systolic heart failure (HF) frequently have symptoms despite receiving standard treatment. The addition of the selective heart rate inhibitor ivabradine has been shown to improve their quality of life (QOL) in randomized trials but not under day-to-day practice conditions.
Objective:
The objective of the study was to assess changes in QOL after the addition of ivabradine to the standard treatment of patients with systolic HF, in daily clinical practice.
Patients and Methods:
In a multicenter surveillance protocol, patients with a diagnosis of systolic HF who were prospectively prescribed ivabradine 5–7.5 mg twice a day for 60 days were selected for surveillance on their QOL. Primary data on demographic and clinical characteristics, together with a change in QOL assessed by a visual analog scale, during a 60-day follow-up, were extracted for analysis from the case records of patients kept with the investigators.
Results:
In 594 patients with systolic HF who received ivabradine in addition to standard treatment for 60 days, intention to treat analysts showed that 465 (78.3%, 95% confidence interval (CI), 74.7–81.4) had improvement in QOL. The mean (95% CI) QOL score increased by 37.0% (35.1–39.1).
Conclusion:
These results confirm the observations of previous randomized trials that in day-to-day clinical practice, patients with systolic HF benefit from an improvement in QOL when ivabradine is added to their standard treatment.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,720
205
-
CASE REPORT
Eight months of HeartMate II device support without drug therapy
Kewal Krishan, Sean Pinney, Anelechi C Anyanwu
May-August 2017, 3(2):122-124
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_30_17
Thromboembolic complication rates of 20%–30% were initially a major limitation to the widespread use of left ventricular assist devices. The success of the HeartMate (Thoratec, Corp., Pleasanton, CA, USA) device has been partly due to the reduced incidence of thromboembolic events, although anticoagulation regime has been recommended for this mechanical circulatory support. We here present a case with the placement of HeartMate II in a patient, noncompliant to medical therapy where device worked for 8 months without any anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,506
168
-
LETTERS TO EDITOR
An update on mid-term international society of heart research – Indian section meeting: Cardiovascular research convergence 2017
Sanjay K Banerjee, Sandeep Seth
May-August 2017, 3(2):127-129
DOI
:10.4103/jpcs.jpcs_44_17
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
2,277
155
-
Sitemap
|
What's New
|
Feedback
|
Disclaimer
|
Privacy Notice
© Journal of the Practice of Cardiovascular Sciences | Published by Wolters Kluwer -
Medknow
Online since 11
th
March,2015