Cryptogenic stroke due to undetected atrial fibrillation – longer ECG monitoring may be the key

Up to 40% of ischemic strokes remain unexplained after routine evaluation and thus are considered cryptogenic. However, a number of these strokes may be due to an undetected episode of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) where anticoagulation can reduce the risk of subsequent ischemic stokes. Although a minimum of 24 hours of ECG monitoring is guideline […]

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Opinion based guideline recommendations less likely to stand the test of time

Limited data exists on how frequently guidelines change over time. This study examined how frequently class I recommendations (“procedure/treatment should be performed/administered”) in ACC/AHA guidelines were downgraded to a lower class over time. Four independent reviewers examined 619 class I ACC/AHA recommendations in 11 guidelines released between 1998-2007 and revised between 2006-2013. Overall, 495 recommendations […]

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Differences in Statin Eligible Patients across Guidelines

Recent ACC/AHA guidelines recommend consideration of statin therapy among patients with a 7.5% 10-year risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD).  In this study, the authors examined implications of these new guidelines as compared with previous European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and Adult Treatment Panel III (ATP III) guidelines in a Dutch population-based prospective cohort of […]

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Validation of the Pooled Cohort Risk Equations from Recent ACC/AHA Guidelines

Recent American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines for the assessment of cardiovascular risk recommend a new 10-year atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk prediction tool called the Pooled Cohort risk equation. This new predictive model developed from cohorts of patients that were largely studied prior to the year 2000.  In light of the declining […]

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Clonidine and Aspirin Fail to Reduce Peri-operative Myocardial Infarction

Myocardial infarction (MI) is the most common major vascular event that occurs after planned non-cardiac surgery.  Multiple strategies have been assessed to try and reduce the rates of peri-operative MI, but few have consistently demonstrated substantial benefit.  With a pro-thrombotic environment and marked sympathetic activation thought to play etiological roles, in the POISE-2 study, the […]

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Vegetarian diet associated with lower blood pressure  

Conflicting evidence exists on the association between a vegetarian diet (involving no or rare meat consumption) and hypertension. In this meta-analysis, the authors included 7 controlled trials and 32 observational studies examining the association between vegetarian diets and hypertension. The 7 trials included 311 individuals with a mean age of 44.5 years.  After pooling of […]

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ACEI reduce mortality whereas ARB did not in diabetic populations  

Where the benefits of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blockade for reduction of cardiovascular risk are similar for ACE inhibitors (ACEI) and ARBs are unknown.  The answer to this question is of particular importance among diabetics, given the higher cardiovascular risk in this patient population.  In this meta-analysis, the authors examined effect of ACEI and ARBs on the […]

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Epinephrine for Non-Shockable In-hospital Cardiac Arrest — Time is of the Essence

Guidelines recommend epinephrine as the primary medical intervention for cardiac arrest. However, no randomized trial data are available to support this recommendation. In this observational study from the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines – Resuscitation multi-center registry of in-hospital cardiac arrest, the authors sought to determine if timing of epinephrine administration in the […]

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Spironolactone for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Nearly half of all patients presenting with heart failure have normal or near normal left ventricular systolic function.  Optimal treatment strategies for this large patient group remain unclear.  Small mechanistic studies have suggested diastolic function may be improved by mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonists.  Whether this mechanistic benefit translates into better patient outcomes is not known.  In the […]

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Renal denervation misses the mark in resistant hypertension

The prospect of percutaneous renal-artery denervation to treat hypertension has been widely heralded in response to pilot studies that demonstrated marked reductions in blood pressure after renal denervation.  Despite the rapid adoption of catheter-based renal artery denervation, data from large scale randomised controlled trials remains absent.  A total of  535 patients with severe resistant hypertension […]

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