| Literature DB >> 33992429 |
John Iskander1, Peter Kelada2, Lara Rashad2, Doaa Massoud2, Peter Afdal3, Antoine Fakhry Abdelmassih4.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) has been showing patterns of extensive rise in prevalence in the contemporary era, affecting the quality of life of millions of people and leading the causes of death worldwide. It has been a provocative challenge for modern medicine to diagnose CVD in its crib, owing to its etiological factors being attributed to a large array of systemic diseases, as well as its non-binary hideous nature that gradually leads to functional disability. Novel echocardiography techniques have enabled the cardiac ultrasound to provide a comprehensive analysis of the heart in an objective, feasible, time- and cost-effective manner. Speckle tracking echocardiography, contrast echocardiography, and 3D echocardiography have shown the highest potential for widespread use. The uses of novel modalities have been elaborately demonstrated in this study as a proof of concept that echocardiography has a place in routine general practice with supportive evidence being as recent as its role in the concurrent COVID-19 pandemic. Despite such evidence, many uses remain off-label and unexploited in practice. Generalization of echocardiography at the point of care can become a much-needed turning point in the clinical approach to case management. To actualize such aspirations, we recommend further prospective and interventional studies to examine the effect of implementing advanced techniques at the point of care on the decision-making process and evaluate their effectiveness in prevention of cardiovascular morbidities and mortalities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33992429 PMCID: PMC9046647 DOI: 10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2021.100847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Probl Cardiol ISSN: 0146-2806 Impact factor: 16.464
Cardiac burden of systemic diseases.
| Disease | Prevalence | Percentage Of Heart Affection | Risk Of Cardiac Death |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | 31.5% (low-income countries) | Accounts for 50% of ischemic heart disease cases | 13% of total deaths worldwide |
| Obesity | 13% in 18 yo and older | 40% increased risk for CVD with every 5kg/m2 BMI increase | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 8.5% | Every 1% increase in HbA1c corresponds with 30% increased risk of HF | 65% |
| Radiation induced cardiomyopathy | - | 0.5-37% in breast cancer (dose-dependent). | 1.5 to 3 fold increased fatal myocardial infarction risk compared to unirradiated Hodgkin lymphoma patients. |
| Chemotherapy-related cardiomyopathy | - | anthracyclines: 5-48% (dose dependent). | 68% 5-year survival rate with cardiac affection as leading cause |
| Rheumatic heart disease | 30 million people globally | 60% | 305,000 deaths/year |
| Systemic Lupus Erythematosis | 20 to 150 cases per 100,000 in US | 50% | 32% |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 0.2–1.0% | 48% increased risk of developing CVD events | 39.6% |
Uses of STE in systemic heart diseases.
| Toxic cardiomyopathy | Chemotherapy-related cardiac dysfunction(a)(b) |
| Immune-mediated diseases | Rheumatic heart disease(b) |
| Infiltrative diseases | Thalassemia(a)(b) |
| Metabolic and endocrine diseases | Obesity(a) |
| Infective diseases | COVID-19(b) |
| Others | HFpEF(b) |
(a) STE uses having a prognostic role in monitoring response to treatment.
(b) STE uses having a prognostic role in monitoring disease progression.
STE has an early diagnostic value in all uses mentioned.
prevalence of abnormal myocardial perfusion in systemic diseases.
| Condition | Imaging modality | Abnormal perfusion% of cases |
|---|---|---|
| Type 2 DM (free of cardiac symptoms) | Technetium-99m sestamibi SPECT | 10.3% |
| PET scan | 13.5% | |
| SLE | Technetium-99m sestamibi SPECT | 33% |
| Coronary angiography | 38% | |
| Rheumatic heart disease | Coronary angiography | 10.91% |
| HIV | 99m Tc-tetrofosmin SPECT | 9.6% |
| Sarcoidosis | PET scan | 65.6% |
| Amyloidosis | PET scan | 81.9% |
| CMR | 100% | |
| Sickle beta-thalassemia | Exercise Tc-99m tetrofosmin gated SPECT | 27% |
| Emergencies (Acute chest pain with negative ECG and Troponin) | Stress SPECT | 12.1% |
FIG 1Fundamental principles of STE. (Color version of figure is available online.)
FIG 2Steps of performing STE. (Color version of figure is available online.)
FIG 3Contrast echocardiography as a structural imaging modality.
FIG 4Contrast echocardiography in myocardial perfusion imaging. (Color version of figure is available online.)
FIG 53DE provides quantitative volumetric analysis without geometrical assumptions. (Color version of figure is available online.)
FIG 63DE obtains realistic anatomical representations of the cardiac valves. (Color version of figure is available online.)