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Pediatric Cardiology Dec 2023Infants with staged surgical palliation for congenital heart disease are at high-risk for interstage morbidity and mortality. Interstage telecardiology visits (TCV) have...
Infants with staged surgical palliation for congenital heart disease are at high-risk for interstage morbidity and mortality. Interstage telecardiology visits (TCV) have been effective in identifying clinical concerns and preventing unnecessary emergency department visits in this high-risk population. We aimed to assess the feasibility of implementing auscultation with digital stethoscopes (DSs) during TCV and the potential impact on interstage care in our Infant Single Ventricle Monitoring & Management Program. In addition to standard home-monitoring practice for TCV, caregivers received training on use of a DS (Eko CORE attachment assembled with Classic II Infant Littman stethoscope). Sound quality of the DS and comparability to in-person auscultation were evaluated based on two providers' subjective assessment. We also evaluated provider and caregiver acceptability of the DS. From 7/2021 to 6/2022, the DS was used during 52 TCVs in 16 patients (median TCVs/patient: 3; range: 1-8), including 7 with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Quality of heart sounds and murmur auscultation were subjectively equivalent to in-person findings with excellent inter-rater agreement (98%). All providers and caregivers reported ease of use and confidence in evaluation with the DS. In 12% (6/52) of TCVs, the DS provided additional significant information compared to a routine TCV; this expedited life-saving care in two patients. There were no missed events or deaths. Use of a DS during TCV was feasible in this fragile cohort and effective in identifying clinical concerns with no missed events. Longer term use of this technology will further establish its role in telecardiology.
Topics: Infant; Humans; Stethoscopes; Feasibility Studies; Heart Defects, Congenital; Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome; Heart Murmurs
PubMed: 37285041
DOI: 10.1007/s00246-023-03198-7 -
Frontiers in Pediatrics 2023To create a brief, acceptable, innovative method for self-paced learning to enhance recognition of pediatric heart murmurs by medical students, and to demonstrate this...
OBJECTIVE
To create a brief, acceptable, innovative method for self-paced learning to enhance recognition of pediatric heart murmurs by medical students, and to demonstrate this method's effectiveness in a randomized, controlled trial.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A curriculum of six 10-min online learning modules was designed to enable deliberate practice of pediatric cardiac auscultation, using recordings of patients' heart murmurs. Principles of andragogy and multimedia learning were applied to optimize acquisition of this skill. A pretest and posttest, given 4 weeks apart, were created using additional recordings and administered to 87 3rd-year medical students during their pediatric clerkship. They were randomized to have access to the modules after the pretest or after the posttest, and asked to use at least the first 2 of the modules.
RESULTS
47 subjects comprised the Intervention group, and 40 subjects the Control group. On our primary outcome, distinguishing innocent from pathological with at least moderate confidence, the posttest scores were significantly higher for the Intervention group (60.5%) than for the Control group (20.0%). For our secondary outcomes, the 2 groups also differed significantly in the ability to distinguish innocent from pathological murmurs, and in identifying the actual diagnosis. On all 3 outcomes, those Intervention group subjects who accessed 4-6 modules scored higher than those who accessed 0-3 modules, who in turn scored higher than the Control group.
SUMMARY
Applying current principles of adult learning, we have created a teaching program for medical students to learn to recognize common pediatric murmurs. Its effectiveness was demonstrated in a randomized, controlled trial. The program results in a meaningful gain in this skill from 1 h of self-paced training with high acceptance to learners.
PubMed: 38293663
DOI: 10.3389/fped.2023.1283306 -
Cureus Jul 2023Atrial myxomas are the most common primary neoplasm of the heart. Due to their mass effect, they may lead to dysfunction of the heart or mitral valve. Rarely, neoplastic...
Atrial myxomas are the most common primary neoplasm of the heart. Due to their mass effect, they may lead to dysfunction of the heart or mitral valve. Rarely, neoplastic fragments may embolize or a thrombus secondary to stasis may form, which can infarct downstream structures (e.g., the brain). We report the case of a 59-year-old man presenting with headaches, visual changes, and word-finding difficulty secondary to multifocal brain lesions that were identified on computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. After an extensive workup, the etiology of the patient's neurological symptoms was determined to be embolization from a large atrial myxoma (2.3x3.5 cm). Histologic and immunohistochemical examination of the atrial myxoma and largest brain lesion yielded similarities, including the presence of spindle-shaped and stellate cells, myxoid regions, Alcian blue pH 2.5 positivity, calretinin positivity, cluster of differentiation 34 (CD34) positivity, and cluster of differentiation 68 (CD68) negativity. This case was remarkable due to the patient's late presentation, the large size of the atrial myxoma, the presence of abundant cerebral hemisphere and cerebellar lesions, and the histologic comparison of the heart and brain lesions. Atrial myxomas have been reported from childhood to late adulthood and when symptoms typically present clinically due to the mass effect. However, neurologic manifestations from embolization or thrombus formation can occur, as in the present case. Therefore, considering the presence of atrial myxomas is important in patients with neurologic manifestations and heart murmurs.
PubMed: 37539427
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.41323 -
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 2023This study aims to assess the ability of state-of-the-art machine learning algorithms to detect valvular heart disease (VHD) from digital heart sound recordings in a...
OBJECTIVE
This study aims to assess the ability of state-of-the-art machine learning algorithms to detect valvular heart disease (VHD) from digital heart sound recordings in a general population that includes asymptomatic cases and intermediate stages of disease progression.
METHODS
We trained a recurrent neural network to predict murmurs from heart sound audio using annotated recordings collected with digital stethoscopes from four auscultation positions in 2,124 participants from the Tromsø7 study. The predicted murmurs were used to predict VHD as determined by echocardiography.
RESULTS
The presence of aortic stenosis (AS) was detected with a sensitivity of 90.9%, a specificity of 94.5%, and an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.979 (CI: 0.963-0.995). At least moderate AS was detected with an AUC of 0.993 (CI: 0.989-0.997). Moderate or greater aortic and mitral regurgitation (AR and MR) were predicted with AUC values of 0.634 (CI: 0.565-703) and 0.549 (CI: 0.506-0.593), respectively, which increased to 0.766 and 0.677 when clinical variables were added as predictors. The AUC for predicting symptomatic cases was higher for AR and MR, 0.756 and 0.711, respectively. Screening jointly for symptomatic regurgitation or presence of stenosis resulted in an AUC of 0.86, with 97.7% of AS cases ( = 44) and all 12 MS cases detected.
CONCLUSIONS
The algorithm demonstrated excellent performance in detecting AS in a general cohort, surpassing observations from similar studies on selected cohorts. The detection of AR and MR based on HS audio was poor, but accuracy was considerably higher for symptomatic cases, and the inclusion of clinical variables improved the performance of the model significantly.
PubMed: 38328674
DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2023.1170804 -
Cureus Dec 2023Morgagni hernia is a rare congenital defect of the diaphragm, especially seen in children but rarely observed in adults. It occurs due to a congenital defect during the...
Morgagni hernia is a rare congenital defect of the diaphragm, especially seen in children but rarely observed in adults. It occurs due to a congenital defect during the development of the diaphragm. Bochdalek hernia is a common congenital form of diaphragmatic hernia. Morgagni hernia is usually rare with a prevalence of approximately 2-3%. Beaver tail liver, which is also called sliver of liver, is a rare variant of liver morphology. Sometimes elongated left lobe of the liver can extend laterally across the midline to contact and often surround the spleen. A 46-year-old female from Karnataka complained of fever with chills and lower back aches for seven days with no history of chest pain, vomiting, or diarrhea. There have been no similar complaints in the past. She had no other comorbidities. She was a non-smoker and non-alcoholic. Biomass gas exposure for 20 years was noted as she cooked food with firewood. She was a housewife by occupation with no history of trauma or surgeries in the past. The general physical exam was unremarkable. The respiratory system was normal. Auscultation showed decreased breath sounds in the mammary area of the right side of the chest with normal vesicular breath sounds in all other areas. Per abdominal exam showed a flat abdomen. Umbilicus was central in position. There was tenderness in the right hypochondriac and epigastric regions with no guarding or rigidity. On examining the cardiovascular system, apical impulses could not be palpated and normal heart sounds were heard with no cardiac murmurs. Other systems examination was normal. Routine blood investigations were done, revealing hemoglobin of 11.6%, total WBC of 6270 cells, and hematocrit of 33.1%. The renal function test was within normal limits (creatinine = 0.7 mg/dl). A chest X-ray revealed a right lower zone, para cardiac well-circumscribed structure suggestive of a cyst with an air-fluid level inside. Chest CT was suggestive of a hernia in the anterior aspect of the diaphragm measuring 3.5 x 3.3 cm at the level of D9 vertebral body with transverse colon and omentum as its contents, ascending upwards into anterior and superior mediastinum for a length of 13 cm causing shift of cardia posteriorly and to the left (anterior midline diaphragmatic hernia - Morgagni hernia). A hyperdense lesion (Hounsfield unit = 64) measuring 1.3 x 1.8 cm was noted in segment seven of the right lobe of the liver, suggestive of a complex cyst. Beaver tail was noted in the liver. Morgagni hernia usually presents in younger age groups with respiratory symptoms. Its incidental detection in adults is very rare. In this case, the patient was having lower backache and no other gastrointestinal symptoms. The respiratory and cardiothoracic systems get affected because the intestinal contents herniating through the diaphragm shift the position of the cardia and the lower lobes of the lungs, which may have implications such as repeated cough and infections. Symptomatic hernias are usually detected in an early age group. It can present with symptoms of gastrointestinal obstruction or acute chest symptoms or can even be asymptomatic. Treatment is primarily surgical repair of the hernia. This can be done either transthoracically or transabdominally. It is usually advised that surgical repair should be done even in asymptomatic cases as in this case, to avoid obstruction of the intestine or worsening of the hernia that is pulling the abdominal contents into the thorax.
PubMed: 38161555
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.49769 -
Scientific Reports Mar 2024Traditionally, heart murmurs are diagnosed through cardiac auscultation, which requires specialized training and experience. The purpose of this study is to predict...
Traditionally, heart murmurs are diagnosed through cardiac auscultation, which requires specialized training and experience. The purpose of this study is to predict patients' clinical outcomes (normal or abnormal) and identify the presence or absence of heart murmurs using phonocardiograms (PCGs) obtained at different auscultation points. A semi-supervised model tailored to PCG classification is introduced in this study, with the goal of improving performance using time-frequency deep features. The study begins by investigating the behavior of PCGs in the time-frequency domain, utilizing the Stockwell transform to convert the PCG signal into two-dimensional time-frequency maps (TFMs). A deep network named AlexNet is then used to derive deep feature sets from these TFMs. In feature reduction, redundancy is eliminated and the number of deep features is reduced to streamline the feature set. The effectiveness of the extracted features is evaluated using three different classifiers using the CinC/Physionet challenge 2022 dataset. For Task I, which focuses on heart murmur detection, the proposed approach achieved an average accuracy of 93%, sensitivity of 91%, and F1-score of 91%. According to Task II of the CinC/Physionet challenge 2022, the approach showed a clinical outcome cost of 5290, exceeding the benchmark set by leading methods in the challenge.
Topics: Humans; Phonocardiography; Algorithms; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Heart Murmurs; Heart Auscultation
PubMed: 38555390
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-58274-6 -
Animals : An Open Access Journal From... Jan 2024Mitral and aortic valve insufficiencies have been commonly reported in horses. The objective of this study was to establish the use of acoustic cardiography (Audicor) in...
Mitral and aortic valve insufficiencies have been commonly reported in horses. The objective of this study was to establish the use of acoustic cardiography (Audicor) in horses with aortic (AI) or mitral valve insufficiency (MI). A total of 17 healthy horses, 18 horses with AI, and 28 horses with MI were prospectively included. None of the horses was in heart failure. Echocardiography and Audicor analyses were conducted. Electromechanical activating time (EMAT), rate-corrected EMATc, left ventricular systolic time (LVST), rate-corrected LVSTc, and intensity and persistence of the third and fourth heart sound (S3, S4) were reported by Audicor. Graphical analysis of the three-dimensional (3D) phonocardiogram served to visually detect murmurs. Audicor snapshot variables were compared between groups using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's multiple-comparisons test. The association between Audicor snapshot variables and the corresponding echocardiographic variables was investigated by linear regression and Bland-Altman analyses. Heart murmurs were not displayed on Audicor phonocardiograms. No significant differences were found between Audicor variables obtained in clinically healthy horses and horses with valvular insufficiency. The Audicor device is unable to detect heart murmurs in horses. Audicor variables representing cardiac function are not markedly altered, and their association with corresponding echocardiographic variables is poor in horses with valvular insufficiency that are not in heart failure.
PubMed: 38275790
DOI: 10.3390/ani14020331 -
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery Apr 2024In this case report, we present the unique and intriguing case of a 57-year-old man who experienced exertional palpitations and shortness of breath for 5 years. He was...
In this case report, we present the unique and intriguing case of a 57-year-old man who experienced exertional palpitations and shortness of breath for 5 years. He was diagnosed with idiopathic heart failure three years ago, leading to diuretic treatment. Physical examination revealed notable left lower extremity swelling, severe varicose veins, and cardiac murmurs. Echocardiography showed significant cardiac enlargement and severe functional mitral and tricuspid valve regurgitation. Computed tomography (CT) imaging uncovered a 10 mm left common iliac arteriovenous fistula, causing abnormal early filling of the inferior vena cava (IVC) and marked IVC dilation. Open surgical repair of the arteriovenous fistula resulted in symptom relief and improved cardiac function. This case underscores the importance of considering unusual causes in heart failure patients and highlights the value of early diagnosis and intervention in complex cardiac-vascular interactions.
Topics: Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Arteriovenous Fistula; Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical; Echocardiography; Heart Failure; Tricuspid Valve Insufficiency; Vena Cava, Inferior
PubMed: 38594763
DOI: 10.1186/s13019-024-02664-4 -
European Heart Journal. Case Reports Aug 2023Pericarditis is a common pericardial disorder that is frequently accompanied by a pericardial friction rub, which can be detected during a physical examination. Although...
BACKGROUND
Pericarditis is a common pericardial disorder that is frequently accompanied by a pericardial friction rub, which can be detected during a physical examination. Although patients' awareness of cardiac murmurs and vascular bruits has been extensively reported, there are no reports on patients' self-awareness of a pericardial friction rub.
CASE SUMMARY
We present the first case of a patient with acute pericarditis associated with objective self-awareness of a pericardial friction rub, which we recorded with an electronic stethoscope and confirmed the sound with the patient. The patient had a recent history of three-vessel coronary artery bypass grafting and presented with a progressively worsening, rhythmic, and 'sandpaper-scratching' sound in both ears. The sound was more pronounced in the left lateral decubitus position. The symptom resolved with colchicine therapy and was associated with concomitant resolution of the pericardial friction rub.
DISCUSSION
This is the first documented case of a patient demonstrating objective self-awareness of a pericardial rub resulting from acute pericarditis associated with post-pericardiotomy syndrome. Tinnitus refers to the perception of an auditory sensation that can be subjective or objective, depending on whether it is heard only by the individual or can also be heard by an observer. While objective tinnitus caused by cardiovascular conditions has been previously reported, no cases have attributed the pericardial friction rub as the underlying cause. Therefore, we suggest using the term pericardial rub tinnitus to describe this unique phenomenon.
PubMed: 37547373
DOI: 10.1093/ehjcr/ytad333 -
International Journal of Cardiology Jun 2024Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) is routinely required during pre-participation screening in the presence of symptoms, family history of sudden cardiac death or...
Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) is routinely required during pre-participation screening in the presence of symptoms, family history of sudden cardiac death or cardiomyopathies <40-year-old, murmurs, abnormal ECG findings or in the follow-up of athletes with a history of cardiovascular disease (CVD). TTE is a cost-effective first-line imaging modality to evaluate the cardiac remodeling due to long-term, intense training, previously known as the athlete's heart, and to rule out the presence of conditions at risk of sudden cardiac death, including cardiomyopathies, coronary artery anomalies, congenital, aortic and heart valve diseases. Moreover, TTE is useful for distinguishing physiological cardiac adaptations during intense exercise from pathological behavior due to an underlying CVD. In this expert opinion statement endorsed by the Italian Society of Sports Cardiology, we discussed common clinical scenarios where a TTE is required and conditions falling in the grey zone between the athlete's heart and underlying cardiomyopathies or other CVD. In addition, we propose a minimum dataset that should be included in the report for the most common indications of TTE in sports cardiology clinical practice.
PubMed: 38852859
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2024.132230