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Frontiers in Pediatrics 2024Atrial septal defect (ASD) is a congenital heart disease that often presents without symptoms or murmurs. If left untreated, children with ASD can develop comorbidities...
BACKGROUND
Atrial septal defect (ASD) is a congenital heart disease that often presents without symptoms or murmurs. If left untreated, children with ASD can develop comorbidities in adulthood. In Japan, school electrocardiography (ECG) screening has been implemented for all 1st, 7th, and 10th graders. However, the impact of this program in detecting children with ASD is unknown.
METHODS
This is a retrospective study that analyzed consecutive patients with ASD who underwent catheterization for surgical or catheter closure at ≤18 years of age during 2009-2019 at a tertiary referral center in Japan.
RESULTS
Of the overall 116 patients with ASD (median age: 3.0 years of age at diagnosis and 8.9 years at catheterization), 43 (37%) were prompted by the ECG screening (Screening group), while the remaining 73 (63%) were by other findings (Non-screening group). Of the 49 patients diagnosed at ≥6 years of age, 43 (88%) were prompted by the ECG screening, with the 3 corresponding peaks of the number of patients at diagnosis. Compared with the non-screening group, the screening group exhibited similar levels of hemodynamic parameters but had a lower proportion of audible heart murmur, which were mainly prompted by the health care and health checkups in infancy or preschool period. Patients positive for a composite parameter (rsR' type of iRBBB, inverted T in V4, or ST depression in the aVF lead) accounted for 79% of the screening group at catheterization, each of which was correlated with hemodynamic parameters in the overall patients.
CONCLUSIONS
The present study shows that school ECG screening detects otherwise unrecognized ASD, which prompted the diagnosis of the majority of patients at school age and >one-third of overall patients in Japan. These findings suggest that ECG screening program could be an effective strategy for detecting hemodynamically significant ASD in students, who are asymptomatic and murmurless.
PubMed: 38887565
DOI: 10.3389/fped.2024.1396853 -
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 -
Postgraduate Medicine May 2024This study aimed to assess physicians' approach to cardiac murmurs and their level of knowledge about this sign, which is a crucial finding in childhood cardiac...
OBJECTIVE
This study aimed to assess physicians' approach to cardiac murmurs and their level of knowledge about this sign, which is a crucial finding in childhood cardiac anomalies.
METHODS
The study intended to include all family physicians in the Adıyaman province of Turkey, but ultimately 150 out of 210 physicians participated and was completed with a percentage response rate of 71%. Participants were asked about their approach to cardiac murmurs, answered knowledge questions, and completed a questionnaire on demographic characteristics. Subsequently, eight heart sounds were played, and participants were asked to identify the nature of each sound.
RESULTS
Family medicine specialists (all scores were < 0.001) and physicians who completed a pediatric internship lasting over a month (knowledge score = 0.012, behavioral score = 0.021, recording score = 0.01) demonstrated significantly higher knowledge, approach, and recording scores. Age and years in the profession showed a negative correlation with recording scores.
CONCLUSIONS
The study highlights the significant impact of various factors such as gender, specialization, internship duration, experience, and theoretical knowledge on the ability to recognize and approach cardiac murmurs. These findings underscore the importance of incorporating these factors into medical education and development programs, especially those aimed at improving cardiac examination skills.
Topics: Humans; Male; Female; Heart Murmurs; Clinical Competence; Turkey; Adult; Surveys and Questionnaires; Child; Middle Aged; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
PubMed: 38805321
DOI: 10.1080/00325481.2024.2360387 -
Journal of Echocardiography May 2024An 18-month-old boy presented with recurrent episodes of irritability and documented fast heart rate suggestive of supraventricular tachycardia. Cardiovascular...
An 18-month-old boy presented with recurrent episodes of irritability and documented fast heart rate suggestive of supraventricular tachycardia. Cardiovascular examination revealed significant cardiomegaly, normal heart sounds and no murmurs. The differential diagnosis of marked right atrial dilatation and management principles of idiopathic dilatation of the right atrium are described.
PubMed: 38789653
DOI: 10.1007/s12574-024-00651-1 -
Animals : An Open Access Journal From... Apr 2024Auscultation of heart sounds is an important veterinary skill requiring an understanding of anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology and pattern recognition. This...
Auscultation of heart sounds is an important veterinary skill requiring an understanding of anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology and pattern recognition. This cross-sectional study was developed to evaluate a targeted, audio-visual training resource for veterinary students to improve their understanding and auscultation of common heart conditions in horses. Fourth- and fifth-year 2021 and 2022 Bachelor of Veterinary Science students at the University of Queensland (UQ) were provided the learning resource and surveyed via online pre- and post-intervention surveys. Results were quantitatively analyzed using descriptive statistics and Mann-Whitney U tests. Open-ended survey questions were qualitatively analyzed by thematic analysis and Leximancer™ Version 4 program software analysis. Over the two-year period, 231 fourth-year and 222 fifth-year veterinary students had access to the resource; 89 completed the pre-intervention survey and 57 completed the post-intervention survey. Quantitative results showed the resource helped students prepare for practicals and their perception of competency and confidence when auscultating equine cardiac sounds improved ( < 0.05). Compared to fifth-year students, fourth-year students felt less competent at identifying murmurs and arrythmias prior to accessing the learning resource ( < 0.05). Fourth-year and fifth-year students' familiarity with detection of murmurs improved after completing the learning resource ( < 0.001). Qualitative analysis demonstrated a limited number of opportunities to practice equine cardiac auscultation throughout the veterinary degree, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, and that integrated audio-visual resources are an effective means of teaching auscultation.
PubMed: 38731348
DOI: 10.3390/ani14091341 -
Identifying pediatric heart murmurs and distinguishing innocent from pathologic using deep learning.Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Jul 2024To develop a deep learning algorithm to perform multi-class classification of normal pediatric heart sounds, innocent murmurs, and pathologic murmurs.
OBJECTIVE
To develop a deep learning algorithm to perform multi-class classification of normal pediatric heart sounds, innocent murmurs, and pathologic murmurs.
METHODS
We prospectively enrolled children under age 18 being evaluated by the Division of Pediatric Cardiology. Parents provided consent for a deidentified recording of their child's heart sounds with a digital stethoscope. Innocent murmurs were validated by a pediatric cardiologist and pathologic murmurs were validated by echocardiogram. To augment our collection of normal heart sounds, we utilized a public database of pediatric heart sound recordings (Oliveira, 2022). We propose two novel approaches for this audio classification task. We train a vision transformer on either Markov transition field or Gramian angular field image representations of the frequency spectrum. We benchmark our results against a ResNet-50 CNN trained on spectrogram images.
RESULTS
Our final dataset consisted of 366 normal heart sounds, 175 innocent murmurs, and 216 pathologic murmurs. Innocent murmurs collected include Still's murmur, venous hum, and flow murmurs. Pathologic murmurs included ventricular septal defect, tetralogy of Fallot, aortic regurgitation, aortic stenosis, pulmonary stenosis, mitral regurgitation and stenosis, and tricuspid regurgitation. We find that the Vision Transformer consistently outperforms the ResNet-50 on all three image representations, and that the Gramian angular field is the superior image representation for pediatric heart sounds. We calculated a one-vs-rest multi-class ROC curve for each of the three classes. Our best model achieves an area under the curve (AUC) value of 0.92 ± 0.05, 0.83 ± 0.04, and 0.88 ± 0.04 for identifying normal heart sounds, innocent murmurs, and pathologic murmurs, respectively.
CONCLUSION
We present two novel methods for pediatric heart sound classification, which outperforms the current standard of using a convolutional neural network trained on spectrogram images. To our knowledge, we are the first to demonstrate multi-class classification of pediatric murmurs. Multiclass output affords a more explainable and interpretable model, which can facilitate further model improvement in the downstream model development cycle and enhance clinician trust and therefore adoption.
Topics: Humans; Deep Learning; Heart Murmurs; Child; Child, Preschool; Infant; Adolescent; Prospective Studies; Heart Sounds; Female; Male; Algorithms; Diagnosis, Differential; Heart Auscultation
PubMed: 38723434
DOI: 10.1016/j.artmed.2024.102867 -
Tierarztliche Praxis. Ausgabe K,... Apr 2024The objective of this study was to evaluate the signalement, clinical features, and echocardiographic findings of cats diagnosed with patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) as...
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this study was to evaluate the signalement, clinical features, and echocardiographic findings of cats diagnosed with patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) as well as short- and medium-term outcome after successful ligation of the PDA.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Over a 10-year period 17 cats were diagnosed with PDA by transthoracic echocardiography. Thirteen cats were surgically treated by thoracotomy and ligation of the PDA.
RESULTS
In all cats, a heart murmur was detected. In 88.2% of the cases, this presented as grade 4 out of 6 murmur (15/17 cats). A continuous murmur was more common (10/17 cats; 58.9%) than a systolic murmur (7/17 cats; 41.1%). Echocardiography showed that left ventricular internal diameter end diastole (LVIDd) and left ventricular internal diameter end systole (LVIDs) were significantly above reference values in the majority of cats. Mean diameter of the PDA measured at the widest point of the vessel was 3.4 mm (± 1.08 mm) and mean maximum flow velocity amounted to 5,06 m/sec (2,6m/sec-6,4m/sec). Surgery was successfully performed in all cats treated by surgical ligation and all of these patients were discharged after postoperative inpatient therapy. One cat experienced perioperative bleeding from the PDA, which was stopped efficaciously. This cat exhibited a residual shunt directly postoperatively; this could no longer be visualized in a re-check echocardiography 3 months later. Six cats were followed over a longer period of time.
CONCLUSIONS
The surgical prognosis in this case study is very good with a postoperative survival rate of 100%.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE
Surgical treatment of PDA is curative in animals not displaying advanced cardiac lesions. The auscultation of a heart murmur can provide initial findings indicative of PDA. Therefore, cardiac auscultation is warranted at every first presentation of a kitten. It must however be taken into consideration that not every cat with PDA necessarily has a continuous murmur but may display a systolic heart murmur. Therefore, it is important give utmost attention to the patients' clinical signs.
Topics: Animals; Cats; Ductus Arteriosus, Patent; Cat Diseases; Retrospective Studies; Echocardiography; Ligation; Heart Murmurs; Female; Male
PubMed: 38701804
DOI: 10.1055/a-2290-2441 -
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease Apr 2024Infective endocarditis (IE) is characterised by fever, heart murmurs, and emboli. Splenic emboli are frequent in left-sided IE. A systematic review of the literature... (Review)
Review
Infective endocarditis (IE) is characterised by fever, heart murmurs, and emboli. Splenic emboli are frequent in left-sided IE. A systematic review of the literature published on splenic embolism (SE) between 2000 and 2023 was conducted. Search strategies in electronic databases identified 2751 studies published between 1 January 2000 and 4 October 2023, of which 29 were finally included. The results showed that the imaging tests predominantly used to detect embolisms were computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography (PET)/CT, single-photon emission computed tomography/CT, ultrasound, and contrast-enhanced ultrasound. More recent studies typically used F-FDG PET-CT. The proportion of SE ranged from 1.4% to 71.7%. Only seven studies performed systematic conventional CT screening for intra-abdominal emboli, and the weighted mean frequency of SE was 22% (range: 8-34.8%). F-FDG PET-CT was performed systematically in seven studies, and splenic uptake was found in a weighted mean of 4.5%. There was a lack of uniformity in the published literature regarding the frequency and management of splenic embolisation. CT scans were the most frequently used method, until recently, when F-FDG PET-CT scans began to predominate. More data are necessary regarding the frequency of SE, especially focusing on their impact on IE management and prognosis.
PubMed: 38668544
DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed9040083 -
Veterinary Research Communications Apr 2024The present research aimed to document the incidence, clinical signs, haematological, and serum biochemical alterations, as well as electrocardiography and...
The present research aimed to document the incidence, clinical signs, haematological, and serum biochemical alterations, as well as electrocardiography and echocardiography findings in 62 buffaloes (selected from a total of 240) infected with Trypanosoma evansi. The study spanned one year, from January 2022 to December 2022. Morphological identification of Trypanosoma evansi was done by the presence of a centrally positioned nucleus with a small sub-terminal kinetoplast at the posterior position through microscopic examination of Giemsa stained peripheral blood smears. The incidence of trypanosomosis were determined to be 26% (62/240) using stained blood smear examination and 41% (98/240) through polymerase chain reaction assay. Clinical signs exhibited by buffaloes with trypanosomosis included the lack of rumination (94%; 58/62), anorexia (90%; 56/62), emaciation (87%; 54/62), loss of milk yield (84%; 52/62), ocular discharges (82%; 51/62), depressed demeanour (81%; 50/62), sunken eye balls (61%; 38/62), fever (60%; 37/62), scleral congestion (56%; 35/62) and intermittent fever (42%; 26/62). Cardiovascular clinical findings in affected buffaloes included tachycardia (44%; 27/62), cardiac arrhythmia (24%; 15/62), cardiac murmurs (19%; 12/62) and muffled heart sounds (18%; 11/62). In the present study, buffaloes with trypanosomosis exhibited significant reduction in haemoglobin (p = 0.008), packed cell volume (p = 0.004), total erythrocyte count (p = 0.003), mean corpuscular volume (p = 0.042), total leucocyte count (p = 0.048) and absolute neutrophil count (p = 0.012); a significant increase in absolute eosinophil count (p = 0.011) and absolute monocyte count (p = 0.008) compared to the apparently healthy buffaloes. Additionally significant decrease in albumin (p = 0.001), A/G ratio (p = 0.007), calcium (p = 0.008), glucose (p = 0.007), phosphorous (p = 0.048), sodium (p = 0.008), potassium (p = 0.041) and chloride (p = 0.046) were observed in buffaloes with trypanosomosis compared to healthy ones. Buffaloes with trypanosomosis also showed significant increase in globulin (p = 0.004), aspartate aminotransferase (p = 0.008), bilirubin (p = 0.034), blood urea nitrogen (p = 0.071), creatinine (p = 0.029), cholesterol (p = 0.046), lactate dehydrogenase (p = 0.009), gamma-glutamyl transferase (p = 0.004) and creatine kinase-myoglobin binding levels (p = 0.005). Electrocardiography explorations in buffaloes with trypanosomosis revealed sinus tachycardia, low voltage QRS complex, ST segment elevation, wide QRS complex, sinus arrhythmia, sinus bradycardia, wandering pace maker, first degree atrio ventricular block, biphasic T wave and tall T wave. Echocardiography examination unveiled cardiac chamber dilatation, ventricular wall thickening and indications of pericarditis/cardiac tamponade. Necropsy was carried on the dead buffaloes during the study period disclosed severely congested blood vessels on epicardial surface, endocardial haemorrhages, and presence of pericardial fluid. Histopathological examination of the heart revealed hyaline degeneration, haemorrhages in the cardiac muscles and varying degrees of degenerative changes. Additionally, the pericardium displayed increased thickness due to presence of more elastic fibres, fibroblast cells in the myocardium, discontinuity of muscle layers, vascular congestion, perivascular mono nuclear cell infiltration and augmented thickness of the endocardium with fibroblast cell proliferation. The study's conclusion highlights cardiac alterations as secondary complications in buffaloes infected with Trypanosoma evansi. Further investigations are recommended to elucidate therapeutic modifications and refine the treatment paradigm.
PubMed: 38652411
DOI: 10.1007/s11259-024-10381-5 -
Medical & Biological Engineering &... Apr 2024Obtaining accurate cardiac auscultation signals, including basic heart sounds (S1 and S2) and subtle signs of disease, is crucial for improving cardiac diagnoses and...
Obtaining accurate cardiac auscultation signals, including basic heart sounds (S1 and S2) and subtle signs of disease, is crucial for improving cardiac diagnoses and making the most of telehealth. This research paper introduces an innovative approach that utilizes a modified cosine transform (MCT) and a masking strategy based on long short-term memory (LSTM) to effectively distinguish heart sounds and murmurs from background noise and interfering sounds. The MCT is used to capture the repeated pattern of the heart sounds, while the LSTMs are trained to construct masking based on the repeated MCT spectrum. The proposed strategy's performance in maintaining the clinical relevance of heart sounds continues to demonstrate effectiveness, even in environments marked by increased noise and complex disruptions. The present work highlights the clinical significance and reliability of the suggested methodology through in-depth signal visualization and rigorous statistical performance evaluations. In comparative assessments, the proposed approach has demonstrated superior performance compared to recent algorithms, such as LU-Net and PC-DAE. Furthermore, the system's adaptability to various datasets enhances its reliability and practicality. The suggested method is a potential way to improve the accuracy of cardiovascular diagnostics in an era of rapid advancement in medical signal processing. The proposed approach showed an enhancement in the average signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by 9.6 dB at an input SNR of - 6 dB and by 3.3 dB at an input SNR of 10 dB. The average signal distortion ratio (SDR) achieved across a variety of input SNR values was 8.56 dB.
PubMed: 38627355
DOI: 10.1007/s11517-024-03088-x