Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades

OBJECTIVE: Dengue continues to cause significant global morbidity and mortality. Severe disease is characterized by cardiovascular compromise from capillary leakage. Cardiac involvement in dengue has also been reported but has not been adequately studied. SETTING: Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho...

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Hlavný autor: Simmons, Cameron
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: 2018
On-line prístup:https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/146
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author Simmons, Cameron
author_browse Simmons, Cameron
author_facet Simmons, Cameron
author_sort Simmons, Cameron
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description OBJECTIVE: Dengue continues to cause significant global morbidity and mortality. Severe disease is characterized by cardiovascular compromise from capillary leakage. Cardiac involvement in dengue has also been reported but has not been adequately studied. SETTING: Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. SUBJECTS AND DESIGN: Seventy-nine patients aged 8-6 yrs with different dengue severity grades were studied using echocardiography including tissue Doppler imaging. The patients were split into severity grades: dengue, dengue with warning signs, and severe dengue. Changes in cardiac functional parameters and hemodynamic indices were monitored over the hospital stay. INTERVENTION: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Patients with severe dengue had worse cardiac function compared with dengue in the form of left ventricular systolic dysfunction with increased left myocardial performance index (0.58 [0.26-0.80] vs. 0.38 [0.22-0.70], p = .006). Septal myocardial systolic velocities were reduced (6.4 [4.8-10] vs. 8.1 [6-13] cm/s, p = .01) as well as right ventricular systolic (11.4 [7.5-17] vs. 13.5 [10-17] cm/s, p = .016) and diastolic velocities (13 [8-23] vs. 17 [12-25] cm/s, p = .0026). In the severe group, these parameters improved from hospital admission to discharge; septal myocardial systolic velocities to 8.8 (7-11) cm/s (p = .002), right ventricular myocardial systolic velocities to 15.0 (11.8-23) cm/s, (p = .003), and diastolic velocity to 21 (11-25) cm/s (p = .002). Patients with cardiac impairment were more likely to have significant pleural effusions. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with severe dengue have evidence of systolic and diastolic cardiac impairment with septal and right ventricular wall being predominantly affected.
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spelling oai:localhost:123456789-1462021-04-07T16:30:08Z Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades Simmons, Cameron OBJECTIVE: Dengue continues to cause significant global morbidity and mortality. Severe disease is characterized by cardiovascular compromise from capillary leakage. Cardiac involvement in dengue has also been reported but has not been adequately studied. SETTING: Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. SUBJECTS AND DESIGN: Seventy-nine patients aged 8-6 yrs with different dengue severity grades were studied using echocardiography including tissue Doppler imaging. The patients were split into severity grades: dengue, dengue with warning signs, and severe dengue. Changes in cardiac functional parameters and hemodynamic indices were monitored over the hospital stay. INTERVENTION: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Patients with severe dengue had worse cardiac function compared with dengue in the form of left ventricular systolic dysfunction with increased left myocardial performance index (0.58 [0.26-0.80] vs. 0.38 [0.22-0.70], p = .006). Septal myocardial systolic velocities were reduced (6.4 [4.8-10] vs. 8.1 [6-13] cm/s, p = .01) as well as right ventricular systolic (11.4 [7.5-17] vs. 13.5 [10-17] cm/s, p = .016) and diastolic velocities (13 [8-23] vs. 17 [12-25] cm/s, p = .0026). In the severe group, these parameters improved from hospital admission to discharge; septal myocardial systolic velocities to 8.8 (7-11) cm/s (p = .002), right ventricular myocardial systolic velocities to 15.0 (11.8-23) cm/s, (p = .003), and diastolic velocity to 21 (11-25) cm/s (p = .002). Patients with cardiac impairment were more likely to have significant pleural effusions. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with severe dengue have evidence of systolic and diastolic cardiac impairment with septal and right ventricular wall being predominantly affected. 2018-09-14T11:14:59Z 2017-07-12T04:42:01Z 2018-09-14T11:14:59Z 2012-02-01 Journal Article https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/146 English
spellingShingle Simmons, Cameron
Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title_full Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title_fullStr Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title_full_unstemmed Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title_short Cardiac function in Vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
title_sort cardiac function in vietnamese patients with different dengue severity grades
url https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/146
work_keys_str_mv AT simmonscameron cardiacfunctioninvietnamesepatientswithdifferentdengueseveritygrades