Wed.Apr 03, 2024

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FDA clears 1st AI to detect heart failure

Becker's Hospital Review - Cardiology

The FDA has approved an artificial intelligence algorithm for Eko Health's digital stethoscope that can detect low ejection fraction, a key indicator of heart failure.

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FDA Clears First AI to Aid Heart Failure Detection During Routine Check-ups

DAIC

milla1cf Wed, 04/03/2024 - 18:55 April 3, 2024 — - Eko Health , a pioneer in applying artificial intelligence ( AI ) for early detection of heart and lung diseases, announces FDA clearance for its Low EF detection AI. For the first time, U.S. healthcare providers can now detect Low EF, a key heart failure indicator, in 15 seconds using an Eko stethoscope during a routine physical examination.

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My 7 Rules for Health

Physiologically Speaking

Greetings! Today, I’m going to share some of my personal “rules for health.” These aren’t rules in the sense that I never deviate from them or punish myself when I do. Rather, they’re things I try to abide by each day. They’re my health non-negotiables (most of the time). Some of these are evidence-based: formed from research that seemed applicable and likely to lead to positive health or performance outcomes.

Exercise 101
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American College of Cardiology Sets Full Range of Education Sessions and Meetings ACC Scientific Session, ACC.24

DAIC

April 3, 2024 — In gearing up for its Annual Scientific Session, ACC.24, amidst the 75th anniversary of the organization, the American College of Cardiology (ACC) has planned a full range of educational programming, special events and peer networking scheduled throughout the April 6-8 event in Atlanta, GA. Here is an overview of sessions, events and meetings coordinated to help members in particular specialties, sections and areas of interest learn and engage with peers and expert cardiology pro

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Unfavorable social factors may raise heart disease risk factors in Asian American adults

American Heart News - Heart News

Research Highlights: Asian American adults with more unfavorable factors related to income level, education, housing, access to health care and other social variables had a greater likelihood of having risk factors for cardiovascular disease in this.

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FDA Announces Teleflex and Arrow International Recall of ARROW QuickFlash Radial Artery and Radial Artery/Arterial Line Catheterization Kits for Increased Resistance That May Lead to Vessel Injuries, Narrowing, or Blockage

DAIC

milla1cf Wed, 04/03/2024 - 10:04 April 3, 2024 — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) announced that Teleflex and Arrow International are recalling the ARROW QuickFlash Radial Artery and Radial Artery/Arterial Line Catheterization Kits after receiving reports of increased resistance in the guidewire handle and chamber during use. This issue may cause serious injury, including injury to blood vessel walls, narrowing of the blood vessels (vasospasm), artery blockage (embolism), or deat

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Hematology Month in Review: March 2024

HCPLive

Our March 2024 month-in-review in hematology features updates to the anemia pipeline, the latest research in sickle cell disease, and the role of SGLT2 inhibition on hematologic outcomes.

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MB-106 Positioned as Potential CAR T-cell Therapy Option for Autoimmune Diseases

HCPLive

Manuel Litchman, MD, further discusses Mustang Bio's expansion into autoimmune diseases with MB-106, an autologous CAR T-cell therapy.

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GE HealthCare Introduces Caption AI on Vscan Air SL Wireless Handheld Ultrasound System to Help More Clinicians Capture Diagnostic-quality Cardiac Images

DAIC

milla1cf Wed, 04/03/2024 - 18:58 April 3, 2024 — GE HealthCare announced the launch of Caption AI artificial intelligence (AI)-driven software for rapid cardiac assessments at the point of care on Vscan Air SL. Now, with Caption AI technology, clinicians using Vscan Air SL handheld ultrasound will have access to real-time, step-by-step guidance to capture diagnostic-quality images and automated ejection fraction estimation to help inform clinical decisions across cardiac settings.

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New research explains how brain blood vessels are formed

Medical Xpress - Cardiology

Cardiovascular diseases, including myocardial infarction and stroke, are the world's leading cause of death, claiming around 18 million lives a year. This observation justifies the adage that you are only as old as your arteries and explains why researchers are working relentlessly to understand how the cardiovascular system develops and functions.

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Perinatal PTSD Diagnoses Rose 394 Percent From 2008 – 2020

HCPLive

The study found the odds of a perinatal PTSD diagnosis were greater for people aged 15 – 26 years, more comorbidities, and a lower income of poverty.

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Low-income US adults left behind while rest of US experienced large declines in heart attack, stroke risk over 30 years

Medical Xpress - Cardiology

Over the last three decades, heart disease deaths have plummeted in the US, but a new study suggests cardiovascular benefits apply only to people in higher-income populations. For poor populations, heart attack rates stayed the same or got worse during that 30-year period.

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Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in Type 1 Diabetes

The New England Journal of Medicine

More than half of newly diagnosed cases of type 1 diabetes occur in adulthood. This review focuses on the prevention of cardiovascular disease in patients with type 1 diabetes.

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Primary Care Strategy Fails to Reduce Kidney-Dysfunction Triad Hospitalizations

Med Page Today

(MedPage Today) -- Using a personalized algorithm to identify primary care patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), type 2 diabetes, and hypertension (the kidney-dysfunction triad) -- plus practice facilitators to help providers deliver guideline.

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Anticoagulation for Secondary Atrial Fibrillation

The New England Journal of Medicine

This feature about a women with AF triggered by sepsis offers a case vignette accompanied by two essays, one supporting oral anticoagulant therapy after discharge and the other recommending no anticoagulant therapy.

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Patient Stabs ED Worker; Campus Building Tied to Cancer; Your Gut and Heart Disease

Med Page Today

(MedPage Today) -- Note that some links may require registration or subscription. An emergency department worker in Minnesota sustained serious injuries after being stabbed by a 31-year-old patient. (Fox9) A third of LGBT patients said they were.

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Chest X-Rays’ Cardiovascular Screening Potential

CardiacWire

There are over 70 million chest X-rays performed in the U.S. every year, and a pair of new studies highlighted how AI could be used to “opportunistically screen” these exams for undetected cardiovascular disease. A Mass General Brigham team writing in the Annals of Internal Medicine detailed how their deep learning system was able to identify patients with greater 10-year risks of experiencing major cardiovascular events by analyzing their chest X-rays.

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Mustang Bio Announces Expansion into CAR T-cell Therapy for Autoimmune Diseases

HCPLive

Manuel Litchman, MD, discusses Mustang Bio's expansion into autoimmune diseases with MB-106, an autologous CAR T-cell therapy.

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Implementation Science to Achieve Equity in Heart Failure Care: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

Circulation

Circulation, Ahead of Print. Guideline-directed medical therapies and guideline-directed nonpharmacological therapies improve quality of life and survival in patients with heart failure (HF), but eligible patients, particularly women and individuals from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, are often not treated with these therapies. Implementation science uses evidence-based theories and frameworks to identify strategies that facilitate uptake of evidence to improve health.

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The Importance of Simulation-Based Training for Doctors in Various Medical Fields

ADN Center of Excellence

In the rapidly evolving landscape of medicine, simulation-based training has emerged as a pivotal tool in medical education, offering a realistic and safe environment to practice various procedures and scenarios. For doctors in different fields of medicine, this form of training is invaluable, providing numerous benefits that translate to improved patient care and outcomes.

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Unfavorable social factors may raise heart disease risk factors in Asian American adults

Science Daily - Heart Disease

Asian American adults with more unfavorable factors related to income level, education, housing, access to health care and other social variables had a greater likelihood of having risk factors for cardiovascular disease in this study.

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Submission System Under Maintenance

International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences

Dear authors, we would like to inform you that our journal submission system is experiencing technical issues, and submissions are temporarily unavailable. We are aware of the situation and are working to rectify the error as quickly as possible. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and kindly request understanding from all affected authors.

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The Importance of Simulation-Based Training for Doctors in Various Medical Fields

ADN Center of Excellence

In the rapidly evolving landscape of medicine, simulation-based training has emerged as a pivotal tool in medical education, offering a realistic and safe environment to practice various procedures and scenarios. For doctors in different fields of medicine, this form of training is invaluable, providing numerous benefits that translate to improved patient care and outcomes.

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Why heart rhythm problems tend to happen early in the morning

Medical Xpress - Cardiology

Many studies have shown that potentially lethal heart rhythm disturbances ('ventricular arrhythmia') are more likely to occur in the morning, when people wake after a night's sleep, but until now the trigger mechanism has not been fully understood.

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Uncovering atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease by PET imaging

Nature Reviews - Cardiology

Nature Reviews Cardiology, Published online: 04 April 2024; doi:10.1038/s41569-024-01009-x In this Review, van Leent and colleagues provide an overview of current PET imaging approaches for assessment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, as well as of whole-body PET applications; discuss the link between imaging readouts and atherosclerotic plaque pathology; and highlight promising developments in PET systems and radiotracer synthesis.

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Facilitated Telemedicine Through Opioid Treatment Program Increases HCV Treatment Access

HCPLive

Participants who received facilitated telemedicine initiated DAA therapy faster and had greater cure rates than those who were referred to an off-site hepatitis specialist.

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Unfavorable social factors may raise heart disease risk factors in Asian American adults

Medical Xpress - Cardiology

Having more unfavorable social determinants of health, such as being unemployed, uninsured or not having education beyond high school, was associated with an increased likelihood of having risk factors for cardiovascular disease among Asian American adults, according to new research published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

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Endocrinology Month in Review: March 2024

HCPLive

In this endocrinology month in review for March 2024, we recap the most popular FDA news and pipeline updates as well as recognizing the 2-year anniversary of Diabetes Dialogue.

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Risk of Recurrent Stroke and Mortality Among Black and White Patients With Poststroke Depression

Stroke Journal

Stroke, Ahead of Print. BACKGROUND:Poststroke depression (PSD) is a treatable and common complication of stroke that is underdiagnosed and undertreated in minority populations. We compared outcomes of Black and White patients with PSD in the United States to assess whether race is independently associated with the risk of recurrent stroke and mortality.METHODS:We used deidentified Medicare data from inpatient, outpatient, and subacute nursing facilities for Black and White US patients from Janua

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Pulmonology Month in Review: March 2024

HCPLive

In this Month in Review article for March, news on topics such as asthma and the impacts of pollution in the pulmonology field were highlighted.

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Incidence and Outcomes of Posterior Circulation Involvement in Moyamoya Disease

Stroke Journal

Stroke, Ahead of Print. BACKGROUND:Moyamoya disease (MMD) is a progressive, occlusive disease of the internal carotid arteries and their proximal branches, with the subsequent development of an abnormal vascular network that is rupture-prone. Steno-occlusive changes in the posterior cerebral arteries (PCAs) may contribute to worsened outcomes in patients with MMD; however, there is little information on the incidence and natural history of posterior circulation MMD (PCMMD).

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Peter A. Campochiaro, MD: Phase 1/2a Data on RGX-314 Gene Therapy for Wet AMD

HCPLive

Peter A. Campochiaro, MD, discusses the safety and tolerability of RGX-314 gene therapy in treating wet AMD and how these results inform pivotal clinical trials.

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Cannabinoids and Post-Cardiac Surgery: Preclinical Insights Pave the Way for Future Research

Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology

An abstract is unavailable. This article is available as a PDF only.

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Older Adults More Likely to Have Inappropriately Diagnosed Community-Acquired Pneumonia

HCPLive

These data may have impactful clinical and health policy implications, given that hospitalizations for CAP are known to be common and given the frequency of incorrect diagnoses.

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It's All About That Right Ventricle

Journal of the American Heart Association

Journal of the American Heart Association, Ahead of Print.

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First Patient Randomized in Phase 2 Trial to Assess Efficacy of NBI-1070770 for MDD

HCPLive

Although still recruiting, the first patient was randomized to receive NBI-1070770 for major depressive disorder in a phase 2 trial assessing efficacy, safety, and tolerability.

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Promoting Personal Health Literacy Through Readability, Understandability, and Actionability of Online Patient Education Materials

Journal of the American Heart Association

Journal of the American Heart Association, Ahead of Print.