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Sildenafil should be avoided in valve disease with residual pulmonary hypertension, study suggests

"Valvular disease is considered the next cardiac epidemic because of its strong association with age and the rapid aging of the population worldwide," said principal investigator Dr Javier Bermejo, a cardiologist at Hospital General Universitario Gregorio MaraƱon, Madrid, Spain. "The only established treatment is repair or replacement of the valve surgically or percutaneously," he continued. "But symptoms often remain or reappear in the long-term. Residual pulmonary hypertension is the most important risk factor for death and disability after successful correction of the valvular lesion." Pulmonary hypertension refers to increased blood pressure in the pulmonary artery. In patients with long-standing valvular disease, the high pressure in the left side of the heart is transmitted backwards to the lung vessels which react by thickening. This process may not revert after valve treatment, resulting in persistent pulmonary hypertension. Sildenafil (cen...

Closure of left atrial appendage during heart surgery protects the brain

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Cumulative probability of an ischaemic incident in the brain in the closed versus not-closed groups. Credit: Image courtesy of European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Closure of the left atrial appendage during heart surgery protects the brain, according to late-breaking research presented today in a Hot Line LBCT Session at ESC Congress. The results suggest that closure should be routinely added to open heart surgery. "This is the first randomised study to show that closure of the left atrial appendage during open heart surgery effectively protects against brain infarctions and stroke," said Assoc Prof Helena DomĆ­nguez, the cardiologist who designed the study. "A stroke following open heart surgery can have devastating consequences for patients and their families," said principal investigator Dr Park-Hansen, from the Department of Cardiology at Bispebjerg/Frederiksberg University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark. "Expectations of returning to wor...