Ashok Kondur
Wayne State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ashok Kondur.
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2007
Dhanunjaya Lakkireddy; Krishnamohan R. Basarakodu; James L. Vacek; Ashok Kondur; Srikanth K. Ramachandruni; Dennis J. Esterbrooks; Ronald J. Markert; Manohar S. Gowda
The death certificate is an important medical document that impacts mortality statistics and health care policy. Resident physician accuracy in completing death certificates is poor. We assessed the impact of two educational interventions on the quality of death certificate completion by resident physicians. Two-hundred and nineteen internal medicine residents were asked to complete a cause of death statement using a sample case of in-hospital death. Participants were randomized into one of two educational interventions: either an interactive workshop (group I) or provided with printed instruction material (group II). A total of 200 residents completed the study, with 100 in each group. At baseline, competency in death certificate completion was poor. Only 19% of residents achieved an optimal test score. Sixty percent erroneously identified a cardiac cause of death. The death certificate score improved significantly in both group I (14±6 vs 24±5, p<0.001) and group II (14±5 vs 19±5, p<0.001) postintervention from baseline. Group I had a higher degree of improvement than group II (24±5 vs 19±5, p<0.001). Resident physicians’ skills in death certificate completion can be improved with an educational intervention. An interactive workshop is a more effective intervention than a printed handout.
BMJ Open | 2012
Luis Afonso; Ashok Kondur; Mengistu Simegn; Ashutosh Niraj; Pawan Hari; Ramanjit Kaur; Preeti Ramappa; Jyotiranjan Pradhan; Deepti Bhandare; Kim A. Williams; Sandip Zalawadiya; Aurelio Pinheiro; Theodore P. Abraham
Objective This study was designed to examine the utility of two-dimensional strain (2DS) or speckle tracking imaging to typify functional adaptations of the left ventricle in variant forms of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Design Cross-sectional study. Setting Urban tertiary care academic medical centres. Participants A total of 129 subjects, 56 with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), 34 with hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy (H-LVH), 27 professional athletes with LVH (AT-LVH) and 12 healthy controls in sinus rhythm with preserved left ventricular systolic function. Methods Conventional echocardiographic and tissue Doppler examinations were performed in all study subjects. Bi-dimensional acquisitions were analysed to map longitudinal systolic strain (automated function imaging, AFI, GE Healthcare, Waukesha, Wisconsin, USA) from apical views. Results Subjects with HCM had significantly lower regional and average global peak longitudinal systolic strain (GLS-avg) compared with controls and other forms of LVH. Strain dispersion index, a measure of regional contractile heterogeneity, was higher in HCM compared with the rest of the groups. On receiver operator characteristics analysis, GLS-avg had excellent discriminatory ability to distinguish HCM from H-LVH area under curve (AUC) (0.893, p<0.001) or AT-LVH AUC (0.920, p<0.001). Tissue Doppler and LV morphological parameters were better suited to differentiate the athlete heart from HCM. Conclusions 2DS (AFI) allows rapid characterisation of regional and global systolic function and may have the potential to differentiate HCM from variant forms of LVH.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2016
Ashok Kondur; Alexandros Briasoulis; Mohan Palla; Anirudh Penumetcha; Sagar Mallikethi-Reddy; Apurva Badheka; Theodore Schreiber
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is a viable option in the treatment of severe aortic stenosis in patients at high risk for surgery. We sought to further investigate outcomes in patients at low to intermediate risk with aortic stenosis who underwent surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) versus TAVR. We systematically searched the electronic databases, MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane for prospective cohort studies of the effects of TAVR versus SAVR on clinical outcomes (30-day mortality, all-cause mortality, stroke and myocardial infarction, major vascular complications, paravalvular regurgitation, permanent pacemaker implantation, major bleeding, and acute kidney injury). We identified 5 clinical studies, examining 1,618 patients in the TAVR group and 1,581 patients in the SAVR group with an average follow-up of 1.05 years. No difference in all-cause mortality, stroke, and myocardial infarction between the 2 approaches was found. TAVR was associated with higher rates of vascular complications, permanent pacemaker implantation, and moderate or severe paravalvular regurgitation (p <0.001 for all), whereas more major bleeding events were seen in the SAVR group (p <0.001). In conclusion, TAVR was found to have similar survival and stroke rates and lower major bleeding rates as compared with SAVR in patients at low or intermediate surgical risk. However, SAVR was associated with less pacemaker placements and paravalvular regurgitation rates.
Clinical Cardiology | 2009
Ashok Kondur; Tao Li; Peter Vaitkevicius; Luis Afonso
Heart failure due to myocardial iron overload remains the leading cause of death in patients with transfusion‐dependent anemias. Iron overload‐induced cardiomyopathy is reversible if intensive chelation therapy is instituted on time. Thus, early detection of myocardial iron deposition is imperative to prevent overt heart failure. Conventional cardiac monitoring, including physical examination, electrocardiography, echocardiography or serum ferritin levels fail to predict manifest or subclinical myocardial involvement resulting from iron overload. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging T2* (cMRI‐T2*, pronounced T2 star) times correlate well with myocardial iron levels. This timely review focuses on the utility of cMRI‐T2*, for the preclinical detection of myocardial iron overload and monitoring of myocardial iron content during chelation therapy. Copyright
European Journal of Echocardiography | 2010
Luis Afonso; Pawan Hari; Victor Pidlaoan; Ashok Kondur; Sony Jacob; Vipin Khetarpal
Two-dimensional echocardiography has historically played a limited role in the diagnosis of acute myocarditis because of a lack of specific diagnostic features. The emergence of novel echocardiographic modalities such as strain and myocardial perfusion imaging have greatly augmented the scope of echocardiography, permitting the assessment of myocardial contractility, blood flow, and microvascular integrity. However, the application of these cutting-edge techniques in the diagnosis of acute myocarditis is still at a nascent stage. We present a case of acute myocarditis where echo-based strain imaging/mapping and real-time myocardial contrast echocardiography enabled the detection of regional contractile and perfusion abnormalities, not otherwise apparent with conventional echocardiography. These findings and the final diagnosis were later confirmed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. This case highlights the potential utility of novel echocardiographic techniques in the diagnostic workup of acute myocarditis and underscores the need for prospective studies to assess the sensitivity and specificity of these newer technologies. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a multimodality echocardiographic approach towards the diagnosis of myocarditis.
American Journal of Therapeutics | 2008
Tamam Mohamad; Ashok Kondur; Peter Vaitkevicius; Khaled Bachour; Deepak Thatai; Luis Afonso
BackgroundCocaine is the most common illicit drug used in patients presenting with chest pain to emergency departments. Data on β-blockers in cocaine-related chest pain syndrome are sparse. We sought out to study the causal and detrimental effects of β-blockers in cocaine-related chest pain in a large inner city cohort of patients. Methods and ResultsAll patients presenting to a large inner city emergency department with chest pain, with positive urine drug screen for cocaine were included. The group comprised predominantly young (mean age 46.8 ± 8.2 years), African American (90.6%) males (73.4%). Evidence of myocardial infarction in the form of elevation of troponin-I was noted in 7.3%. Evidence of myonecrosis (MN) was significantly more likely in those who were taking β-blockers at presentation as compared with those who were not (14% versus 4.4%, P < 0.01). In the absence of prospective controlled data, our observational findings seem to suggest that routine initiation or continuation or of β-blockers after admission increased the likelihood of developing MN (23.3% versus 10.7%, P < 0.01) during the course of hospitalization. ConclusionsMN as reflected by elevation of cardiac biomarkers is uncommon in patients presenting with cocaine-related chest pain. Preexisting use of β-blockers seems to render a higher risk of myocardial injury in patients presenting with cocaine-related chest pain. In addition initiation or continuation of β-blockers during hospitalization should be discouraged.
Coronary Artery Disease | 2009
Tamam Mohamad; Ashutosh Niraj; Jareer Farah; Mahmoud Obideen; Apurva Badheka; Ashok Kondur; Deepak Thatai; Luis Afonso
BackgroundCocaine is the most common abused drug in patients presenting to the emergency room with chest pain and frequently leads to cardiac catheterization procedure. The extent of severity underlying coronary artery disease (CAD) in this subgroup of patients has not been well defined. This study set out to define the coronary anatomy as well as the extent of CAD in patients with cocaine-associated myocardial infarction (MI) and correlate that to the presenting electrocardiogram (ECG). MethodsNinety-seven consecutive patients with documented MI and positive urine drug screen for cocaine metabolites were included in the study. Demographic, clinical, ECG and coronary angiography variables were collected. ResultsST elevation MI was encountered in 32% of the patients. Other ECG findings included ST segment depression, T-wave inversion, left ventricular hypertrophy, conduction blocks and/or old MI in more than 80% of cases. Of the total of 66 patients who underwent angiography, 82% had obstructive CAD, with single-vessel disease being the most frequent finding. None of these presenting ECG findings correlated with angiographic location or severity of obstructive CAD. In nearly one-fifth of the patients, troponin elevation suggestive of cardiac myonecrosis occurred in the absence of ECG findings or angiographic coronary disease. ConclusionThe majority of patients with cocaine-associated MI have obstructive CAD with predominant single-vessel disease. Although ECG abnormalities are frequently encountered, they are of limited diagnostic value in the clinical decision making.
American Journal of Therapeutics | 2007
Krishnamohan R. Basarakodu; Wilbert S. Aronow; Chandra K. Nair; Dhanunjaya Lakkireddy; Ashok Kondur; Hema Korlakunta; Sri Laxmi Valasareddi; Vincent Lem; Dan Schuller
Organizing pneumonia is a major reparative response of the lung tissue to an acute injury and is a pathological hallmark of an entity called bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP). It can be idiopathic and called cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP) or be secondary to various conditions such as infections, drugs, connective tissue disorders, and radiation. Fifty-seven patients with pathologically confirmed BOOP were identified and were classified as having either COP or secondary BOOP on the basis of whether there was an identifiable cause. The two groups were compared for demographic, clinical, laboratory, radiological and treatment variables. Duration of treatment with corticosteroids was longer for patients with COP.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2010
Luis Afonso; Pawan Hari; Ashok Kondur; Vikas Veeranna; Palaniappan Manickam; Mengistu Simegn; Sony Jacob; Brian A. Ference
The clinical implications of microalbuminuria (MA) in nondiabetic persons with the metabolic syndrome (MS) are largely unknown. The present post hoc analysis of the Multiethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) included 5,809 nondiabetic persons with no history of cardiovascular disease aged 45 to 84 years. The study population was divided according to the presence or absence of MS and MA into 4 study groups: no MS and no MA, MA only, MS only, and MS plus MA. The measurements included markers of systemic inflammation, subclinical atherosclerosis, left ventricular mass index, composite and individual cardiovascular end points, and all-cause mortality. Prospective and cross-sectional analyses were performed to ascertain the association of study groups with these covariates. The MS plus MA group showed a consistently stronger association with the markers of systemic inflammation, subclinical atherosclerosis, and most clinical end points compared to the other study groups. In conclusion, stratification by MA can help identify a high-risk subset of nondiabetic patients with the MS.
Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2017
Sripal Bangalore; Hiram G. Bezerra; David G. Rizik; Ehrin J. Armstrong; Bruce Samuels; Srihari S. Naidu; Cindy L. Grines; Malcolm T. Foster; James W. Choi; Barry D. Bertolet; Atman P. Shah; Rebecca Torguson; Surendra B. Avula; John Wang; James P. Zidar; Aziz Maksoud; Arun Kalyanasundaram; Steven J. Yakubov; Bassem M. Chehab; Anthony Spaedy; Srini Potluri; Ronald P. Caputo; Ashok Kondur; Robert F. Merritt; Amir Kaki; Ramon Quesada; Manish Parikh; Catalin Toma; Fadi Matar; Joseph DeGregorio
Significant progress has been made in the percutaneous coronary intervention technique from the days of balloon angioplasty to modern-day metallic drug-eluting stents (DES). Although metallic stents solve a temporary problem of acute recoil following balloon angioplasty, they leave behind a permanent problem implicated in very late events (in addition to neoatherosclerosis). BRS were developed as a potential solution to this permanent problem, but the promise of these devices has been tempered by clinical trials showing increased risk of safety outcomes, both early and late. This is not too dissimilar to the challenges seen with first-generation DES in which refinement of deployment technique, prolongation of dual antiplatelet therapy, and technical iteration mitigated excess risk of very late stent thrombosis, making DES the treatment of choice for coronary artery disease. This white paper discusses the factors potentially implicated in the excess risks, including the scaffold consideration and deployment technique, and outlines patient and lesion selection, implantation technique, and dual antiplatelet therapy considerations to potentially mitigate this excess risk with the first-generation thick strut Absorb scaffold (Abbott Vascular, Abbott Park, Illinois). It remains to be seen whether these considerations together with technical iterations will ultimately close the gap between scaffolds and metal stents for short-term events while at the same time preserving options for future revascularization once the scaffold bioresorbs.