Costas A. Tentolouris
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
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Featured researches published by Costas A. Tentolouris.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1994
Michael Kyriakidis; Panaghiotis Petropoulakis; Costas A. Tentolouris; Stelios Marakas; Athanassios Antonopoulos; Costas V. Kourouclis; Pavlos Toutouzas
OBJECTIVESnThe purpose of this study was to investigate changes in the magnitude of blood flow through the contralateral coronary artery in relation to the development of recruitable collateral vessels arising from this artery to supply a balloon-occluded coronary vessel.nnnBACKGROUNDnRecruitable collateral vessels have been shown to emerge suddenly to supply an occluded coronary artery, but their physiologic effect cannot always be predicted angiographically.nnnMETHODSnTwenty-four patients were studied during four successive balloon dilations for single left anterior descending coronary artery stenosis. Before and during each balloon occlusion, blood flow in the proximal right coronary artery was measured by intracoronary Doppler flow velocimetry and quantitative coronary angiography. Estimates of chest pain and ST segment elevation were also obtained.nnnRESULTSnFourteen patients developed angiographically visible recruitable collateral vessels (high grade in 6 [group III], low grade in 8 [group II]), whereas 10 patients (group I) did not. During the four successive balloon occlusions, the right coronary artery flow showed transient reproducible increases in group III (first occlusion 66.4 +/- 36.8%, fourth occlusion 64 +/- 23.9%, all p = 0.036), progressive increases in group II (from first occlusion 17.9 +/- 26.6% [p = 0.08] to fourth occlusion 60.4 +/- 35.9% [p = 0.014]) and no significant changes in group I. Between the first and the fourth occlusion, the severity of chest pain and the magnitude of ST segment elevation declined significantly in group II but did not change in groups I and III.nnnCONCLUSIONSnDuring balloon coronary artery occlusion, the transient appearance of recruitable collateral vessels is associated with a transient increase in blood flow through the collateral donor artery. This increase in coronary flow appears to reflect collateral function better than the angiographic assessment, especially in patients with poor collateral vessel recruitment.
Circulation | 1995
Panaghiotis Petropoulakis; Michael Kyriakidis; Costas A. Tentolouris; Costas V. Kourouclis; Pavlos Toutouzas
BACKGROUNDnAlterations in phasic coronary flow profile have been demonstrated at rest in patients with aortic valve stenosis (AVS) but have never been studied under conditions of hemodynamic stress.nnnMETHODS AND RESULTSnThirty-four patients with significant pure AVS (21 with exertional symptoms [group 1], 13 asymptomatic [group 2]) and 9 control subjects (group 3), all with normal coronary arteries, were studied successively at rest, during rapid atrial pacing, and after dobutamine infusion (5 to 30 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 i.v.) by proximal left anterior descending (LAD) intracoronary Doppler flow velocimetry concomitant with hemodynamic measurements. Systolic retrograde coronary flow velocity (CFV) was recorded only in patients with AVS, and its resting peak value was positively correlated with peak aortic pressure gradient (APG) (r = .63, P < .001). In group 1, there was lower aortic valve area (0.58 +/- 0.10 versus 0.75 +/- 0.08 cm2, P < .001) and higher resting APG and peak systolic retrograde CFV than in group 2, and also higher resting peak diastolic and mean CFV than in groups 2 and 3. In the two AVS groups, there were no changes from rest in APG and retrograde CFV at peak pacing rate; however, these parameters increased concomitantly and significantly at peak dobutamine stress. The ratio of the resting systolic to diastolic CFV curve area was inversely correlated with mean APG (r = -.54, P < .001); it was significantly lower in group 1 than in groups 2 and 3 (0.19 +/- 0.07 versus 0.29 +/- 0.10 and 0.30 +/- 0.04, respectively, both P < .005) and increased at peak pacing (group 1, to 0.29 +/- 0.14; group 2, to 0.39 +/- 0.12; group 3, to 0.38 +/- 0.07; all P < .001). At peak dobutamine stress, it decreased in patients with AVS (group 1, to 0.05 +/- 0.05; group 2, to 0.08 +/- 0.03; both P < .001) but did not change in group 3 (0.25 +/- 0.05). From rest to peak dobutamine stress, in both AVS groups there was increased retrograde systolic (group 1, 441 +/- 483%; group 2, 681 +/- 356%; both P < .001), decreased total systolic (group 1, -66 +/- 25%, P < .001; group 2, -19 +/- 24%; P = NS), and increased diastolic (group 1, 33.4 +/- 31.7%; group 2, 197.7 +/- 105.1%; both P < .001; group 1 versus group 2, P < .001) CFV curve area. In contrast, group 3 showed comparable increases in both systolic (143.5 +/- 44.4%) and diastolic (197.1 +/- 75.2%) CFV area (both P < .001). The stress-induced increases in the mean CFV and blood flow exceeded or were comparable with the concomitant increases in the estimated myocardial metabolic demand in groups 2 and 3 but were significantly lower in group 1.nnnCONCLUSIONSnStress-induced changes in LAD phasic CFV profile differ significantly between patients with and without AVS. In AVS, these changes are closely related to the concomitant stress-induced changes in hemodynamic parameters.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1990
Christodoulos Stefanadis; Costas Kourouklis; Costas Stratos; Christos Pitsavos; Costas A. Tentolouris; Pavlos Toutouzas
A new technique was developed for percutaneous mitral valve balloon valvuloplasty, using a retrograde approach to the left atrium via the left ventricle. A newly designed externally steerable guiding catheter is used for the introduction of 1 or 2 guidewires to the left atrium and the balloon catheters are advanced along these guidewires into the mitral orifice. The technique was used successfully in 10 adult patients with rheumatic mitral stenosis. After the procedure there was a significant reduction in mitral valve pressure gradient and an increase in the mitral valve area in all cases. There were no serious complications during or after the procedure. This technique should prove to be a useful nonsurgical treatment for mitral stenosis and could provide an alternative to the transseptal method.
Circulation | 1997
Michael Kyriakidis; John Dernellis; Aristides Androulakis; Glafkos Kelepeshis; John Barbetseas; Aristides Anastasakis; Athanasios Trikas; Costas A. Tentolouris; John Gialafos; Pavlos Toutouzas
BACKGROUNDnIn this study, we both investigated coronary flow velocity in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) and tested the hypothesis of differing coronary flow reserve (CFR) of coronary arteries perfusing left ventricular regions with nonuniform myocardial hypertrophy by measuring the relative CFR.nnnMETHODS AND RESULTSnCoronary flow velocity was assessed in left anterior descending coronary (LAD) and left circumflex (LCX) arteries in 18 patients with HOCM and marked hypertrophy only in the ventricular septum, in 13 patients without obstruction (HCM), and in 9 age- and sex-matched normal subjects at rest, during rapid atrial pacing, and after dobutamine infusion (5 to 30 microg/kg per minute). Relative CFR was estimated as the ratio between absolute CFR of the LAD and absolute CFR of the LCX (LAD/LCX(CF)). At the peak of rapid atrial pacing and during dobutamine stress, LAD/LCX(CF) was reversed in HOCM patients (from 1.25+/-0.11 to 0.82+/-0.07 and 0.79+/-0.06, respectively), whereas it remained unchanged in control subjects (from 1.0+/-0.1 to 1.0+/-0.05 and 1.0+/-0.05, respectively; P<.001). In HCM patients, LAD/LCX(CF) at rest was 1.10+/-0.11, whereas during rapid atrial pacing and dobutamine stress, it was 0.92+/-0.08 and 0.90+/-0.09, respectively. Relative CFR was 0.62+/-0.05 in HOCM patients and 1.05+/-0.05 (P<.001) in normal subjects. There was an inverse correlation between relative CFR and peak systolic outflow tract gradient (r2=.74, P<.001).nnnCONCLUSIONSnRegional distribution of hypertrophy in some patients with HOCM resulted in regional impairment of coronary flow. Relative CFR can be used to estimate regional disturbances of coronary flow and may help in patient selection for new interventional therapeutic techniques.
Congestive Heart Failure | 2008
Christina Chrysohoou; Christos Pitsavos; John Barbetseas; Stella Brili; Iason Kotroyiannis; Labros Papademetriou; George Metallinos; John Skoumas; Costas A. Tentolouris; Christodoulos Stefanadis
The authors sought to investigate whether serum uric acid levels are associated with systolic left and right ventricular function, as well as left atrial function in patients with newly diagnosed heart failure. The authors enrolled 106 consecutive patients (mean age 65+/-13 years). Echocardiographic and biochemical assessment was performed during the third day of hospitalization. Pulsed tissue Doppler imaging of the systolic function of mitral and tricuspid annulus was characterized by the systolic waves (Smv and Stv, respectively), expressed in cm/s, and the left atrial function by the Amv wave. Left atrial kinetics was calculated using an equation. Serum uric acid levels were inversely correlated with Stv (P=.005) and left atrial kinetics (P=.05), after controlling for potential confounders. Uric acid levels appear to be correlated with more impaired right ventricular systolic function and decreased left atrial work in patients with heart failure.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013
Panagiotis Tourikis; Dimitris Tousoulis; Agapi Kataki; Nikolaos Papageorgiou; Gerasimos Siasos; Charalampos Antoniades; Dimitris Athanasiou; Stathis Dimitropoulos; Costas A. Tentolouris; Costas Tsioufis; Konstantinos Toutouzas; Christodoulos Stefanadis
Previous studies support the crucial role of immune responses in the development and progression of atherosclerosis. CD4+CD28null T cells and CD4+CD31- T cells represent two specific subsets of circulating CD4+ T cells that affect endothelium. However, their accurate role on endothelial function
Chest | 1992
Michael Kyriakidis; John Barbetseas; Athanassios Antonopoulos; Charalambos Skouros; Costas A. Tentolouris; Pavlos Toutouzas
Clinical Cardiology | 1997
Stella Brili; Stamatis S. Castelanos; Constadina Aggeli; Costas A. Tentolouris; Christos Pitsavos; Pavlos Toutouzas; Anastasia I. Tzonou
International Journal of Cardiology | 2007
Ioannis Skoumas; Constantina Masoura; Christos Pitsavos; Dimitris Tousoulis; Lambros Papadimitriou; Konstantinos Aznaouridis; Christina Chrysohoou; Nikolaos Giotsas; Marina Toutouza; Costas A. Tentolouris; Charalambos Antoniades; Christodoulos Stefanadis
Circulation | 1996
Dimitrios Tousoulis; Costas A. Tentolouris; Bosinakou E; Apostolopoulos T; P. Toutouzas