Cynthia Ennis
University of Massachusetts Medical School
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American Journal of Cardiology | 2008
Joseph L. Bouchard; Gerard P. Aurigemma; Jeffrey C. Hill; Cynthia Ennis; Dennis A. Tighe
Tissue Doppler imaging combined with transmitral Doppler permits estimation of pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) in many, but not all, patients, whereas pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) and cardiac output (time-velocity integral method) are routinely measured. It was hypothesized that simple Doppler echocardiographic measurements could be used to estimate PAWP in many patients by rearranging the equation for pulmonary vascular resistance ([mean pulmonary artery pressure - (left atrial pressure/cardiac output)] x 80). Data from 69 patients (mean age 59 +/- 15 years) were reviewed, including cardiac output, transmitral mitral E wave velocity, and lateral tissue Doppler imaging mitral annular early diastolic velocity. PAWP was determined in the 2 ways of (1) measured (PAWPm) using the regression equation PAWPm = 1.91 + (1.24 * transmitral mitral E wave velocity/mitral annular early diastolic velocity) developed and validated by Nagueh, and (2) using a nomogram that we developed to predict PAWP when cardiac output and PASP were known. Moderately strong correlation was found between PASP and PAWPm (r = 0.73), and this correlation improved when excluding patients with pulmonary or liver disease and restricting cardiac output to 3.5 to 6.0 L/min (physiologic range; r = 0.81). Furthermore, the relation between PAWPm and PASP allowed for discrimination of high versus low PAWP: 36 of 37 patients with PASP < or =30 mm Hg had PAWPm < or =15 mm Hg (sensitivity 97%, specificity 47%). Conversely, 9 of 9 patients with PASP > or =40 mm Hg had PAWPm > or =12 mm Hg (sensitivity 100%, specificity 70%). Predicted PAWP correlated well with PAWPm (r = 0.63) and improved when patients with liver or pulmonary disease were excluded (r = 0.83). In conclusion, PASP strongly correlated with PAWP, and this principle can be exploited to rapidly detect patients with low or high PAWP.
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2016
Mayank Sardana; Adedotun Ogunsua; Matthew Spring; Amir Y. Shaikh; Owusu Asamoah; Glenn Stokken; Clifford Browning; Cynthia Ennis; J. Kevin Donahue; Lawrence Rosenthal; Kevin C. Floyd; Gerard P. Aurigemma; Nisha I. Parikh; David D. McManus
Although catheter ablation (CA) for atrial fibrillation (AF) is commonly used to improve symptoms, AF recurrence is common and new tools are needed to better inform patient selection for CA. Left atrial function index (LAFI), an echocardiographic measure of atrial mechanical function, has shown promise as a noninvasive predictor of AF. We hypothesized that LAFI would relate to AF recurrence after CA.
Critical pathways in cardiology | 2017
John Bostrom; Jane S. Saczynski; Alexandra M. Hajduk; Kevin Donahue; Lawrence Rosenthal; Clifford Browning; Cynthia Ennis; Kevin C. Floyd; Heather Richardson; Nada Esa; Jessica Ogarek; David D. McManus
Background: Impairments in psychosocial status and cognition relate to poor clinical outcomes in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). However, how often these conditions co-occur and associations between burden of psychosocial and cognitive impairment and quality of life (QoL) have not been systematically examined in patients with AF. Methods: A total of 218 patients with symptomatic AF were enrolled in a prospective study of AF and psychosocial factors between May 2013 and October 2014 at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center. Cognitive function, depression, and anxiety were assessed at baseline and AF-specific QoL was assessed 6 months after enrollment using validated instruments. Demographic and clinical information were obtained from a structured interview and medical record review. Results: The mean age of the study participants was 63.5 ± 10.2 years, 35% were male, and 81% had paroxysmal AF. Prevalences of impairment in 1, 2, and 3 psychosocial/cognitive domains (eg, depression, anxiety, or cognition) were 75 (34.4%), 51 (23.4%), and 16 (7.3%), respectively. Patients with co-occurring psychosocial/cognitive impairments (eg, >1 domain) were older, more likely to smoke, had less education, and were more likely to have heart failure (all P < 0.05). Compared with participants with no psychosocial/cognitive impairments, AF-specific QoL at 6 months was significantly poorer among participants with baseline impairment in 2 (B = −13.6, 95% CI: −21.7 to −5.4) or 3 (B = −15.1, 95% CI: −28.0 to −2.2) psychosocial/cognitive domains. Conclusion: Depression, anxiety, and impaired cognition were common in our cohort of patients with symptomatic AF and often co-occurred. Higher burden of psychosocial/cognitive impairment was associated with poorer AF-specific QoL.
Critical pathways in cardiology | 2015
Amir Y. Shaikh; Nada Esa; William Martin-Doyle; Menhel Kinno; Iryna Nieto; Kevin C. Floyd; Clifford Browning; Cynthia Ennis; J. Kevin Donahue; Lawrence Rosenthal; David D. McManus
INTRODUCTION Predicting which patients will be free from atrial fibrillation (AF) after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) remains challenging. Clinical risk prediction scores show modest ability to identify patients at risk for AF recurrence after PVI. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is associated with risk for incident and recurrent AF but is not currently included in existing AF risk scores. We sought to evaluate the incremental benefit of adding preoperative BNP to existing risk scores for predicting AF recurrence during the 6 months after PVI. METHODS One hundred sixty-one patients with paroxysmal or persistent AF underwent an index PVI procedure between 2010 and 2013; 77 patients (48%) had late AF recurrence after PVI (>3 months post-PVI) over the 6-month follow-up period. RESULTS A BNP greater than or equal to 100 pg/dL (P=0.01) and AF recurrence within 3 months after PVI (P<0.001) were associated with late AF recurrence in multivariate analyses. Addition of BNP to existing clinical risk scores significantly improved the areas under the curve for each score, with an integrated discrimination improvement of 0.08 (P=0.001) and a net reclassification improvement of 60% (P=0.001) for all risk scores. CONCLUSIONS Circulating BNP levels are independently associated with late AF recurrence after PVI. Inclusion of BNP significantly improves the discriminative ability of CHADS2, CHA2DS2-VASc, R2CHADS2, and the HATCH score in predicting clinically significant, late AF recurrence after PVI and should be incorporated in decision-making algorithms for management of AF. B-R2CHADS2 is the best score model for prediction of late AF recurrence.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2016
Donna M Suter; Kevin C. Floyd; Lawrence Rosenthal; Clifford Browning; Cynthia Ennis; J. Kevin Donahue; John F. Keaney; Theo E. Meyer; David D. McManus
Introduction: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common condition that adversely impacts quality of life, reduces survival and requires significant healthcare resource utilization. Catheter-based ablation is an effective tool commonly used in the management of symptomatic AF patients, but it remains technically and logistically complex. Data describing the impact of team-based process improvement initiatives on laboratory resource utilization and outcomes of AF ablation are limited. To address this knowledge gap, we examined the impact of a real-time review of quality indicators and systems-based process improvement (PI) initiative on outcomes and resource utilization over 5 years. Methods: We developed an AF Treatment Program to conduct real-time review of ablation outcomes and lab resource utilization to facilitate PI and promote accountability. Key stakeholders and operational deficiencies were identified, and process changes, when needed, were implemented. Real-time feedback on performance was given and monthly results posted. In this analysis we examine the impact of our AF PI initiative on case start times, case duration, procedural adverse outcomes and ablation success rates. Results: Over the study period, concurrent with PI efforts, the rate of adverse outcomes decreased from 16.7% to 1.9% (p=0.03), average case start time improved by 85% (p=0.04), and the mean case duration decreased by 70 minutes (p=0.11). Maintenance of sinus rhythm at 1 year for the pre-intervention group was 78% versus 83% during the most recent study year (p=0.04). Conclusions: A continuous quality improvement AF program was associated with significant declines in adverse event rates and increased laboratory efficiencies, without adversely affecting long-term ablation outcomes. Although the non-randomized nature of our study precludes assumptions of causality, we hypothesize that real-time review and feedback was a major driver of performance improvement. ![][1] [1]: /embed/graphic-1.gif
American Journal of Geriatric Cardiology | 2007
Joseph L. Bouchard; Gerard P. Aurigemma; Robert J. Goldberg; John B. Fournier; Craig S. Vinch; Jeffrey C. Hill; Cynthia Ennis; Dennis A. Tighe; Theo E. Meyer
Archive | 2016
Mayank Sardana; Owusu Asamoah; Glenn Stokken; Matthew Spring; Amir Y. Shaikh; Adedotun Ogunsua; Barinder Hansra; Deego Mohamud; Michael Gagnier; Summer Aldrugh; Nada Esa; Kevin Floyd; Clifford Browning; Cynthia Ennis; Kevin Donahue; Lawrence Rosenthal; Gerard P. Aurigemma; David D. McManus
Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2016
Donna M Suter; Lisa J Greenwood; Kevin C. Floyd; Lawrence Rosenthal; Cynthia Ennis; Clifford Browning; John K Donahue; John F. Keaney; Theo E. Meyer; David D. McManus
Circulation | 2010
Cynthia Ennis; Edward Nobrega; Dionyssios Robotis; Lawrence Rosenthal
Circulation | 2008
Cynthia Ennis; Matthew McGuiness; Rishi Vohora; Stephanie Ennis; Lawrence Rosenthal