Emilio Cuesta
Hospital Universitario La Paz
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emilio Cuesta.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2009
José M. Oliver; R. Alonso-Gonzalez; Ana González; Pastora Gallego; Ángel Sánchez-Recalde; Emilio Cuesta; Ángel Aroca; Jose Lopez-Sendon
The actual incidence of ascending aorta complications (AACs) in adults with bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) and the role of associated coarctation of the aorta (COA) as an independent risk factor for AACs remain unknown. From the Adult Congenital Heart Disease database at La Paz Hospital, 631 patients in whom a BAV was diagnosed by echocardiography or surgical inspection since December 1989 were identified. These patients were then further subdivided into 2 groups according to the presence of an associated COA. AACs included aortic aneurysms (ascending aorta > or =55 mm) and aortic dissection, rupture, or perforation. Patients with a BAV and COA had a greater prevalence of AACs (8.0%) than those with an isolated BAV (3.7%; p = 0.037). The coexistence of COA was the only significant predictor of AACs (odds ratio 4.7, 95% confidence interval 1.5 to 15; p = 0.01). From the total patient group with a BAV, the clinical and echocardiographic data were reviewed for 341 patients without an AAC at baseline (97 with and 244 without COA) who had undergone serial examinations >1 year apart. The median follow-up was 7 years (interquartile range 3.5 to 10.2; total 2,436 patient-years). A new AAC occurred in 13 patients (0.5/100 patient-years). The incidence of AACs was 1.3/100 patient-years in the COA group versus 0.2/100 patient-years in the non-COA group (hazard ratio 7.5, 95% confidence interval 2.0 to 28, p = 0.002). All acute aortic events (dissection or rupture) at follow-up occurred in patients with a BAV and COA. In conclusion, the long-term incidence of AACs in patients with isolated BAV is low, but patients with BAV and associated COA are at increased risk.
Heart Rhythm | 2008
José L. Merino; Elena Refoyo; Rafael Peinado; Emilio Cuesta
t B f s t P l s a S t v A m c t f w t R l A 36-year-old man without apparent structural heart disase was referred for catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation. e had weekly episodes of palpitations that were resistant to iltiazem, propranolol, and flecainide. Short bursts of atrial achycardia and fibrillation were demonstrated on ECGs and 4-hour ambulatory ECG Holter monitoring recorded on ifferent days. The patient underwent 64-detector multislice omputed tomography (CT) of the left atrium and pulmoary veins before the ablation procedure. A 24-pole ring-shaped catheter (yellow in Figure 1) and custom octapolar ablation catheter (white in Figure 1) ere introduced into the left atrium for mapping and abla-
Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2014
Montserrat Bret-Zurita; Emilio Cuesta; Antonio J. Cartón; Jesús Díez; Ángel Aroca; José M. Oliver; Federico Gutiérrez-Larraya
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES Although congenital heart defects are the most common major congenital abnormalities, the associated mortality has been decreasing due to improvements in their diagnosis and treatment. We assessed the usefulness of 64-multidetector computed tomography in the diagnosis and management of these patients. METHODS This 5-year observational, analytical, retrospective, cohort study included a total of 222 tomographic studies of patients with congenital heart disease. Computed tomography scans were read twice and medical records were reviewed. We assessed the complexity of the disease, patient, and radiological technique, and evaluated the contribution of new data in relation to clinical suspicion and diagnostic change. A confidence interval was set at 95% and a P value of<.05 was used as the cutoff for statistical significance. RESULTS In 35.1% of patients, the treatment procedure was performed after computed tomography without other tests. Additional diagnostic catheterization was performed in 12.5% of patients. There were new findings in 77% of patients (82.9% with complex disease), which prompted a change in patient management in 35.6%. All unexpected reports described new findings. No significant differences were found by age, sex, study period, urgency of the test order, patient complexity, or difficulty of the technique. CONCLUSIONS Use of 64-detector computed tomography yields good diagnostic performance in congenital heart disease, prompts changes in management in more than one-third of patients, and reveals new findings in relation to the presumed diagnosis in 77% of patients.
Nefrologia | 2012
Ramón Peces; Ana Aguilar; Cristina Vega; Emilio Cuesta; Carlos Peces; Rafael Selgas
Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2014
Montserrat Bret-Zurita; Emilio Cuesta; Antonio J. Cartón; Jesús Díez; Ángel Aroca; José M. Oliver; Federico Gutiérrez-Larraya
Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2012
Pablo Salinas; Raúl Moreno; Luis Calvo; David Dobarro; Santiago Jiménez-Valero; Ángel Sánchez-Recalde; Guillermo Galeote; Luis Riera; Juan-Ignacio González Montalvo; Ignacio Plaza; Francisco Mariscal; Rosa Gonzalez-Davia; Teresa López; Mar Moreno; Arturo Alvarez; Emilio Cuesta; Gonzalo Garzón; David Filgueiras; Isidro Moreno-Gomez; José M. Mesa; José-Luis López-Sendón
Journal of Cardiology Cases | 2013
Diego Iglesias; Elena Refoyo; Jose Ruiz-Cantador; Emilio Cuesta; Gabriela Guzmán; José M. Mesa; Mar Moreno-Yangüela; Jose Lopez-Sendon
Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2012
Pablo Salinas; Raúl Moreno; Luis Calvo; David Dobarro; Santiago Jiménez-Valero; Ángel Sánchez-Recalde; Guillermo Gaçeote; Luis Riera; Juan-Ignacio González Montalvo; Ignacio Plaza; Francisco Mariscal; Rosa Gonzalez-Davia; Teresa López; Mar Moreno; Arturo Alvarez; Emilio Cuesta; Gonzalo Garzón; David Filgueiras; Isidro Moreno-Gomez; Jose-María Mesa; José-Luis López-Sendón
Nefrologia | 2012
Ramón Peces; Cristina Vega; Ana Aguilar; Rosa Zometa; Claudia Tapia; Carlos Peces; Emilio Cuesta
Pediatric Surgery International | 2010
Montserrat Bret; A. L. Luis; Emilio Cuesta; Federica Pederiva; Rosa Aras; Leopoldo Martinez; Juan A. Tovar