Georgios E. Parharidis
AHEPA University Hospital
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Featured researches published by Georgios E. Parharidis.
Angiology | 2006
Antonios Ziakas; Stavros Gavrilidis; George D. Giannoglou; Efthimia Souliou; K. Gemitzis; D. Kalampalika; M. Arvanitidou Vayona; Ifigenia Pidonia; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
Plasma fibrinogen, C-reactive protein (CRP), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) receiving thrombolysis have been related to prognosis. The aim of this study was to investigate the time course of plasma fibrinogen, CRP, and IL-6 levels during the in-hospital phase in patients with AMI receiving thrombolysis, and their relationship to in-hospital and prognosis after 12-months follow-up. In 40 patients presenting with AMI within 6 hours of symptom onset and treated with thrombolysis, plasma fibrinogen, CRP, and IL-6 levels were measured on admission and after 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours; 7 days; and 6 months. Patients with other diseases that can alter fibrinogen, CRP, or IL-6 levels were excluded. Patients had a clinical follow-up at 6 and 12 months, and the following cardiac events were recorded: cardiac death, recurrent angina, recurrent AMI, and heart failure. Plasma fibrinogen concentrations decreased significantly (p<0.01 vs admission levels) at 12 hours (425 ±94 vs 322 ±132 mg/dL), started to increase at 24 hours, reached peak value at 72 hours (602 ±209 mg/dL), remained elevated at 7 days, and were back to admission levels at 6 months (375 ±79 mg/dL). CRP levels increased significantly at 12 hours (0.73 ±0.43 vs 0.23 ±0.11 mg/dL, p<0.01), reached peak value at 72 hours (7.66 ±3.28 mg/dL), decreased significantly on day 7 (2.32 ±1.17 mg/dL), and at 6 months were within normal limits (0.49 ±0.29 mg/dL). IL-6 levels increased significantly at 6 hours (14.03 ±8.13 vs 6.37 ±3.88 pg/mL, p<0.05), reached peak value at 24 hours (59.49 ±23.57 pg/mL), started to decrease at 48 hours, and at 6 months were within normal limits (2.25 ±1.24 pg/mL). During the in-hospital phase 33 patients had an uneventful course and 7 patients had complications (3 post-AMI angina; 4 heart failure). During the 12-month follow-up period 28 patients had an uneventful course, and 12 patients had complications (1 cardiac death, 5 recurrent angina, 2 recurrent AMI, and 4 heart failure). Regarding the in-hospital prognosis, fibrinogen, CRP, and IL-6 levels were significantly higher (p<0.05) in patients with complications from 48 to 72 hours, from 12 hours until day 7, and from 6 hours until day 7, respectively. During the 12-month follow-up period fibrinogen, CRP, and IL-6 levels were significantly higher in patients with complications (at 48, 24, and 24 hours, respectively) only in the subgroup of patients who had complications within the first 6 months following AMI. Multivariate analysis showed that CRP at 48 hours was the most important factor related to in-hospital prognosis (p=0.02), and ejection fraction followed by CRP at 24 hours (p=0.02) to 6-month prognosis (p=0.018). Fibrinogen, CRP, and IL-6 levels alter in patients with AMI receiving thrombolysis, and are related both to in-hospital and to 6-month follow-up prognosis.
The Cardiology | 2008
Theodoros D. Karamitsos; Haralambos Karvounis; Triantafyllos Didangelos; Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Melania Kachrimanidou; Joseph B. Selvanayagam; Georgios E. Parharidis
Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate left ventricular diastolic function and its relation to aortic wall stiffness in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus without coronary artery disease or hypertension. Patients: Sixty-six patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus were examined by echocardiography and divided into two groups according to the diastolic filling pattern determined by mitral annulus tissue Doppler velocities. Group A patients (n = 21) presented diastolic dysfunction with a peak early diastolic mitral annular velocity (Em)/peak late diastolic mitral annular velocity (Am) ratio <1 whereas in group B patients (n = 45) the Em/Am ratio was >1. Coronary artery disease was excluded based on normal thallium scintigraphy. Aortic stiffness index was calculated from aortic diameters measured by echocardiography, using accepted criteria. Results: Aortic stiffness index differed significantly among the two groups. Significant correlations were found between parameters of left ventricular diastolic function (Em/Am, isovolumic relaxation time, deceleration time) and aortic stiffness index. Multiple stepwise linear regression analysis revealed aortic stiffness index (β = –0.39, p = 0.001) and isovolumic relaxation time (β = –0.46, p < 0.001) as the main predictors of Em/Am ratio. Conclusions: Aortic stiffness is increased in type 1 diabetic patients with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. This impairment in aortic elastic properties seems to be related to parameters of diastolic function.
Angiology | 2004
Haralampos Karvounis; Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Theodora Zaglavara; Ioannis G. Nouskas; Konstantinos D. Gemitzis; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
Diabetic cardiomyopathy is a distinct entity in diabetic patients with congestive heart failure, who have no angiographic evidence of significant coronary artery stenosis. The aim of this study was to evaluate left ventricular (LV) function in 24 elderly patients (mean age 67 ±2 years) with type 2 diabetes, who were asymptomatic and had no history of hypertension, or coronary or valvular heart disease. LV systolic indices (ejection fraction [EF] and fractional shortening [FS]), diastolic indices (E wave, A wave, E/A ratio, isovolumic relaxation time [IVRT] and deceleration time [DT]) and the myocardial performance index (MPI) were evaluated with echocardiography. Compared to controls (24 age- and gender-matched normal subjects), the E wave was reduced (0.60 ±0.10 m/sec vs 0.72 ±0.08 m/sec, p<0.05), the A wave was increased (0.77 ±0.07 m/sec vs 0.68 ±0.06 m/sec, p<0.05), the E/A ratio was decreased (0.78 ±0.20 vs 1.06 ±0.18, p<0.001) and both IVRT and DT were prolonged (0.115 ±0.01 sec vs 0.09 ±0.01 sec, p<0.001 and 0.240 ±0.04 sec vs 0.180 ±0.03 sec, p<0.001, respectively). The MPI was significantly increased (0.640 ±0.170 vs 0.368 ±0.098, p<0.001). LV diastolic function and the MPI are markedly impaired in asymptomatic elderly patients with type 2 diabetes.
Diabetic Medicine | 2006
Theodoros D. Karamitsos; Haralambos Karvounis; T. P. Didangellos; Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Emmanouella Dalamanga; D. T. Karamitsos; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
Aims Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with macrovascular disease and impaired aortic function. We hypothesized that the change in aortic elastic properties could be investigated with colour tissue Doppler imaging (CTDI) in Type 1 diabetic patients and that these findings could be related to the aortic stiffness index.
European Respiratory Journal | 2008
C. E. Papadopoulos; Georgia Pitsiou; Theodoros D. Karamitsos; Haralambos Karvounis; Theodoros Kontakiotis; Georgios Giannakoulas; Georgios K. Efthimiadis; Paraskevi Argyropoulou; Georgios E. Parharidis; Demosthenes Bouros
It was hypothesised that, apart from right ventricular (RV) dysfunction, patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) also exhibit left ventricular (LV) impairment, which may affect disease progression and prognosis. The aim of the present study was to evaluate LV performance in a cohort of IPF patients using conventional and tissue Doppler echocardiography. IPF patients exhibiting mild-to-moderate pulmonary arterial hypertension (mean age 65±9 yrs; n = 22) and healthy individuals (mean age 61±6 yrs; n = 22) were studied. Conventional and tissue Doppler echocardiography were used for the evaluation of RV and LV systolic and diastolic function. In addition to the expected impairment in RV function, all patients showed a characteristic reversal of LV diastolic filling to late diastole compared with controls (early diastolic peak filling velocity (E)/late diastolic peak filling velocity 0.7±0.2 versus 1.5±0.1, respectively). Patients with IPF also exhibited lower peak myocardial velocities in early diastole (Em; 5.7±1.1 versus 10.3±1.6 cm·s−1, respectively), higher in late diastole (Am; 8.9±1.3 versus 5.5±0.8 cm·s−1, respectively), lower Em/Am ratio (0.6±0.1 versus 1.9±0.5, respectively) and higher E/Em ratio (10.8±3 versus 6±0.6, respectively), all indicative of LV diastolic dysfunction. Moreover, LV propagation velocity was significantly lower in IPF patients (46±13 versus 83±21 cm·s−1, respectively). Physicians should be aware that patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis exhibit early impairment of left ventricular diastolic function.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2003
Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Haralampos Karvounis; Ioannis T. Gourasas; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
BACKGROUND Several studies have demonstrated the protective effects of preinfarction angina in Q wave myocardial infarction, implicating the role of ischemic preconditioning but this role remains uncertain in patients with a NSTEMI. Subendocardial viability in NSTEMI patients, is thought to be less dependent on collateral circulation and thus more likely to be protected by other mechanisms such as preconditioning. METHODS We have studied prospectively 40 patients with first NSTEMI and with angiographically proven poor or no collateral development and compared two groups; those with versus those without preinfarction angina. All in-hospital events, such as recurrent angina, congestive heart failure, arrhythmias and reinfarction were recorded. Serum markers of myocardial necrosis (CPK, CPK-MB, AST) and discharge QTc values were estimated. RESULTS Preconditioned patients suffered less recurrent angina (18 vs. 55% P=0.014), congestive heart failure (0 vs. 22%, P=0.02), arrhythmic events (0 vs. 27%, P=0.008) and had significant smaller values of mean peak CPK (381 +/- 152 vs. 859 +/- 496 I.U./l, P=0.0008), mean peak CPK-MB (45.5 +/- 24.6 vs. 105.2 +/- 87 I.U./l, P=0.01), mean peak AST (59.8 +/- 23.1 vs. 112.4 +/- 64.3 I.U./l, P=0.003) and QTc value at discharge (0.42 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.46 +/- 0.05 s, P=0.005) than patients without preconditioning. Multiple logistic regression analysis confirmed that the absence of preinfarction angina (relative risk 9.10, 95% CI 2.08-40.00, P=0.003) was a significant predictor of in-hospital complications. CONCLUSIONS Preinfarction angina constitutes a strong clinical correlate to ischemic preconditioning in patients with first NSTEMI, offering serious protection, by improving in-hospital outcome and reducing infarct size.
Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System | 2011
Georgios Pechlivanidis; Lilian Mantziari; Georgios Giannakoulas; Hariklia Dimitroula; Haralambos Styliadis; Haralambos Karvounis; Ioannis H. Styliadis; Georgios E. Parharidis
Introduction: Systemic hypertension is known to affect both left and right ventricular (RV) function. Little is known about the effect of the renin—angiotensin system (RAS) inhibition on global RV function in patients with essential hypertension. Materials and methods: Forty patients (17 male, mean age 47 ± 10 years) with mild hypertension free of cardiovascular disease were assessed by echocardiography at baseline and after nine months of antihypertensive treatment with RAS inhibitors. Tissue Doppler imaging derived myocardial performance index (MPI) of the left and right ventricle was used as an index of global ventricular function. Results: Both left ventricular (LV) and RV MPI were increased at baseline and were reduced after treatment (LV MPI reduced from 0.42 ± 0.06 to 0.39 ± 0.05, p < 0.001 and RV MPI was reduced from 0.34 ± 0.06 to 0.32 ± 0.05, p < 0.005). There was a positive correlation between mitral and tricuspid E/A ratio both at baseline and at month nine after treatment (r = 0.661, p < 0.001 and r = 0.503, p < 0.005 respectively). LV mass index and interventricular septum thickness were decreased after treatment. No correlation was found between MPI improvement and blood pressure reduction. Conclusions: RAS inhibition in patients with mild hypertension results in an improvement of RV global function which is unrelated to the reduction in blood pressure.
Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2004
Amalia I. Boufidou; Areti Makedou; Dimitrios N. Adamidis; Haralampos Karvounis; John T. Gourassas; Haralampos T. Kesidis; Kali Makedou; Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
SUMMARY Objective: Elevated plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) levels constitute a risk factor for coronary artery disease (CAD). We prospectively examined the association of fasting tHcy levels in patients in Northern Greece who had established CAD. Patients and methods: Plasma fasting tHcy levels were measured in 42 patients with angiographically documented CAD and compared to 42 age-, sex-, BMI- and smoking habit-matched control subjects. We also determined the plasma vitamin B12, folic acid and lipoprotein levels in all patients and controls. Conventional risk factors for CAD were also estimated. Results: In a univariate analysis, tHcy (jumol/l) levels were higher in patients compared to controls almost reaching statistical significance (13 (7–41) vs 11.3 (4–39); p = 0.07). Multivariate analysis of conventional risk factors showed that tHcy levels were not an independent risk factor for CAD. However, tHcy levels were significantly higher in patients with a previous history of myocardial infarction compared to patients without such a history and to controls (15 (8.8-29) vs 11.7 (7-41); p = 0.007 and 15 (8.8-29) vs 11.3 (4-39); p = 0.002, respectively). Hyperhomocysteinaemia (> 15|imol/l) was detected in 35.7% of patients and 11.9% of controls (p < 0.05). Conclusions: In Northern Greece, plasma tHcy levels may not be an independent risk factor for CAD in patients with angiographically documented CAD. However, patients with CAD have a trend towards higher tHcy levels. Additionally, plasma tHcy levels may be associated with the development of myocardial infarction.
Angiology | 2004
Haralambos Karvounis; Ioannis G. Nouskas; Thomas M. Farmakis; Kostas M. Vrogistinos; Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Theodora Zaglavara; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
Assessment of left ventricular (LV) function is crucial in the immediate postinfarction period. The authors evaluated the clinical applicability of the Doppler-derived myocardial performance index (MPI, defined as the sum of isovolumic contraction and relaxation times divided by LV ejection time) in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) as to whether this index reflects the severity of LV dysfunction in this subgroup of patients. Post-AMI patients (n = 33) were compared with age- and sex-matched healthy subjects (n = 35). Within 24 hours of the AMI and 1 month thereafter, patients underwent 2D and Doppler echocardiography. Patients were divided into group A (Killip Class I, n = 22) and group B (Killip Class II-III, n = 11). The authors measured the LV ejection fraction (EF), diastolic indices (transmitral E and A waves, E/A ratio, deceleration time [DT], isovolumic contraction time [IVCT], isovolumic relaxation time [IVRT], MPI, LV end-systolic and end-diastolic volume indices [ESVi and EDVi] and wall motion score index [WMSi]). One-year mortality was also assessed. There was no significant difference concerning E and A waves, E/A ratio, and IVRT between the 2 groups. There were highly statistical differences at day 1 for EF (59.3 ± 6.7% vs 36.8 ± 4.5%, p<0.0001), DT (0.160 ± 0.030 sec vs 0.127 ± 0.022, p < 0.005), MPI (0.344 ± 0.084 vs 0.686 ± 0.120, p < 0.0001), ESVi (28.4 ± 3.9 mL/m2 vs 46.2 ± 8.4, p < 0.001), and WMSi (1.58 ± 0.06 vs 1.88 ± 0.35, p = 0.05), which persisted after 1 month. One-year mortality was significantly (0 vs 27.3%, p<0.01) lower in group A patients. This study shows that the MPI, reliably indicated LV dysfunction post-AMI, significantly correlated with clinically determined functional class, and possibly has some prog nostic implication.
Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2003
Christodoulos E. Papadopoulos; Haralampos Karvounis; Georgios E. Parharidis; G. Louridas
Background: Preinfarction angina (PA) consists a strong clinical correlate to ischemic preconditioning (PC) and seems to occur in a bimodal time course. The aim of the study is to evaluate the impact of both forms of PC on QTc value representing myocardial electric stability, in patients with a first NSTEMI.