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Dive into the research topics where Harshil Dhutia is active.

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Featured researches published by Harshil Dhutia.


Circulation | 2017

Prevalence of Subclinical Coronary Artery Disease in Masters Endurance Athletes With a Low Atherosclerotic Risk Profile

Ahmed Merghani; Viviana Maestrini; Stefania Rosmini; Andrew T Cox; Harshil Dhutia; Rachel Bastiaenan; Sarojini David; Tee Joo Yeo; Rajay Narain; Aneil Malhotra; Michael Papadakis; Mathew G Wilson; Maite Tome; Khaled AlFakih; James C. Moon; Sanjay Sharma

Background: Studies in middle-age and older (masters) athletes with atherosclerotic risk factors for coronary artery disease report higher coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores compared with sedentary individuals. Few studies have assessed the prevalence of coronary artery disease in masters athletes with a low atherosclerotic risk profile. Methods: We assessed 152 masters athletes 54.4±8.5 years of age (70% male) and 92 controls of similar age, sex, and low Framingham 10-year coronary artery disease risk scores with an echocardiogram, exercise stress test, computerized tomographic coronary angiogram, and cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging with late gadolinium enhancement and a 24-hour Holter. Athletes had participated in endurance exercise for an average of 31±12.6 years. The majority (77%) were runners, with a median of 13 marathon runs per athlete. Results: Most athletes (60%) and controls (63%) had a normal CAC score. Male athletes had a higher prevalence of atherosclerotic plaques of any luminal irregularity (44.3% versus 22.2%; P=0.009) compared with sedentary males, and only male athletes showed a CAC ≥300 Agatston units (11.3%) and a luminal stenosis ≥50% (7.5%). Male athletes demonstrated predominantly calcific plaques (72.7%), whereas sedentary males showed predominantly mixed morphology plaques (61.5%). The number of years of training was the only independent variable associated with increased risk of CAC >70th percentile for age or luminal stenosis ≥50% in male athletes (odds ratio, 1.08; 95% confidence interval, 1.01–1.15; P=0.016); 15 (14%) male athletes but none of the controls revealed late gadolinium enhancement on cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. Of these athletes, 7 had a pattern consistent with previous myocardial infarction, including 3(42%) with a luminal stenosis ≥50% in the corresponding artery. Conclusions: Most lifelong masters endurance athletes with a low atherosclerotic risk profile have normal CAC scores. Male athletes are more likely to have a CAC score >300 Agatston units or coronary plaques compared with sedentary males with a similar risk profile. The significance of these observations is uncertain, but the predominantly calcific morphology of the plaques in athletes indicates potentially different pathophysiological mechanisms for plaque formation in athletic versus sedentary men. Coronary plaques are more abundant in athletes, whereas their stable nature could mitigate the risk of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2016

The prevalence and significance of a short QT interval in 18 825 low-risk individuals including athletes

Harshil Dhutia; Aneil Malhotra; Sameer Parpia; Vincent Gabus; Gherardo Finocchiaro; Greg Mellor; Ahmed Merghani; Lynne Millar; Rajay Narain; Nabeel Sheikh; Elijah R. Behr; Michael Papadakis; Sanjay Sharma

Objectives The short QT syndrome is a cardiac channelopathy characterised by accelerated repolarisation which manifests as a short QT interval on the ECG. The definition of a short QT interval is debated, ranging from <390 to ≤320 ms, and its clinical significance in healthy young individuals is unknown. We assessed the prevalence and medium-term significance of an isolated short QT interval in a diverse young British population. Methods Between 2005 and 2013, 18 825 apparently healthy people aged 14–35 years underwent cardiovascular evaluation with history, physical examination and ECG. QT intervals were measured by cardiologists using 4 recommended guidelines (Seattle 2013, Heart Rhythm Society 2013, European Society of Cardiology 2010 and American Heart Association 2009). Results The prevalence of a short QT interval was 0.1% (26 patients, ≤320 ms), 0.2% (44 patients, ≤330 ms), 7.9% (1478 patients, <380 ms), 15.8% (2973 patients, <390 ms). Male gender and Afro-Caribbean ethnicity had the strongest association with short QT intervals. Athletes had shorter QT intervals than non-athletes but athletic status did not predict short QT intervals. Individuals with short QT intervals ≤320 ms did not report syncope or a sinister family history, and during a follow-up period of 5.3±1.2 years, there were no deaths in this group. Conclusions The prevalence of a short QT interval depends on the recommended cut-off value. Even at values ≤320 ms, there was an excellent medium-term prognosis among 14 people followed. We conclude that a definition of ≤320 ms is realistic to prevent overdiagnosis and excessive investigations.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2016

Cost Implications of Using Different ECG Criteria for Screening Young Athletes in the United Kingdom

Harshil Dhutia; Aneil Malhotra; Vincent Gabus; Ahmed Merghani; Gherardo Finocchiaro; Lynne Millar; Rajay Narain; Michael Papadakis; Huseyin Naci; Maite Tome; Sanjay Sharma

BACKGROUND High false-positive rates and cost of additional investigations are an obstacle to electrocardiographic (ECG) screening of young athletes for cardiac disease. However, ECG screening costs have never been systematically assessed in a large cohort of athletes. OBJECTIVE This study investigated the costs of ECG screening in athletes according to the 2010 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) recommendations and the Seattle and refined interpretation criteria. METHODS Between 2011 and 2014, 4,925 previously unscreened athletes aged 14 to 35 years were prospectively evaluated with history, physical examination, and ECG (interpreted with the 2010 ESC recommendations). Athletes with abnormal results underwent secondary investigations, the costs of which were based on U.K. National Health Service Tariffs. The impact on cost after applying the Seattle and refined criteria was evaluated retrospectively. RESULTS Overall, 1,072 (21.8%) athletes had an abnormal ECG on the basis of 2010 ESC recommendations; 11.2% required echocardiography, 1.7% exercise stress test, 1.2% Holter, 1.2% cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, and 0.4% other tests. The Seattle and refined criteria reduced the number of positive ECGs to 6.0% and 4.3%, respectively. Fifteen (0.3%) athletes were diagnosed with potentially serious cardiac disease using all 3 criteria. The overall cost of de novo screening using 2010 ESC recommendations was


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018

Outcomes of Cardiac Screening in Adolescent Soccer Players

Aneil Malhotra; Harshil Dhutia; Gherardo Finocchiaro; Sabiha Gati; Ian Beasley; Paul Clift; Charlotte Cowie; Antoinette Kenny; Jamil Mayet; David Oxborough; Kiran Patel; Guido Pieles; Dhrubo Rakhit; David R. Ramsdale; Leonard Shapiro; John Somauroo; Graham Stuart; Amanda Varnava; John Walsh; Zaheer R Yousef; Maite Tome; Michael Papadakis; Sanjay Sharma

539,888 (


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2017

Inter-Rater Reliability and Downstream Financial Implications of Electrocardiography Screening in Young Athletes

Harshil Dhutia; Aneil Malhotra; Tee Joo Yeo; Irina Chis Ster; Vincent Gabus; Alexandros Steriotis; Hélder Dores; Greg Mellor; Carmen García-Corrales; Bode Ensam; Viknesh Jayalapan; Vivienne Anne Ezzat; Gherardo Finocchiaro; Sabiha Gati; Michael Papadakis; Maria Tome-Esteban; Sanjay Sharma

110 per athlete and


Heart | 2014

91 Differentiating Physiological Left Ventricular Hypertrophy from Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Athletes: Proposed Echocardiographic Protocol

Aneil Malhotra; Nabeel Sheikh; Harshil Dhutia; Arun Siva; Lynne Millar; Ahmed Merghani; Rajay Narain; Helder Dores; Sanjay Sharma; Michael Papadakis

35,993 per serious diagnosis). The Seattle and refined criteria reduced the cost to


Europace | 2015

Variation of electrocardiogram interpretation: yet another contributor to the Achilles heel of pre-participation electrocardiographic programmes in athletes

Sanjay Sharma; Harshil Dhutia

92 and


Heart | 2014

103 Prevalence And Significance Of Anterior T Wave Inversion In Females

Aneil Malhotra; Harshil Dhutia; Sabiha Gati; Helder Dores; Lynne Millar; Rajay Merghani; Ahmed Merghani; Mike Walker; Michael Papadakis; Sanjay Sharma

87 per athlete screened and


European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2018

Obesity and sudden cardiac death in the young: Clinical and pathological insights from a large national registry:

Gherardo Finocchiaro; Michael Papadakis; Harshil Dhutia; Della Cole; Elijah R. Behr; Maite Tome; Sanjay Sharma; Mary N. Sheppard

30,251 and


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2017

Emergency response facilities including primary and secondary prevention strategies across 79 professional football clubs in England

Aneil Malhotra; Harshil Dhutia; Sabiha Gati; Tee-Joo Yeo; Gherardo Finnochiaro; Tracey Keteepe-Arachi; Thomas Richards; Mike Walker; Robin Birt; David Stuckey; Laurence Robinson; Maite Tome; Ian Beasley; Michael Papadakis; Sanjay Sharma

28,510 per serious diagnosis, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Contemporary ECG interpretation criteria decrease costs for de novo screening of athletes, which may be cost permissive for some sporting organizations.

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