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Dive into the research topics where Ioanna Kougioumtzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Ioanna Kougioumtzi.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Asthma-chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap syndrome (ACOS): current literature review

Antonis Papaiwannou; Paul Zarogoulidis; Konstantinos Porpodis; Dionysios Spyratos; Ioannis Kioumis; Georgia Pitsiou; Athanasia Pataka; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Stamatis Arikas; Andreas Mpakas; Theodora Tsiouda; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Stavros Siminelakis; Alexander Kolettas; George Kessis; Thomas Beleveslis; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are chronic diseases, very common in general population. These obstructive airway illnesses are manifested with chronic inflammation affecting the whole respiratory tract. Obstruction is usually intermittent and reversible in asthma, but is progressive and irreversible in COPD. Asthma and COPD may overlap and converge, especially in older people [overlap syndrome-asthma-chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap syndrome (ACOS)]. Although ACOS accounts approximately 15-25% of the obstructive airway diseases, is not well recognised because of the structure of clinical trials. COPD studies exclude asthma patients and asthma studies exclude COPD patients, respectively. It is crucial to define asthma, COPD and overlap syndrome (ACOS), as notable clinical entities, which they share common pathologic and functional features, but they are characterized from differences in lung function, acute exacerbations, quality of life, hospital impact and mortality.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2013

Treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

Konstantinos Zarogoulidis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Kaid Darwiche; Efimia Boutsikou; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Ilias Karapantzos; Haidong Huang; Dionysios Spyratos

Radical surgery is the standard of care for fit stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Adjuvant treatment should be offered only as part of an investigation trial. Stage II and IIIA adjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy remains the gold standard for completely resected NSCLC tumors. Additionally radiotherapy should be offered in patients with N2 lymph nodes. In advanced stage IIIB/IV or inoperable NSCLC pts, a multidisciplinary treatment should be offered consisted of 4 cycles of cisplatin-based chemotherapy plus a 3(rd) generation cytotoxic agent or a cytostatic (anti-EGFR, anti-VEGFR) drug.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Right heart failure post left ventricular assist device implantation

Mihalis Argiriou; Styliani-Maria Kolokotron; Timothy Sakellaridis; Orestis Argiriou; Christos Charitos; Paul Zarogoulidis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Theodora Tsiouda; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

Right heart failure (RHF) is a frequent complication following left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation. The incidence of RHF complicates 20-50% (range, 9-44%) of cases and is a major factor of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Unfortunately, despite the fact that many risk factors contributing to the development of RHF after LVAD implantation have been identified, it seems to be extremely difficult to avoid them. Prevention of RHF consists of the management of the preload and the afterload of the right ventricle with optimum inotropic support. The administration of vasodilators designed to reduce pulmonary vascular resistance is standard practice in most centers. The surgical attempt of implantation of a right ventricular assist device does not always resolve the problem and is not available in all cardiac surgery centers.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Review of mitral valve insufficiency: repair or replacement

Athanasios Madesis; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; George Kesisis; Theodora Tsiouda; Thomas Beleveslis; Alexander Koletas; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

Mitral valve (MV) dysfunction is the second-most common clinically significant form of valvular defect in adults. MV regurgitation occurs with the increasing frequency of degenerative changes of the aging process. Moreover, other causes of clinically significant MV regurgitation include cardiac ischemia, infective endocarditis and rhematic disease more frequently in less developed countries. Recent evidence suggests that the best outcomes after repair of severe degenerative mitral regurgitation (MR) are achieved in asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic patients, who are selected for surgery soon after diagnosis on the basis of echocardiography. This review will focus on the surgical management of mitral insufficiency according to its aetiology today and will give insight to some of the perspectives that lay in the future.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Pneumothorax and asthma.

Konstantinos Porpodis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Dionysios Spyratos; Kalliopi Domvri; Ioannis Kioumis; Nikolaos Angelis; Maria Konoglou; Alexandros Kolettas; Georgios Kessisis; Thomas Beleveslis; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Theodora Tsiouda; Michael Argyriou; Maria Kotsakou; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

This review is focused on the relationship between asthma, pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum while presenting a number of case reports that include these conditions. The association between pneumothorax and asthma is not widely known. While asthma includes a common disorder and is prevalent worldwide, its morbidity and mortality is high when is associated with pneumothorax. Furthermore, the delayed diagnosis of pneumothorax while focusing on asthma includes the higher risk of coincidental pneumothorax in asthmatic patients. In addition, pneumomediastinum is considered benign and self-limiting condition that responds to conservative therapy. Although it is rare, the concurrence of pneumomediastinum with pneumothorax may prove fatal during a serious asthma attack. In conclusion, the symptoms of chest pain, dyspnea or focal chest findings when presented in asthmatic patients, must always create suspicion of pneumothorax or pneumomediastinum to the physician.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Surgical management of cardiac implantable electronic device infections.

Michael Koutentakis; Stavros Siminelakis; Panagiotis Korantzopoulos; Alexandra Petrou; Eleftheria Priavali; Andreas Mpakas; Eleftheria Gesouli; Eleftheria Apostolakis; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Theodora Tsiouda; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

PURPOSE The infection of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) is a serious and potentially lethal complication. The population at risk is growing, as the device implantation is increasing especially in older patients with associated comorbid conditions. Our purpose was to present the management of this complicated surgical condition and to extract the relevant conclusions. METHODS During a 3-year period 1,508 CIED were implanted in our hospital. We treated six cases of permanent pacemaker infection with localized pocket infection or endocarditis. In accordance to the recent AHA/ACC guidelines, complete device removal was decided in all cases. The devices were removed under general anaesthesia, with a midline sternotomy, under extracorporeal circulation on the beating heart. Epicardial permanent pacing electrodes were placed on the right atrium and ventricle before the end of the procedure. RESULTS The postoperative course of all patients was uncomplicated and after a follow up period of five years no relapse of infection occurred. CONCLUSIONS Management protocols that include complete device removal are the only effective measure for the eradication of CIED infections. Although newer technologies have emerged and specialized techniques of percutaneous device removal have been developed, the surgical alternative to these methods can be a safe solution in cases of infected devices.


Drug Design Development and Therapy | 2013

Successful application of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation due to pulmonary hemorrhage secondary to granulomatosis with polyangiitis

Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt; Arndt T. Petermann; Aikaterini N. Visouli; Paul Zarogoulidis; Kaid Darwiche; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Markus Ketteler; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis; Johannes Brachmann

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is increasingly applied in adults with acute refractory respiratory failure that is deemed reversible. Bleeding is the most frequent complication during ECMO support. Severe pre-existing bleeding has been considered a contraindication to ECMO application. Nevertheless, there are cases of successful ECMO application in patients with multiple trauma and hemorrhagic shock or head trauma and intracranial hemorrhage. ECMO has proved to be life-saving in several cases of life-threatening respiratory failure associated with pulmonary hemorrhage of various causes, including granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener’s disease). We successfully applied ECMO in a 65-year-old woman with acute life-threatening respiratory failure due to diffuse massive pulmonary hemorrhage secondary to granulomatosis with polyangiitis, manifested as severe pulmonary-renal syndrome. ECMO sustained life and allowed disease control, together with plasmapheresis, cyclophosphamide, corticoids, and renal replacement therapy. The patient was successfully weaned from ECMO, extubated, and discharged home. She remains alive on dialysis at 17 months follow-up.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Preoperative evaluation for lung cancer resection

Dionysios Spyratos; Paul Zarogoulidis; Konstantinos Porpodis; Nikolaos Angelis; Antonios Papaiwannou; Ioannis Kioumis; Georgia Pitsiou; Athanasia Pataka; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Andreas Mpakas; Stamatis Arikas; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Theodora Tsiouda; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Stavros Siminelakis; Michael Argyriou; Maria Kotsakou; George Kessis; Alexander Kolettas; Thomas Beleveslis; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

During the last decades lung cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide for both sexes. Even though cigarette smoking has been proved to be the main causative factor, many other agents (e.g., occupational exposure to asbestos or heavy metals, indoor exposure to radon gas radiation, particulate air pollution) have been associated with its development. Recently screening programs proved to reduce mortality among heavy-smokers although establishment of such strategies in everyday clinical practice is much more difficult and unknown if it is cost effective compared to other neoplasms (e.g., breast or prostate cancer). Adding severe comorbidities (coronary heart disease, COPD) to the above reasons as cigarette smoking is a common causative factor, we could explain the low surgical resection rates (approximately 20-30%) for lung cancer patients. Three clinical guidelines reports of different associations have been published (American College of Chest Physisians, British Thoracic Society and European Respiratory Society/European Society of Thoracic Surgery) providing detailed algorithms for preoperative assessment. In the current mini review, we will comment on the preoperative evaluation of lung cancer patients.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Airway inflammation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Nikolaos Angelis; Konstantinos Porpodis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Dionysios Spyratos; Ioannis Kioumis; Antonis Papaiwannou; Georgia Pitsiou; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Andreas Mpakas; Stamatis Arikas; Theodora Tsiouda; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Michael Argyriou; George Kessisis; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an inflammatory airway disease whose incidence and mortality increases every year. It is associated with an abnormal inflammatory response of the lung to toxic particles or gases (usually cigarette smoke). A central role in the pathophysiology has been shown to play a chronic inflammation of the airways that is expressed primarily by hypersecretion of mucus, stenosis of the smaller airways and the establishment of pulmonary emphysema. There is an increasing trend for assessing the inflammatory pattern of inflammatory airway diseases through mediators measured by noninvasive techniques. Markers in biological fluids and exhaled air have been the subject of intense evaluation over the past few years, with some of them reaching their introduction into clinical practice, while others remain as research tools. Of particular interest for the scientific community is the discovery of clinically exploitable biomarkers associated with specific phenotypes of the disease. Studying the effects of therapeutic interventions in these biomarkers may lead to targeted therapy based on phenotype and this is perhaps the future of therapeutics in COPD.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2014

Therapeutic modalities for Pancoast tumors

Panagopoulos Nikolaos; Livaditis Vasilios; Koletsis Efstratios; Alexopoulos Panagiotis; Prokakis Christos; Baltayiannis Nikolaos; Hatzimichalis Antonios; Kosmas Tsakiridis; Paul Zarogoulidis; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis; Nikolaos Katsikogiannis; Ioanna Kougioumtzi; Nikolaos Machairiotis; Theodora Tsiouda; Athanasios Madesis; Georgios Vretzakis; Alexandros Kolettas; Dougenis Dimitrios

A Pancoast tumor, also called a pulmonary sulcus tumor or superior sulcus tumor, is a tumor of the pulmonary apex. It is a type of lung cancer defined primarily by its location situated at the top end of either the right or left lung. It typically spreads to nearby tissues such as the ribs and vertebrae. Most Pancoast tumors are non-small cell cancers. The growing tumor can cause compression of a brachiocephalic vein, subclavian artery, phrenic nerve, recurrent laryngeal nerve, vagus nerve, or, characteristically, compression of a sympathetic ganglion resulting in a range of symptoms known as Horners syndrome. Pancoast tumors are named for Henry Pancoast, a US radiologist, who described them in 1924 and 1932.The treatment of a Pancoast lung cancer may differ from that of other types of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Its position and close proximity to vital structures may make surgery difficult. As a result, and depending on the stage of the cancer, treatment may involve radiation and chemotherapy given prior to surgery. Surgery may consist of the removal of the upper lobe of a lung together with its associated structures as well as mediastinal lymphadenectomy. Surgical access may be via thoracotomy from the back or the front of the chest and modification. Careful patient selection, improvements in imaging such as the role of PET-CT in restaging of tumors, radiotherapy and surgical advances, the management of previously inoperable lesions by a combined experienced thoracic-neurosurgical team and prompt recognition and therapy of postoperative complications has greatly increased local control and overall survival for patients with these tumors.

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Dive into the Ioanna Kougioumtzi's collaboration.

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Paul Zarogoulidis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Nikolaos Katsikogiannis

Democritus University of Thrace

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Konstantinos Zarogoulidis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Kosmas Tsakiridis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Theodora Tsiouda

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Ioannis Kioumis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Georgia Pitsiou

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Haidong Huang

Second Military Medical University

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Athanasios Madesis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Bojan Zaric

University of Novi Sad

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