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Dive into the research topics where Liliya Paranskaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Liliya Paranskaya.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2013

Residual mitral valve regurgitation after percutaneous mitral valve repair with the mitraclip® system is a risk factor for adverse one-year outcome

Liliya Paranskaya; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Gökmen R. Turan; Tim C. Rehders; Jasmin Ortak; Christoph Nienaber; Hüseyin Ince

We undertook this study to investigate the mid‐term clinical results after MitraClip® implantation and the impact of post‐repair mitral valve (MV) function and anatomy on survival and outcome composite endpoint in high‐risk patients.


Eurointervention | 2012

Early and mid-term outcomes of percutaneous mitral valve repair with the MitraClip®: comparative analysis of different EuroSCORE strata

Liliya Paranskaya; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Gökmen R. Turan; Dimitar Divchev; Rehders Tc; Henrik Schneider; Jasmin Ortak; Christoph Nienaber; Hüseyin Ince

AIMS Compare mid-term outcomes after MitraClip® implantation for severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients categorised in different logistic EuroSCORE (LES) groups. METHODS AND RESULTS MitraClip was implanted in 85 patients (78 ± 6 years, 48 men [56.5%]) with severe symptomatic MR. Baseline characteristics, perioperative results, mid-term survival, major adverse cerebrovascular and cardiac events (MACCE), and re-hospitalisation were compared in patients with LES <20% (n=30) and ≥ 20% (n=55). Overall LES was 24 ± 12 (range 2.5-56.3) and STS-score 12 ± 7 (range 1.2-31.2). Overall procedural success rate was 96.5% with an in-hospital mortality rate of 3.5%. Echocardiographic and clinical follow-up confirmed similar mean transmitral pressure gradient (p=0.13), MR degree (p=0.48), and NYHA Class (p=0.93). Estimated six-month survival and freedom from composite endpoint was 80.7%/77.1% in LES ≥ 20% and 90.8/86.6% in LES<20% group, respectively (p= 0.014; p=0.018). Multivariate analysis determined LES ≥ 20% (OR=8.1; 95% CI 1.002-65.186), mean transmitral gradient after intervention (OR 2.5; 95% CI 1.267-5.131) and residual MR (OR=5.1; 95% CI 1.464-17.946) as predictors for overall mortality. CONCLUSIONS LES is a good predictor of perioperative results, and follow-up adverse outcomes after MitraClip implantation are significantly influenced by the preoperative risk profile. The presence of residual MR immediately after MitraClip therapy can exacerbate the occurrence of MACCE.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2013

Staged total percutaneous treatment of aortic valve pathology and mitral regurgitation: Institutional experience

Stephan Kische; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Liliya Paranskaya; Jochen K. Schubert; Nicole S Arsoy; Karl Heinz Hauenstein; Anthony Alozie; Bojan Jovanovich; Christoph Nienaber; Hüseyin Ince

To summarize our single Institution experience with staged total percutaneous management of aorto‐mitral pathology.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2013

Percutaneous mitral valve repair with the mitraclip® system

Liliya Paranskaya; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Gökmen R. Turan; Dimitar Divchev; Tim C. Rehders; Bernd Westphal; Jochen K. Schubert; Christoph Nienaber; Hüseyin Ince

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to compare outcomes using standard clipping (SC) (one to two clips) or multiple clipping (MC) (more than two clips). Background: MitraClip® implantation using MC has been proposed to treat severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in high‐risk patients. Methods and Results: A tailored strategy was used implanting as many clips as required to eliminate MR. A total of 85 consecutive patients [78 ± 6 years, 48 men (56.5%) ] with MR (grade 3+ or 4+) were included. EuroSCORE was 24 ± 12 (2.5–56.3) and STS‐score 12 ± 7 (1.2–31.2). SC was used in 61 (71.8%) and MC in 24 (28.2%) patients. Patients in MC group had larger mitral valve (MV) annuli (P = 0.025), MV orifice areas (MVOA) (P = 0.01), and MR degree (P = 0.005). Successful clip placement was achieved in 82 patients (96.5%). At discharge, no patient had grade 4+ MR. MR 3+ presented in 4 patients (7.0%) in the SC group and in 1 (4.5%) in the MC group (P = 0.72). There were 3 (3.5%) in‐hospital deaths. Follow up (211 ± 173 days, range 4–652) echocardiography confirmed similar MVOA (P = 0.83) and MV gradients (P = 0.54) in the both groups. At linear regression there was no independent correlation between clips number and postoperative MVOA/gradient. One‐year survival was 71.1% without difference between groups (P = 0.74). Conclusion: Although the hemodynamic and anatomical basis of MR may differ, every procedure should aim at eliminating MR. In some patients this goal can be achieved using MC with minimized risk of MV stenosis if preoperative anatomy/mechanism of MV regurgitation are adequately assessed.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Surgical revision after percutaneous mitral valve repair by edge-to-edge device: when the strategy fails in the highest risk surgical population

Anthony Alozie; Bernd Westphal; Stephan Kische; Alexander Kaminski; Liliya Paranskaya; Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Jasmin Ortak; Jochen K. Schubert; Gustav Steinhoff; Hüseyin Ince

OBJECTIVES Percutaneous edge-to-edge devices for non-surgical repair of mitral valve regurgitation are under clinical evaluation in high-risk patients deemed not suitable for conventional surgery. To address guidelines for initial therapy decision, we here report on 13 cases of surgery after failed percutaneous edge-to-edge mitral valve repair or attempted repair, and discuss methodology and prognostic factors for operative outcome in this high-risk situation. METHODS Thirteen patients referred to our cardiothoracic unit after failed percutaneous mitral valve repair or attempted repair using the edge-to-edge technique, were treated surgically for mitral valve failure between June 2010 and December 2012. Pathology of mitral valve before and after interventional mitral valve repair (especially prevalent mode of failure) was evaluated and classified for each individual patient by echocardiography and intraoperative direct visualization. Number of implanted edge-to-edge devices were identified. Preoperative risk scores were matched with intraoperative observations and histopathological findings of valve tissue. Postoperative morbidity and mortality were analysed with respect to mitral valve and patient-related data. RESULTS Three of 10 patients were referred with severe mitral valve regurgitation/stenosis after initially successful percutaneous edge-to-edge therapy or attempted therapy. In 3 patients, ≥ 2 edge-to-edge devices were implanted leading to very tight edge-to-edge leaflet connection and fibrosis. All patients underwent successful surgical mitral valve replacement and concomitant complete cardiac surgery (CABG, aortic or tricuspid valve surgery, ASD closure and pulmonary vein isolation for atrial fibrillation). The likelihood of repair was reduced with respect to multiple edge-to-edge technology. One device could not be harvested surgically because of embolization. One patient died on the second postoperative day due to sepsis with multiple organ failure. The remaining 12 patients were discharged with excellent valve prosthesis function and followed up to 2 years post-surgery. The current long-term survival rate is 77%. CONCLUSION Our series demonstrate that highest risk patients can survive mitral valve surgery after failed multiple edge-to-edge interventional mitral valve repair. As long-term results of the MitraClip therapy are pending, we recommend close meshed follow-up of patients treated with the MitraClip device, especially within the first year of the index procedure as delays in salvage management, interventional or surgical, when the index procedure fails may increase morbidity and mortality.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2013

Challenges in patient selection for the parachute device implantation.

Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Benjamin Bermaoui; Liliya Paranskaya; R. GökmenTuran; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Stephan Kische; Ralph Birkemeyer; Bojan Jovanovic; Jan Schuetz; Ibrahim Akin; Cem Hakan Turan; Jasmin Ortak; Karlheinz Hauenstein; Nienaber Ca; Hueseyin Ince

A novel percutaneous ventricular restoration therapy (PVRT) has been recently proposed to treat patients with ischemic heart failure (IHF) and antero‐apical regional wall motion abnormalities after myocardial infarction (MI). In this prospective, single center, non‐randomized study, we herein propose safety and feasibility evaluation of the device, in which a different patient selection strategy was used.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2012

Correlation between the functional impairment of bone marrow-derived circulating progenitor cells and the extend of coronary artery disease

Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; R. Goekmen Turan; Liliya Paranskaya; Nicole S Arsoy; C Hakan Turan; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Jasmin Ortak; Henrik Schneider; Sophie Ludovicy; Tina Hermann; Giuseppe D’Ancona; Serkan Durdu; A. Ruchan Akar; Hueseyin Ince; Christoph Nienaber

BackgroundBone marrow-derived circulating progenitor cells (BM-CPCs) in patients with coronary heart disease are impaired with respect to number and functional activity. However, the relation between the functional activity of BM-CPCs and the number of diseased coronary arteries is yet not known. We analyzed the influence of the number of diseased coronary arteries on the functional activity of BM-CPCs in peripheral blood (PB) in patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD).MethodsThe functional activity of BM-CPCs was measured by migration assay and colony forming unit in 120 patients with coronary 1 vessel (IHD1, n = 40), coronary 2 vessel (IHD2, n = 40), coronary 3 vessel disease (IHD3, n = 40) and in a control group of healthy subjects (n = 40). There was no significant difference of the total number of cardiovascular risk factors between IHD groups, beside diabetes mellitus (DM), which was significantly higher in IHD3 group compared to IHD2 and IHD1.ResultsThe colony-forming capacity (CFU-E: p < 0.001, CFU-GM: p < 0.001) and migratory response to stromal cell-derived factor 1 (SDF-1: p < 0.001) as well as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF: p < 0001) of BM-CPCs were reduced in the group of patients with IHD compared to control group. The functional activity of BM-CPCs was significantly impaired in patients with IHD3 as compared to IHD1 (VEGF: p < 0.01, SDF-1: p < 0.001; CFU-E: p < 0.001, CFU-GM: p < 0.001) and to IHD2 (VEGF: p = 0.003, SDF-1: p = 0.003; CFU-E: p = 0.001, CFU-GM: p = 0.001). No significant differences were observed in functional activity of BM-CPCs between patients with IHD2 and IHD1 (VEGF: p = 0.8, SDF-1: p = 0.9; CFU-E: p = 0.1, CFU-GM: p = 0.1). Interestingly, the levels of haemoglobin AIc (HbAIc) correlated inversely with the functional activity of BM-CPCs (VEGF: p < 0.001, r = −0.8 SDF-1: p < 0.001, r = −0.8; CFU-E: p = 0.001, r = −0.7, CFU-GM: p = 0.001, r = −0.6) in IHD patients with DM.ConclusionsThe functional activity of BM-CPCs in PB is impaired in patients with IHD. This impairment increases with the number of diseased coronary arteries. Moreover, the regenerative capacity of BM-CPCs in ischemic tissue further declines in IHD patients with DM. Furthermore, monitoring the level of BM-CPCs in PB may provide new insights in patients with IHD.


BMC Cardiovascular Disorders | 2014

Do gender differences in primary PCI mortality represent a different adherence to guideline recommended therapy? a multicenter observation

Ralf Birkemeyer; Henrik Schneider; Andreas Rillig; Juliane Ebeling; Ibrahim Akin; Stefan Kische; Liliya Paranskaya; Werner Jung; Hueseyin Ince; Christoph Nienaber

BackgroundIt is uncertain whether gender differences in outcome after primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) are only attributable to different baseline characteristics or additional factors.MethodsDatabases of two German myocardial infarction network registries were combined with a total of 1104 consecutive patients admitted with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and treated according to standardized protocols.ResultsApproximately 25% of patients were females. Mean age (69 vs 61 years), incidence of diabetes (28% vs 20%), hypertension (68 vs 58%) and renal insufficiency (26% vs 19%) was significantly higher compared to males. Mean prehospital delay was numerically longer in females (227 vs 209 min) as was in hospital delay (35 vs 30 min). PCI was finally performed in 92% of females and 95% of males with comparable procedural success (95% vs 97%). Use of drug eluting stents (55% vs 68%) and application of GP 2b 3a blockers (75% vs 89%) was significantly less frequent in women. At discharge, prescription of beta blockers and lipid lowering drugs was also significantly lower in females (84% vs 90% and 71% vs 84%). Unadjusted in-hospital mortality was significantly higher in females (10% vs 5%) without attenuation after 12 months. Adjusted mortality however did not differ significantly between genders.ConclusionHigher unadjusted mortality in females after primary PCI was accompanied by significant differences in baseline characteristics, interventional approach and secondary prophylaxis in spite of the same standard of care. Lower guideline adherence seems to be less gender specific but rather a manifestation of the risk-treatment paradox.


Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2011

Relation between the frequency of CD34+ bone marrow derived circulating progenitor cells and the number of diseased coronary arteries in patients with myocardial ischemia and diabetes

Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; R. Goekmen Turan; C Hakan Turan; Sophie Ludovicy; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Nicole S Arsoy; Henrik Schneider; Jasmin Ortak; Tim C. Rehders; Tina Hermann; Liliya Paranskaya; Peter Kohlschein; Manuela Bastian; A Tulga Ulus; Kurtulus Sahin; Hueseyin Ince; Christoph Nienaber

BackgroundBone marrow-derived circulating progenitor cells (BM-CPCs) in patients with coronary heart disease are impaired with respect to number and mobilization. However, it is unknown whether the mobilization of BM-CPCs depends on the number of diseased coronary arteries. Therefore, in our study, we analysed the correlation between the diseased coronary arteries and the frequency of CD34/45+ BM-CPCs in peripheral blood (PB) in patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD).MethodsThe frequency of CD34/45+ BM-CPCs was measured by flow cytometry in 120 patients with coronary 1 vessel (IHD1, n = 40), coronary 2 vessel (IHD2, n = 40), coronary 3 vessel disease (IHD3, n = 40) and in a control group of healthy subjects (n = 40). There was no significant difference of the total number of cardiovascular risk factors between IHD groups, beside diabetes mellitus (DM), which was significantly higher in IHD3 group compared to IHD2 and IHD1 groups.ResultsThe frequency of CD34/45+ BM-CPCs was significantly reduced in patients with IHD compared to the control group (CD34/45+; p < 0.001). The frequency of BM-CPCs was impaired in patients with IHD3 compared to IHD1 (CD34/45+; p < 0.001) and to IHD2 (CD34/45+; p = 0.001). But there was no significant difference in frequency of BM-CPCs between the patients with IHD2 and IHD1 (CD34/45+; p = 0.28). In a subgroup we observed a significant negative correlation between levels of hemoglobin AIc (HbAIc) and the frequency of BM-CPCs (CD34/45+; p < 0.001, r = -0.8).ConclusionsThe frequency of CD34/45+ BM-CPCs in PB is impaired in patients with IHD. This impairment may augment with an increased number of diseased coronary arteries. Moreover, the frequency of CD34/45+ BM-CPCs in ischemic tissue is further impaired by diabetes in patients with IHD.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2013

Percutaneous mitral valve repair with the MitraClip system: perioperative and 1-year follow-up results using standard or multiple clipping strategy.

Liliya Paranskaya; Giuseppe D'Ancona; Ilkay Bozdag-Turan; Ibrahim Akin; Stephan Kische; Gökmen R. Turan; Dimitar Divchev; Tim C. Rehders; Bernd Westphal; Jochen K. Schubert; Nienaber Ca; Hüseyin Ince

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to compare outcomes using standard clipping (SC) (one to two clips) or multiple clipping (MC) (more than two clips). Background: MitraClip® implantation using MC has been proposed to treat severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in high‐risk patients. Methods and Results: A tailored strategy was used implanting as many clips as required to eliminate MR. A total of 85 consecutive patients [78 ± 6 years, 48 men (56.5%) ] with MR (grade 3+ or 4+) were included. EuroSCORE was 24 ± 12 (2.5–56.3) and STS‐score 12 ± 7 (1.2–31.2). SC was used in 61 (71.8%) and MC in 24 (28.2%) patients. Patients in MC group had larger mitral valve (MV) annuli (P = 0.025), MV orifice areas (MVOA) (P = 0.01), and MR degree (P = 0.005). Successful clip placement was achieved in 82 patients (96.5%). At discharge, no patient had grade 4+ MR. MR 3+ presented in 4 patients (7.0%) in the SC group and in 1 (4.5%) in the MC group (P = 0.72). There were 3 (3.5%) in‐hospital deaths. Follow up (211 ± 173 days, range 4–652) echocardiography confirmed similar MVOA (P = 0.83) and MV gradients (P = 0.54) in the both groups. At linear regression there was no independent correlation between clips number and postoperative MVOA/gradient. One‐year survival was 71.1% without difference between groups (P = 0.74). Conclusion: Although the hemodynamic and anatomical basis of MR may differ, every procedure should aim at eliminating MR. In some patients this goal can be achieved using MC with minimized risk of MV stenosis if preoperative anatomy/mechanism of MV regurgitation are adequately assessed.

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