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Dive into the research topics where Małgorzata Kurpesa is active.

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Featured researches published by Małgorzata Kurpesa.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2002

Myocardial ischemia and autonomic activity in dippers and non-dippers with coronary artery disease: assessment of normotensive and hypertensive patients.

Małgorzata Kurpesa; Ewa Trzos; Jarosław Drożdż; Zbigniew Bednarkiewicz; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to assess the relations between the circadian variations of blood pressure (BP) and the pattern of ischemia and autonomic activity in normotensive and hypertensive patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). PATIENTS AND METHODS On the basis of the results of ambulatory BP monitoring, 115 patients with stable CAD were divided into Group 1 (with arterial hypertension) and Group 2 (normotensives). Groups were subdivided into dippers and non-dippers. Holter monitoring was performed to assess the occurrence and circadian pattern of ischemic episodes. Time domain and frequency domain HRV analyses were performed to evaluate the autonomic activity. RESULTS The total number of ischemic episodes was similar in dippers and non-dippers. Non-dippers had a greater number of silent episodes and a different circadian pattern of ischemia with more night episodes. Among the time-domain HRV parameters, only SDNN was similar in dippers and non-dippers. Non-dippers had lower pNN50 and rMSSD-the parameters expressing parasympathetic activity. Differences between diurnal and nocturnal results of spectral HRV analysis were observed in dipper patients only. They presented an elevation of HF power and a decline of LF power at night. All differences between dippers and non-dippers were of similar significance in both hypertensives and normotensives. CONCLUSIONS A lack of a nocturnal fall in BP is present in normotensive and hypertensive patients with CAD. Non-dippers with CAD had silent and nighttime ischemia more often. They also had an abnormal pattern of autonomic activity with higher sympathetic and lower parasympathetic modulation.


Hypertension Research | 2010

Melatonin for nondippers with coronary artery disease: assessment of blood pressure profile and heart rate variability.

Tomasz Rechciński; Ewa Trzos; Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła; Małgorzata Kurpesa

The aim of this study was to assess the effects of 5 mg melatonin before sleep in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and with an abnormal circadian pattern of blood pressure (BP) on changes in circadian BP profile and heart rate variability (HRV). Sixty patients with CAD, nondippers aged 48–80 years (male 75%), were included. In addition to previous treatment, they were randomly allocated to melatonin or placebo. After 90 days, a second 24-h BP monitoring was carried out. Each patient had two sessions (before randomization and at the end of study) of 24-h ECG monitoring to assess the changes in HRV. Inclusion of melatonin led to BP pattern normalization in 35% of patients in the melatonin group and in 15% of controls (P=0.609). This effect was reached not only by a decrease in nighttime BP, but also by an increase in daytime BP (significant in the melatonin group). A nonoptimal effect for BP profile was observed in 12.5% of patients: extreme- or reverse dippers. In patients with conversion from nondippers to dippers (responders), an increase in standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals between initial and final HRV analyses was observed. Nonresponders represented an increase in the mean circadian heart rate. To avoid nonoptimal effects, the inclusion of melatonin in pharmacotherapy of patients with CAD should be based on monitoring of circadian BP profile, before and during treatment. As melatonin caused not only a nocturnal decrease in BP but also a daytime increase, it should not be recommended in patients with ‘high normal’ values of BP because of the danger of induction of arterial hypertension.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2007

Enlarged Left Atrium Is a Simple and Strong Predictor of Poor Prognosis in Patients after Myocardial Infarction

Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła; Jarosław Drożdż; Michał Plewka; Ewa Trzos; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Tomasz Rechciński; Aneta Rózga; Edyta Płońska-Gościniak; Jarosław D. Kasprzak

Background and Aim: Patients after myocardial infarction (MI) differ according to the extend of myocardial damage and prognosis. Diastolic function impairment may have great impact on development of heart failure and outcomes. We evaluated the prognostic value of various echocardiographic measurements in 18‐month and 3‐year observation after MI. Methods: 60 patients after MI (44 male, mean age 60 ± 11) were examined by transthoracic echocardiography with the assessment of wide spectrum of parameters. Mortality and combined end points (cardiac deaths and heart failure exacerbation) were assessed after 18‐month and 3‐year observation and groups with and without end points were compared. Optimal cutoff values were estimated by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis and resulting Kaplan–Meier curves were compared. Results and Conclusions: After 18 months, 11 deaths occurred and 20 subjects experienced hospitalization caused by heart failure exacerbation. Although the group with cardiac events showed a greater enlargement of the left ventricle and lower ejection fraction, the highest relative risk of poor outcome (RR = 5.0) was related to the left atrial enlargement above 44 mm. Although restrictive or pseudonormal inflows were connected with 2.1 relative risk of combined end point, all patients with E deceleration time ≤130 ms experienced heart failure exacerbation or death. Despite tissue Doppler and propagation parameters describing elevated end‐diastolic pressure differed between groups with various outcomes in multivariate analysis, only enlarged left atrium was an independent predictor for both combined end point and cardiac death. Further 3‐year follow‐up solely confirmed the role of above described predictors.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2013

Severe Obesity Impairs Systolic and Diastolic Heart Function – The Significance of Pulsed Tissue Doppler, Strain, and Strain Rate Parameters

Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Łukasz Chrzanowski; Anna Kapusta; Barbara Uznańska-Loch; Edyta Płońska; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Tomasz Rechciński; Ewa Trzos; Jarosław D. Kasprzak

We assessed the impact of morbid obesity on systolic and diastolic heart function in severely obese, but otherwise healthy subjects and age‐matched controls.


Archives of Medical Science | 2013

Echocardiographic indices of left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic function in hypertensive patients with preserved LVEF classified as dippers and non-dippers

Monika Możdżan; Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Ewa Trzos; Tomasz Rechciński; Marlena Broncel; Jarosław D. Kasprzak

Introduction Long-lasting arterial hypertension causes left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and impairs left ventricular diastolic function. Our aim was to compare echocardiographic parameters between hypertensive patients defined as dippers and non-dippers during ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring. Material and methods We analysed 61 consecutive subjects with treated hypertension undergoing 24-h BP monitoring and transthoracic echocardiographic examination and included in the study patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (EF ≥ 50%). Echocardiographic and arterial pressure parameters were compared between the group classified as dippers (n = 26, 57 ±13 years, 16 males) and non-dippers (n = 35, 60 ±12 years, 24 males) according to present or absent decrease of BP during the night > 10%. Echocardiographic data were compared between both groups and control subjects without hypertension. Results Dippers had lower average systolic, diastolic and mean arterial pressure during the night hours but did not differ according to the mean pressure calculated from a 24-hour period. All echocardiographic parameters were similar in dippers and non-dippers. All patients with arterial hypertension presented with larger dimension of both ventricles and left atrium, thicker left ventricular walls, higher LV mass and mass index and preserved EF and E/A ratio as compared with normotensive controls. Normal geometry, concentric remodelling and eccentric hypertrophy were similarly distributed in both groups. Concentric hypertrophy was more prevalent in non-dippers as compared to the dippers (71.4% vs. 38.5%, p < 0.043). Conclusions The concentric type of LVH is the prevalent pattern in non-dippers. Non-dipping blood pressure pattern may be responsible for the development of left ventricular concentric hypertrophy secondary to hypertension.


International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health | 2010

WORK-RELATED RISK FACTORS OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

Alicja Bortkiewicz; Elżbieta Gadzicka; Jadwiga Siedlecka; Agata Szyjkowska; Piotr Viebig; Jerzy Krzysztof Wranicz; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Michał Dziuba; Ewa Trzos; Teresa Makowiec-Dąbrowska

OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to find out which occupational factors account for the risk of the myocardial infarction. MATERIAL AND METHODS A questionnaire survey was performed during the period of one calendar year in all patients (1053 subjects, 692 men and 361 women) hospitalized at the Medical University of Łódź because of the first myocardial infarction. The questionnaire was prepared especially for the purpose of this study and consisted of two parts. The first part comprised: demographic data, health status at admittance, traditional risk factors for the ischaemic heart disease and was filled-in by physicians. Part II was done by occupational hygiene specialists and referred to education, job title and characteristics, employment data, self assessment of work-related and general stress, fatigue, socio-economic status, physical activity, alcohol intake, tobacco smoking, dietary habits. RESULTS Mean age in the study group was 59.9 ± 10.4 years (26-85 years), 58.7 ± 10.0 (26-84 years) for men and 62.3 ± 10.7 (32-85 years) for women, employment duration was 32.9±8.8 (4-65 years), for men 34.0 ± 8.6 (5-65 years), for women 30.7 ± 8.8 (4-60 years. Most of myocardial infarction cases both in the group of men and women were noted in the age interval 56-60 years, 22.3% vs. 17.4%, respectively. The majority of examined men were farmers, low and middle management and self-employed workers. Among women prevailed clerks, seamstresses and farmers. The most frequent occupational risk factors were: work-related stress, experienced by 54.2% of the examined subjects, occupational noise (45,5%), dust (41,7%) and various chemical factors (33%). A majority of the study group (76.5% women and 54.4% men) linked the cardiac infarction with stress, while 39.1% men vs. 16.5% women correlated it with physical effort. CONCLUSION Our studies indicate that, among a wide spectrum of occupational factors, stress, noise and fine particulate dust are major contributors to the increased risk of myocardial infarction.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2007

Assessment of Mitral Inflow During Standardized Valsalva Maneuver in Stratification of Diastolic Function

Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Jarosław Drożdż; Michał Plewka; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła; Jarosław D. Kasprzak

Background: We assessed the changes of mitral inflow during Valsalva maneuver (VM) in patients with different stages of left ventricular dysfunction and evaluated their value for the differentiation between normal and pseudonormal filling pattern. Methods: A total of 190 patients (120 with coronary artery disease, and 70 healthy subjects) were examined by transthoracic echocardiography. Mitral E/A ratio, early wave deceleration time (Edt), and pulmonary vein flow (especially atrial reversal parameters (Ar)), were used for the initial stratification to normal, delayed relaxation, pseudonormal, and restrictive profiles. Changes of mitral inflow during VM were compared between 54 normal (N) and 15 pseudonormal (PN). Results: During VM, a similar decrease in early wave peak velocity (–30 ± 18 vs –35 ± 17 cm/sec), peak velocity of atrial wave (–6 ± 16 vs –8 ± 17 cm/sec), and E/A ratio (–0.4 ± 0.4 vs –0.4 ± 0.4) was observed in both groups. Only two filling variables, related to atrial phase of inflow, changed in the opposite direction. In normal pattern, the duration and velocity‐time integral of atrial wave diminished during VM as opposed to pseudonormal subjects (ΔAt –7 ± 39 vs 20 ± 44 msec; P < 0.05 and ΔA vti –0.7±1.8 vs 0.4±2 cm; P < 0.05). Increase in peak atrial velocity and marked decrease in E/A ratio during VM were specific for the restrictive group. Conclusions: Changes of mitral inflow during VM have a moderate diagnostic value for the differentiation of normal and pseudonormal pattern. Increased duration of atrial phase but not increase in atrial velocity allowed the diagnosis of pseudonormalization.


Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2017

2017 ISHNE-HRS expert consensus statement on ambulatory ECG and external cardiac monitoring/telemetry

Jonathan S. Steinberg; Niraj Varma; Iwona Cygankiewicz; Peter F. Aziz; Paweł Balsam; Adrian Baranchuk; Daniel J. Cantillon; Polychronis Dilaveris; Sergio Dubner; Nabil El-Sherif; Jaroslaw Krol; Małgorzata Kurpesa; Maria Teresa La Rovere; S. Suave Lobodzinski; Emanuela T. Locati; Suneet Mittal; Brian Olshansky; Ewa Piotrowicz; Leslie A. Saxon; Peter H. Stone; Larisa G. Tereshchenko; Gioia Turitto; Neil J. Wimmer; Richard L. Verrier; Wojciech Zareba; Ryszard Piotrowicz

Ambulatory ECG (AECG) is very commonly employed in a variety of clinical contexts to detect cardiac arrhythmias and/or arrhythmia patterns which are not readily obtained from the standard ECG. Accurate and timely characterization of arrhythmias is crucial to direct therapies that can have an important impact on diagnosis, prognosis or patient symptom status. The rhythm information derived from the large variety of AECG recording systems can often lead to appropriate and patient‐specific medical and interventional management. The details in this document provide background and framework from which to apply AECG techniques in clinical practice, as well as clinical research.


Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2011

The Prevalence and the Prognostic Value of Microvolt T‐Wave Alternans in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Ewa Trzos; Jarosław D. Kasprzak; Maria Krzemińska-Pakuła; Tomasz Rechciński; Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik; Barbara Uznańska; Tomasz Rudziński; Małgorzata Kurpesa

Background: Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (nVT) may have ominous implications for patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The microvolt T‐wave alternans (TWA) has been proposed as a noninvasive tool‐identifying patients at risk of sudden cardiac death and ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF). The aim of the study was to determine the significance of TWA in predicting nVT episodes and compare how other electrocardiographic parameters can predict the occurrence of nVT.


Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2010

Repeatability of Sleep Apnea Detection in 48-Hour Holter ECG Monitoring

Barbara Uznańska; Ewa Trzos; Tomasz Rechciński; Jarosław D. Kasprzak; Małgorzata Kurpesa

Background: There is a significant relationship between obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and cardiovascular diseases. Reliability of new methods evaluating apnea in Holter ECG monitoring is still the matter of investigators’ studies.

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Ewa Trzos

Medical University of Łódź

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Tomasz Rechciński

Medical University of Łódź

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Jarosław D. Kasprzak

Medical University of Łódź

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Michał Plewka

Medical University of Łódź

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Jarosław Drożdż

Medical University of Łódź

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