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Dive into the research topics where Mark Hünlich is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Hünlich.


Eurointervention | 2013

Acute outcomes after MitraClip therapy in highly aged patients: results from the German TRAnscatheter Mitral valve Interventions (TRAMI) Registry.

Wolfgang Schillinger; Mark Hünlich; Stephan Baldus; Taoufik Ouarrak; Peter Boekstegers; Ulrich Hink; Christian Butter; Raffi Bekeredjian; Björn Plicht; Horst Sievert; Joachim Schofer; Jochen Senges; Thomas Meinertz; Gerd Hasenfuß

AIMS The influence of age on baseline demographics and outcomes of patients selected for MitraClip has not been previously investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS Baseline demographics and acute outcomes in 1,064 patients from the German TRAMI registry were stratified by age (525 patients ≥76 years and 539 patients <76 years). In elderly patients, logistic EuroSCORE was higher (25[15-40]% vs. 18[10-31]%, p<0.0001) and the proportion of women was greater (47.2% vs. 29.3%, p<0.0001). Elderly patients were more likely to have preserved left ventricular ejection fraction >50% (40.1% vs. 21.8%, p<0.0001) and degenerative mitral regurgitation (DMR, 35.3% vs. 25.6%, p<0.01). Age was the most frequent reason for non-surgical treatment in the elderly (69.4% vs. 36.1%, p<0.0001). The intrahospital MACCE (death, myocardial infarction, stroke) was low in both groups (3.5% vs. 3.4%, p=0.93) and the proportion of non-severe mitral regurgitation at discharge was similar (95.8% vs. 96.4%, p=0.73). A logistic regression model did not reveal any significant impact of age on acute efficacy and safety of MitraClip therapy. In both groups, the majority of patients were discharged home (81.8% vs. 86.2%, p=0.06). CONCLUSIONS Elderly and younger patients have similar benefits from MitraClip therapy. Age was the most frequent cause for denying surgery in elderly patients.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2011

Impact of the learning curve on outcomes after percutaneous mitral valve repair with MitraClip® and lessons learned after the first 75 consecutive patients

Wolfgang Schillinger; Thomas Athanasiou; Ninja Weicken; Lars Berg; Tobias Tichelbäcker; Miriam Puls; Mark Hünlich; Rolf Wachter; Hans-Joachim Helms; Ralf Seipelt; Friedrich A. Schöndube; Gerd Hasenfuss

Mitral valve regurgitation plays a significant role in the aetiology and course of heart failure. We investigated the impact of the learning curve on outcomes after percutaneous mitral valve repair with MitraClip.


Eurointervention | 2014

Impact of frailty on short- and long-term morbidity and mortality after transcatheter aortic valve implantation: risk assessment by Katz Index of activities of daily living.

Miriam Puls; Bettina Sobisiak; Annalen Bleckmann; Claudius Jacobshagen; Bernhard C. Danner; Mark Hünlich; Tim Beißbarth; Friedrich A. Schöndube; Gerd Hasenfuß; Ralf Seipelt; Wolfgang Schillinger

AIMS Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) represents a less invasive treatment option for elderly patients. Therefore, we aimed to determine the impact of frailty measured by the Katz Index of activities of daily living (ADL) on short- and long-term mortality after TAVI. METHODS AND RESULTS Our study included 300 consecutive patients (mean age, 82±5 years) who had undergone TAVI at our institution (158 transapical, 142 transfemoral procedures). At baseline, 144 patients were impaired in at least one ADL and therefore defined as frail (Katz Index <6). Regarding in-hospital outcome, all serious complications except for stage 3 acute kidney injury were equally distributed in both groups, but early mortality was significantly higher in frail persons (5.5% vs. 1.3%, p=0.04 for immediate procedural mortality; 17% vs. 5.8%, p=0.002 for 30-day mortality; and 23% vs. 6.4%, p<0.0001 for procedural mortality). The risk-score-based 30-day mortality estimates (29% vs. 24% for log. EuroSCORE I, 9.5% vs. 7.5% for EuroSCORE II, and 8.8% vs. 5.9% for STS score) reflected neither the observed 30-day mortality in both groups nor the threefold risk elevation in frail patients. In contrast, the Katz Index <6 was identified as a significant independent predictor of long-term all-cause mortality by multivariate analysis (HR 2.67 [95% CI: 1.7-4.3], p<0.0001). During follow-up (median observation period 537 days) 56% of frail vs. 24% of non-frail patients died. CONCLUSIONS Frailty status measured by the Katz Index represents a powerful predictor of adverse early and late outcome after TAVI, whereas commonly used risk scores lack calibration and discrimination in a TAVI-specific patient cohort. Therefore, we propose the incorporation of this simple and reproducible measure into pre-TAVI risk assessment.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011

Overexpression of CaMKIIδc in RyR2R4496C+/- knock-in mice leads to altered intracellular Ca2+ handling and increased mortality.

Nataliya Dybkova; Simon Sedej; Carlo Napolitano; Stefan Neef; Adam G. Rokita; Mark Hünlich; Joan Heller Brown; Jens Kockskämper; Silvia G. Priori; Burkert Pieske; Lars S. Maier

OBJECTIVES We investigated whether increased Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII) activity aggravates defective excitation-contraction coupling and proarrhythmic activity in mice expressing R4496C mutated cardiac ryanodine receptors (RyR2). BACKGROUND RyR2 dysfunction is associated with arrhythmic events in inherited and acquired cardiac disease. METHODS CaMKIIδc transgenic mice were crossbred with RyR2(R4496C+/-) knock-in mice. RESULTS Heart weight-to-body weight ratio in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) and CaMKIIδc mice was similarly increased approximately 3-fold versus wild-type mice (p < 0.05). Echocardiographic data showed comparable cardiac dilation and impaired contractility in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) and CaMKIIδc mice. Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) content in isolated myocytes was decreased to a similar extent in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) and CaMKIIδc mice. However, relaxation parameters and Ca(2+) decay at 1 Hz were prolonged significantly in CaMKIIδc mice versus CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) mice. Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) spark frequency and characteristics indicated increased sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) leak in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) versus CaMKIIδc myocytes (p < 0.05), most likely because of increased RyR2 phosphorylation. Delayed afterdepolarizations were significantly more frequent with increased amplitudes in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) versus CaMKIIδc mice. Increased arrhythmias in vivo (67% vs. 25%; p < 0.05) may explain the increased mortality in CaMKIIδc/RyR2(R4496C) mice, which died prematurely with only 30% alive (vs. 60% for CaMKIIδc, p < 0.05) after 14 weeks. CONCLUSIONS CaMKIIδc overexpression in RyR2(R4496C+/-) knock-in mice increases the propensity toward triggered arrhythmias, which may impair survival. CaMKII contributes to further destabilization of a mutated RyR2 receptor.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2012

Targeted disruption of Hspa4 gene leads to cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis.

Belal A. Mohamed; Amal Z. Barakat; Wolfram-Hubertus Zimmermann; Reginald E. Bittner; Christian Mühlfeld; Mark Hünlich; Wolfgang Engel; Lars S. Maier; Ibrahim M. Adham

Failure of molecular chaperones to direct the correct folding of newly synthesized proteins leads to the accumulation of misfolded proteins in cells. HSPA4 is a member of the heat shock protein 110 family (HSP110) that acts as a nucleotide exchange factor of HSP70 chaperones. We found that the expression of HSPA4 is upregulated in murine hearts subjected to pressure overload and in failing human hearts. To investigate the cardiac function of HSPA4, Hspa4 knockout (KO) mice were generated and exhibited cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis. Hspa4 KO hearts were characterized by a significant increase in heart weight/body weight ratio, elevated expression of hypertrophic and fibrotic gene markers, and concentric hypertrophy with preserved contractile function. In response to pressure overload, cardiac hypertrophy and remodeling were further aggravated in the Hspa4 KO compared to wild type (WT) mice. Cardiac hypertrophy in Hspa4 KO hearts was associated with enhanced activation of gp130-STAT3, CaMKII, and calcineurin-NFAT signaling. Protein blot and immunofluorescent analyses showed a significant accumulation of polyubiquitinated proteins in cardiac cells of Hspa4 KO mice. These results suggest that the myocardial remodeling of Hspa4 KO mice is due to accumulation of misfolded proteins resulting from impaired chaperone activity. Further analyses revealed a significant increase in cross sectional area of cardiomyocytes, and in expression levels of hypertrophic markers in cultured neonatal Hspa4 KO cardiomyocytes suggesting that the hypertrophy of mutant mice was a result of primary defects in cardiomyocytes. Gene expression profile in hearts of 3.5-week-old mice revealed a differentially expressed gene sets related to ion channels, muscle-specific contractile proteins and stress response. Taken together, our in vivo data demonstrate that Hspa4 gene ablation results in cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis, possibly, through its role in protein quality control mechanism.


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2015

Rationale and Design of the Reduce Elevated Left Atrial Pressure in Patients With Heart Failure (Reduce LAP-HF) Trial

Gerd Hasenfuss; Finn Gustafsson; David M. Kaye; Sanjiv J. Shah; Dan Burkhoff; Marie-Christine Reymond; Jan Komtebedde; Mark Hünlich

OBJECTIVE Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is characterized by elevated left atrial pressure during rest and/or exercise. The Reduce LAP-HF (Reduce Elevated Left Atrial Pressure in Patients With Heart Failure) trial will evaluate the safety and performance of the Interatrial Shunt Device (IASD) System II, designed to directly reduce elevated left atrial pressure, in patients with HFpEF. METHODS The Reduce LAP-HF Trial is a prospective, nonrandomized, open-label trial to evaluate a novel device that creates a small permanent shunt at the level of the atria. A minimum of 60 patients with ejection fraction ≥40% and New York Heart Association functional class III or IV heart failure with a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) ≥15 mm Hg at rest or ≥25 mm Hg during supine bike exercise will be implanted with an IASD System II, and followed for 6 months to assess the primary and secondary end points. Safety and standard clinical follow-up will continue through 3 years after implantation. Primary outcome measures for safety are periprocedural and 6-month major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE) and systemic embolic events (excluding pulmonary thromboembolism). MACCE include death, stroke, myocardial infarction, or requirement of implant removal. Primary outcome measures for device performance include success of device implantation, reduction of PCWP at rest and during exercise, and demonstration of left-to-right flow through the device. Key secondary end points include exercise tolerance, quality of life, and the incidence of heart failure hospitalization. CONCLUSION Reduce LAP-HF is the first trial intended to lower left atrial pressure in HFpEF by means of creating a permanent shunt through the atrial septum with the use of a device. Although the trial is primarily designed to study safety and device performance, we also test the pathophysiologic hypothesis that reduction of left atrial pressure will improve symptoms and quality of life in patients with HFpEF.


Clinical Research in Cardiology | 2009

A rare cause of sudden cardiac arrest: primary cardiac lymphoma

Claudia Dellas; Björn Chapuy; Stefan Schweyer; Gerd Hasenfuß; Mark Hünlich

Sirs, Sudden cardiac arrest is a leading cause of death in developed nations and about 40% of victims present with ventricular fibrillation at the time of first heart rhythm analysis [4]. Acute myocardial ischemia is generally considered to be the most common factor triggering fatal arrhythmias [5]. We report a rare case of sudden cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation in a patient in whom diagnostic follow-up led to the diagnosis of a primary cardiac lymphoma (PCL).


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Cardiomyocyte proliferation prevents failure in pressure overload but not volume overload

Karl Toischer; Wuqiang Zhu; Mark Hünlich; Belal A. Mohamed; Sara Khadjeh; Sean Reuter; Katrin Schäfer; Deepak Ramanujam; Stefan Engelhardt; Loren J. Field; Gerd Hasenfuss

Induction of the cell cycle is emerging as an intervention to treat heart failure. Here, we tested the hypothesis that enhanced cardiomyocyte renewal in transgenic mice expressing cyclin D2 would be beneficial during hemodynamic overload. We induced pressure overload by transthoracic aortic constriction (TAC) or volume overload by aortocaval shunt in cyclin D2–expressing and WT mice. Although cyclin D2 expression dramatically improved survival following TAC, it did not confer a survival advantage to mice following aortocaval shunt. Cardiac function decreased following TAC in WT mice, but was preserved in cyclin D2–expressing mice. On the other hand, cardiac structure and function were compromised in response to aortocaval shunt in both WT and cyclin D2–expressing mice. The preserved function and improved survival in cyclin D2–expressing mice after TAC was associated with an approximately 50% increase in cardiomyocyte number and exaggerated cardiac hypertrophy, as indicated by increased septum thickness. Aortocaval shunt did not further impact cardiomyocyte number in mice expressing cyclin D2. Following TAC, cyclin D2 expression attenuated cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, reduced cardiomyocyte apoptosis, fibrosis, calcium/calmodulin–dependent protein kinase II&dgr; phosphorylation, brain natriuretic peptide expression, and sustained capillarization. Thus, we show that cyclin D2–induced cardiomyocyte renewal reduced myocardial remodeling and dysfunction after pressure overload but not after volume overload.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2017

Mid- to long-term outcome of patients treated with everolimus-eluting bioresorbable vascular scaffolds: Data of the BVS registry Göttingen predominantly from ACS patients

Kristian Hellenkamp; Alexander Becker; Yannick D. Gabriel; Gerd Hasenfuß; Mark Hünlich; Claudius Jacobshagen; Wolfgang Schillinger; Marco R. Schroeter

BACKGROUND Bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) are widely used in routine clinical practice. While previous studies reported acceptable short- to midterm outcome after BVS implantation, data on longer-term outcome are rare. METHODS Patients treated with at least one Absorb®-BVS were consecutively enrolled. Follow-up data were assessed after 834.0 [769.0-1026.0] days. The primary device-oriented composite endpoint (DOCE) was defined as cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI) and/or target lesion revascularization (TLR). RESULTS Between 2012 and 2014, 195 patients were included into study analysis. Overall, 244 BVS were implanted. Mean patient age was 64.0[54.3-74.0] years. Three-quarter of patients had an ACS; of those 42.9% had ST-elevation-MI and 40.8% had non-ST-elevation-MI. DOCE occurred in 3.1%, 6.7%, 11.8% and 15.4% of patients during hospital stay, within 6-months, 18-months or during the complete follow-up period, respectively. In those patients, median time until DOCE was 211.5[43.25-567.25] days. In 11 (36.7%) patients DOCE occurred after >12months. Using univariable analysis, bifurcation stenting was associated with a hazard ratio (HR) of 11.8[2.38-58.57] for TLR (p=0.002) and 2.1[1.02-4.49] for DOCE (p=0.045). Similarly, in ACS patients, bifurcation stenting was associated with an increased risk for TLR (HR=10.4[2.01-53.56]; p=0.005) and for DOCE (HR=2.4[1.09-5.32]; p=0.029) and in multivariable analysis, it remained an independent predictor of DOCE (HR=3.0; p=0.018). CONCLUSIONS Although, the rates of (potentially) device-related complications following BVS implantation are acceptable, they are nonetheless not negligible. Interestingly, they did not decline over time. Bifurcation stenting could be found as relevant procedure-related predictor of DOCE, especially in ACS patients. Randomized trials are warranted to confirm these findings.


Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift | 2014

Flottierende rechtskardiale Transit-Thromben bei akuter Lungenembolie

Miriam Puls; Mark Hünlich; Wolfgang Schillinger

BACKGROUND There is little published evidence on the treatment of mobile masses in the right heart. We report the clinical courses of three consecutive patients presenting with acute pulmonary embolism and mobile masses in the right heart. HISTORY AND ADMISSION FINDINGS Three women, aged 75, 72 and 52 years, were hospitalized within three months because of dyspnea and suspected pulmonary embolism. INVESTIGATIONS Transthoracic echocardiography revealed right ventricular dysfunction and highly mobile masses, which were considered as in-transit right heart thrombi in all cases. TREATMENT AND COURSE All patients received immediate thrombolytic therapy (alteplase). No bleeding complications occurred. Thrombolysis was successful in the first two cases. However, the mass in the right ventricle did not disappear after thrombolysis in the third case and was removed surgically later on. The definite histological diagnosis was a myxoma of the right ventricle. CONCLUSION According to literature, in-transit right heart thrombi are a potentially life-threatening complication of pulmonary embolism even in stable patients. Immediate thrombolysis is a valid therapeutic option and was successfully performed in 2 of our 3 patients. However, as case 3 suggests, differential diagnoses concerning mobile masses in the right heart, i. e. cardiac myxoma, should be taken into account and excluded by thoracic computed tomography .

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Gerd Hasenfuss

University of Göttingen

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Miriam Puls

University of Göttingen

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Gerd Hasenfuß

University of Göttingen

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Lars S. Maier

University of Regensburg

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Ralf Seipelt

University of Göttingen

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Rolf Wachter

University of Göttingen

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Lars Berg

University of Göttingen

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