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Featured researches published by Nuno Cardim.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2011

Current and evolving echocardiographic techniques for the quantitative evaluation of cardiac mechanics: ASE/EAE consensus statement on methodology and indications: Endorsed by the Japanese Society of Echocardiography

Victor Mor-Avi; Roberto M. Lang; Luigi P. Badano; Marek Belohlavek; Nuno Cardim; Geneviève Derumeaux; Maurizio Galderisi; Thomas H. Marwick; Sherif F. Nagueh; Partho P. Sengupta; Rosa Sicari; Otto A. Smiseth; Beverly Smulevitz; Masaaki Takeuchi; James D. Thomas; Mani A. Vannan; Jens Uwe Voigt; Jose Luis Zamorano

Echocardiographic imaging is ideally suited for the evaluation of cardiac mechanics because of its intrinsically dynamic nature. Because for decades, echocardiography has been the only imaging modality that allows dynamic imaging of the heart, it is only natural that new, increasingly automated techniques for sophisticated analysis of cardiac mechanics have been driven by researchers and manufacturers of ultrasound imaging equipment.Several such technique shave emerged over the past decades to address the issue of readers experience and inter measurement variability in interpretation.Some were widely embraced by echocardiographers around the world and became part of the clinical routine,whereas others remained limited to research and exploration of new clinical applications.Two such techniques have dominated the research arena of echocardiography: (1) Doppler based tissue velocity measurements,frequently referred to as tissue Doppler or myocardial Doppler, and (2) speckle tracking on the basis of displacement measurements.Both types of measurements lend themselves to the derivation of multiple parameters of myocardial function. The goal of this document is to focus on the currently available techniques that allow quantitative assessment of myocardial function via image-based analysis of local myocardial dynamics, including Doppler tissue imaging and speckle-tracking echocardiography, as well as integrated backscatter analysis. This document describes the current and potential clinical applications of these techniques and their strengths and weaknesses,briefly surveys a selection of the relevant published literature while highlighting normal and abnormal findings in the context of different cardiovascular pathologies, and summarizes the unresolved issues, future research priorities, and recommended indications for clinical use.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2011

Current and Evolving Echocardiographic Techniques for the Quantitative Evaluation of Cardiac Mechanics: ASE/EAE Consensus Statement on Methodology and Indications Endorsed by the Japanese Society of Echocardiography

Victor Mor-Avi; Roberto M. Lang; Luigi P. Badano; Marek Belohlavek; Nuno Cardim; Geneviève Derumeaux; Maurizio Galderisi; Thomas H. Marwick; Sherif F. Nagueh; Partho P. Sengupta; Rosa Sicari; Otto A. Smiseth; Beverly Smulevitz; Masaaki Takeuchi; James D. Thomas; Mani A. Vannan; Jens Uwe Voigt; Jose Luis Zamorano

Echocardiographic imaging is ideally suited for the evaluation of cardiac mechanics because of its intrinsically dynamic nature. Because for decades, echocardiography has been the only imaging modality that allows dynamic imaging of the heart, it is only natural that new, increasingly automated techniques for sophisticated analysis of cardiac mechanics have been driven by researchers and manufacturers of ultrasound imaging equipment. Several such techniques have emerged over the past decades to address the issue of readers experience and inter-measurement variability in interpretation. Some were widely embraced by echocardiographers around the world and became part of the clinical routine, whereas others remained limited to research and exploration of new clinical applications. Two such techniques have dominated the research arena of echocardiography: (1) Doppler-based tissue velocity measurements, frequently referred to as tissue Doppler or myocardial Doppler, and (2) speckle tracking on the basis of displacement measurements. Both types of measurements lend themselves to the derivation of multiple parameters of myocardial function. The goal of this document is to focus on the currently available techniques that allow quantitative assessment of myocardial function via image-based analysis of local myocardial dynamics, including Doppler tissue imaging and speckle-tracking echocardiography, as well as integrated back- scatter analysis. This document describes the current and potential clinical applications of these techniques and their strengths and weaknesses, briefly surveys a selection of the relevant published literature while highlighting normal and abnormal findings in the context of different cardiovascular pathologies, and summarizes the unresolved issues, future research priorities, and recommended indications for clinical use.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2014

Echocardiographic reference ranges for normal cardiac chamber size: results from the NORRE study.

Seisyou Kou; Luis Caballero; Raluca Dulgheru; Damien Voilliot; Carla Sousa; George Kacharava; George Athanassopoulos; Daniele Barone; Monica Baroni; Nuno Cardim; Jose Juan Gomez de Diego; Andreas Hagendorff; Christine Henri; Krasimira Hristova; Teresa Lopez; Julien Magne; Gonzalo de la Morena; Bogdan A. Popescu; Martin Penicka; Tolga Ozyigit; Jose David Rodrigo Carbonero; Alessandro Salustri; Nico Van de Veire; Ralph Stephan von Bardeleben; Dragos Vinereanu; Jens-Uwe Voigt; Jose Luis Zamorano; Erwan Donal; Roberto M. Lang; Luigi P. Badano

AIMS Availability of normative reference values for cardiac chamber quantitation is a prerequisite for accurate clinical application of echocardiography. In this study, we report normal reference ranges for cardiac chambers size obtained in a large group of healthy volunteers accounting for gender and age. Echocardiographic data were acquired using state-of-the-art cardiac ultrasound equipment following chamber quantitation protocols approved by the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging. METHODS A total of 734 (mean age: 45.8 ± 13.3 years) healthy volunteers (320 men and 414 women) were enrolled at 22 collaborating institutions of the Normal Reference Ranges for Echocardiography (NORRE) study. A comprehensive echocardiographic examination was performed on all subjects following pre-defined protocols. There were no gender differences in age or cholesterol levels. Compared with men, women had significantly smaller body surface areas, and lower blood pressure. Quality of echocardiographic data sets was good to excellent in the majority of patients. Upper and lower reference limits were higher in men than in women. The reference values varied with age. These age-related changes persisted for most parameters after normalization for the body surface area. CONCLUSION The NORRE study provides useful two-dimensional echocardiographic reference ranges for cardiac chamber quantification. These data highlight the need for body size normalization that should be performed together with age-and gender-specific assessment for the most echocardiographic parameters.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2011

Usefulness of a New Miniaturized Echocardiographic System in Outpatient Cardiology Consultations as an Extension of Physical Examination

Nuno Cardim; Covadonga Fernández Golfín; Daniel Ferreira; Adalia Aubele; Júlia Toste; Miguel Angel Cobos; Vanda Carmelo; Igor Nunes; António G. Oliveira; José Zamorano

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to assess the usefulness of a new miniaturized echocardiographic system (MS) to perform bedside echocardiography in initial outpatient cardiology consultations, in addition to physical examination. METHODS One hundred eighty-nine patients referred for initial cardiology outpatient consultations at two tertiary hospitals in two countries were studied. Each patient was submitted to physical examination followed by MS assessment. Scanning time, the number of examinations with abnormal results after physical examination and the MS, and the information obtained by physical examination alone and followed by the MS (in terms of its importance in reaching a diagnosis, in the necessity of performing routine echocardiography, and in the decision to release the patient from the outpatient clinic) were assessed. RESULTS The scanning time with the MS was 180 ± 86 seconds. Its use after physical examination led to diagnoses in 141 patients (74.6%) and to an additional 37 patients (19.6%) being released from the outpatient clinic. After physical examination followed by MS assessment, only 64 patients (33.9%) were sent to the echocardiography lab. The MS modified the decision of whether to send a patient to the echocardiography lab, with referral determined by the MS in 27 patients (14.3%) and no referral determined by the MS in 58 patients (30.7%). CONCLUSIONS The new MS caused a negligible increase in the duration of consultations. It showed additive clinical value over physical examination, increasing the number of diagnoses, reducing the use of unnecessary routine echocardiography, increasing the number of adequate echocardiographic studies, and determining a large number of releases from the outpatient clinic.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2015

Role of multimodality cardiac imaging in the management of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: an expert consensus of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging Endorsed by the Saudi Heart Association.

Nuno Cardim; Maurizio Galderisi; Thor Edvardsen; Sven Plein; Bogdan A. Popescu; Antonello D'Andrea; Oliver Bruder; Bernard Cosyns; Laurent Davin; Erwan Donal; António Freitas; Gilbert Habib; Anastasia Kitsiou; Steffen E. Petersen; Stephen Schroeder; Patrizio Lancellotti; Paolo G. Camici; Raluca Dulgheru; Andreas Hagendorff; Massimo Lombardi; Denisa Muraru; Rosa Sicari

Taking into account the complexity and limitations of clinical assessment in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), imaging techniques play an essential role in the evaluation of patients with this disease. Thus, in HCM patients, imaging provides solutions for most clinical needs, from diagnosis to prognosis and risk stratification, from anatomical and functional assessment to ischaemia detection, from metabolic evaluation to monitoring of treatment modalities, from staging and clinical profiles to follow-up, and from family screening and preclinical diagnosis to differential diagnosis. Accordingly, a multimodality imaging (MMI) approach (including echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance, cardiac computed tomography, and cardiac nuclear imaging) is encouraged in the assessment of these patients. The choice of which technique to use should be based on a broad perspective and expert knowledge of what each technique has to offer, including its specific advantages and disadvantages. Experts in different imaging techniques should collaborate and the different methods should be seen as complementary, not as competitors. Each test must be selected in an integrated and rational way in order to provide clear answers to specific clinical questions and problems, trying to avoid redundant and duplicated information, taking into account its availability, benefits, risks, and cost.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2008

Beyond the sarcomere: CSRP3 mutations cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Christian Geier; Katja Gehmlich; Elisabeth Ehler; Sabine Hassfeld; Andreas Perrot; Katrin Hayess; Nuno Cardim; Katrin Wenzel; Bettina Erdmann; Florian Krackhardt; Maximilian G. Posch; Karl Josef Osterziel; Angelika Bublak; Herbert Nägele; T. Scheffold; Rainer Dietz; Kenneth R. Chien; Simone Spuler; Dieter O. Fürst; Peter Nürnberg; Cemil Özcelik

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a frequent genetic cardiac disease and the most common cause of sudden cardiac death in young individuals. Most of the currently known HCM disease genes encode sarcomeric proteins. Previous studies have shown an association between CSRP3 missense mutations and either dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) or HCM, but all these studies were unable to provide comprehensive genetic evidence for a causative role of CSRP3 mutations. We used linkage analysis and identified a CSRP3 missense mutation in a large German family affected by HCM. We confirmed CSRP3 as an HCM disease gene. Furthermore, CSRP3 missense mutations segregating with HCM were identified in four other families. We used a newly designed monoclonal antibody to show that muscle LIM protein (MLP), the protein encoded by CSRP3, is mainly a cytosolic component of cardiomyocytes and not tightly anchored to sarcomeric structures. Our functional data from both in vitro and in vivo analyses suggest that at least one of MLPs mutated forms seems to be destabilized in the heart of HCM patients harbouring a CSRP3 missense mutation. We also present evidence for mild skeletal muscle disease in affected persons. Our results support the view that HCM is not exclusively a sarcomeric disease and also suggest that impaired mechano-sensory stress signalling might be involved in the pathogenesis of HCM.


European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care | 2014

The use of echocardiography in acute cardiovascular care: recommendations of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging and the Acute Cardiovascular Care Association.

Patrizio Lancellotti; Susanna Price; Thor Edvardsen; Bernard Cosyns; Aleksandar Neskovic; Raluca Dulgheru; Frank A. Flachskampf; Christian Hassager; Agnes Pasquet; Luna Gargani; Maurizio Galderisi; Nuno Cardim; Kristina H. Haugaa; Arnaud Ancion; Jose-Luis Zamorano; Erwan Donal; Héctor Bueno; Gilbert Habib

Echocardiography is one of the most powerful diagnostic and monitoring tools available to the modern emergency/critical care practitioner. Currently, there is a lack of specific European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging/Acute Cardiovascular Care Association recommendations for the use of echocardiography in acute cardiovascular care. In this document, we describe the practical applications of echocardiography in patients with acute cardiac conditions, in particular with acute chest pain, acute heart failure, suspected cardiac tamponade, complications of myocardial infarction, acute valvular heart disease including endocarditis, acute disease of the ascending aorta and post-intervention complications. Specific issues regarding echocardiography in other acute cardiac care scenarios are also described.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Systematic analysis of the regulatory and essential myosin light chain genes: genetic variants and mutations in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Zhyldyz Kabaeva; Andreas Perrot; Bastian Wolter; Rainer Dietz; Nuno Cardim; Correia Jm; Schulte Hd; Almaz Aldashev; Mirsaid M. Mirrakhimov; Karl Josef Osterziel

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) can be caused by mutations in genes encoding for the ventricular myosin essential and regulatory light chains. In contrast to other HCM disease genes, only a few studies describing disease-associated mutations in the myosin light chain genes have been published. Therefore, we aimed to conduct a systematic screening for mutations in the ventricular myosin light chain genes in a group of clinically well-characterised HCM patients. Further, we assessed whether the detected mutations are associated with malignant or benign phenotype in the respective families. We analysed 186 unrelated individuals with HCM for the human ventricular myosin regulatory (MYL2) and essential light chain genes (MYL3) using polymerase chain reaction, single strand conformation polymorphism analysis and automated sequencing. We found eight single nucleotide polymorphisms in exonic and adjacent intronic regions of MYL2 and MYL3. Two MYL2 missense mutations were identified in two Caucasian families while no mutation was found in MYL3. The mutation Glu22Lys was associated with moderate septal hypertrophy, a late onset of clinical manifestation, and benign disease course and prognosis. The mutation Arg58Gln showed also moderate septal hypertrophy, but, in contrast, it was associated with an early onset of clinical manifestation and premature sudden cardiac death. In conclusion, myosin light chain mutations are a very rare cause of HCM responsible for about 1% of cases. Mutations in MYL2 could be associated with both benign and malignant HCM phenotype.


Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2008

Evaluation of left ventricular outflow tract gradient during treadmill exercise and in recovery period in orthostatic position, in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Rita Miranda; Carlos Cotrim; Nuno Cardim; Sofia Almeida; Luís Pires Lopes; Maria José Loureiro; Simões O; Pedro Cordeiro; Paula Fazendas; Isabel João; Manuel Carrageta

Background-Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction is an independent predictor of adverse outcome in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The classical quantification of intraventricular obstruction is performed in resting conditions in supine position, but this assessment does not reflect what happens in HCM patients (pts) in their daily activities, neither during effort nor during orthostatic recovery.Aim-To assess intraventricular gradients with echocardiography during treadmill exercise and in the recovery period in upright position, in HCM pts.Methods-We studied 17 HCM pts (9 males, mean age 53 ± 16 years, 11 with obstructive HCM). Each pt had 2 echocardiographic evaluations at rest (left lateral decubitus (LLD) and orthostatic position). The pts then underwent a treadmill exercise test and intraventricular gradients were measured at peak exercise and during recovery in orthostatic position.Results-3 pts with non-obstructive HCM at rest developed intraventricular gradients during exercise. 1 pt developed this gradient only during orthostatic recovery. The mean intraventricular gradient in LLD was 49 ± 24 mmHg; in orthostatic position was 62 ± 29 mmHg (p < 0.001 versus in LLD); at peak exercise was 83 ± 35 mmHg (p < 0.001 versus supine rest); during recovery it was 96 ± 35 mmHg (p < 0.001 versus peak exercise)Conclusion-In HCM pts the intraventricular gradient increases in orthostatic position, increases significantly during treadmill exercise and continues increasing in the recovery period in orthostatic position. This type of evaluation can help us to better understand the physiopathology, the symptoms and the efficacy of different therapeutic modalities in this disease and should be routinely used in the assessment of HCM pts.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2015

The use of echocardiography in acute cardiovascular care: Recommendations of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging and the Acute Cardiovascular Care Association

Patrizio Lancellotti; Susanna Price; Thor Edvardsen; Bernard Cosyns; Aleksandar Neskovic; Raluca Dulgheru; Frank A. Flachskampf; Christian Hassager; Agnes Pasquet; Luna Gargani; Maurizio Galderisi; Nuno Cardim; Kristina H. Haugaa; Arnaud Ancion; Jose-Luis Zamorano; Erwan Donal; Héctor Bueno; Gilbert Habib

Echocardiography is one of the most powerful diagnostic and monitoring tools available to the modern emergency/ critical care practitioner. Currently, there is a lack of specific European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging/Acute Cardiovascular Care Association recommendations for the use of echocardiography in acute cardiovascular care. In this document, we describe the practical applications of echocardiography in patients with acute cardiac conditions, in particular with acute chest pain, acute heart failure, suspected cardiac tamponade, complications of myocardial infarction, acute valvular heart disease including endocarditis, acute disease of the ascending aorta and post-intervention complications. Specific issues regarding echocardiography in other acute cardiovascular care scenarios are also described.

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Maurizio Galderisi

University of Naples Federico II

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Bogdan A. Popescu

Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy

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Ferreira T

Hospital Pulido Valente

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Patrizio Lancellotti

European Society of Cardiology

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Thor Edvardsen

Oslo University Hospital

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Bernard Cosyns

Free University of Brussels

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Correia Jm

Hospital Pulido Valente

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Susana Longo

Hospital Pulido Valente

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