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Dive into the research topics where Pilar Merlos is active.

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Featured researches published by Pilar Merlos.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2008

Usefulness of the Neutrophil to Lymphocyte Ratio in Predicting Long-Term Mortality in ST Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Julio Núñez; Eduardo Núñez; Vicent Bodí; Juan Sanchis; Gema Miñana; Luis Mainar; Enrique Santas; Pilar Merlos; Eva Rumiz; Helene Darmofal; Àngel Llàcer

Neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (N/L) has been associated with poor outcomes in patients who underwent cardiac angiography. Nevertheless, its role for risk stratification in acute coronary syndromes, specifically in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), has not been elucidated. We sought to determine the association of N/L maximum value (N/L max) with mortality in the setting of STEMI and to compare its predictive ability with total white blood cell maximum count (WBC max). We analyzed 515 consecutive patients admitted with STEMI to a single university center. White blood cells (WBC) and differential count were measured at admission and daily for the first 96 hours afterward. Patients with cancer, inflammatory diseases, or premature death were excluded, and 470 patients were included in the final analysis. The association between N/L max and WBC max with mortality was assessed by Cox regression analysis. During follow-up, we registered 106 deaths (22.6%). A positive trend between mortality and N/L max quintiles was observed; 6.4%, 12.4%, 11.7%, 34%, and 47.9% of deaths occurred from quintiles 1 to 5 (p <0.001), respectively. In a multivariable setting, after adjusting for standard risk factors, patients in the fourth (Q4 vs Q1) and fifth quintile (Q5 vs Q1) showed the highest mortality risk (hazard ratio 2.58, 95% confidence interal 1.06 to 6.32, p = 0.038 and hazard ratio 4.20, 95% confidence interal 1.73 to 10.21, p = 0.001, respectively). When WBC max and cells subtypes were entered together, N/L max remained as the only WBC parameter; furthermore, the model with N/L max showed the most discriminative ability. In conclusion, N/L max is a useful marker to predict subsequent mortality in patients admitted for STEMI, with a superior discriminative ability than total WBC max.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2012

Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis as a therapeutic alternative in patients with advanced congestive heart failure

Julio Núñez; Miguel A. González; Gema Miñana; Rafael Garcia-Ramón; Juan Sanchis; Vicent Bodí; Eduardo Núñez; Maria Jesús Puchades; Patricia Palau; Pilar Merlos; Àngel Llàcer; Alfonso Miguel

Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) has been proposed as an additional therapeutic resource for patients with advanced congestive heart failure (CHF). The objective of this study was to determine the therapeutic role of CAPD, in terms of surrogate endpoints, in the management of patients with advanced CHF and renal dysfunction.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2010

Differential prognostic effect of systolic blood pressure on mortality according to left‐ventricular function in patients with acute heart failure

Julio Núñez; Eduardo Núñez; Gregg C. Fonarow; Juan Sanchis; Vicent Bodí; Vicente Bertomeu-González; Gema Miñana; Pilar Merlos; Vicente Bertomeu-Martínez; Josep Redon; Francisco J. Chorro; Àngel Llàcer

To evaluate the relationship between systolic blood pressure (SBP) and long‐term mortality in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) stratified by ejection fraction (LVEF): reduced (≤40%) vs. preserved (≥50%).


European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2009

Hyperuricemia in acute heart failure. More than a simple spectator

Anna L. Alimonda; Julio Núñez; Eduardo Núñez; Oliver Husser; Juan Sanchis; Vicent Bodí; Gema Miñana; Rocío Robles; Luis Mainar; Pilar Merlos; Helene Darmofal; Àngel Llàcer

BACKGROUND Hyperuricemia is a prevalent condition in chronic heart failure (CHF), describing increased oxidative stress and inflammation. Although there is evidence that serum uric acid (UA) predicts mortality in CHF, its role as a prognostic biomarker in acute heart failure (AHF) has not yet been well assessed. The aim of this study was to determine if UA levels predict all-cause mortality. Additionally, as a secondary endpoint we sought the clinical predictors of UA serum level in this population. METHODS We analyzed 560 consecutive patients with AHF admitted in a single university center. UA (mg/dl) was measured during early hospitalization. Patient survival status was followed up after discharge (median follow-up: 330 days). The independent association of UA level with all-cause mortality was analyzed using Cox regression analysis. RESULTS During follow-up 165 (29.5%) deaths were identified. Patients with UA levels above the median value (>or=7.7 mg/dl) exhibited higher mortality rates (21.1 vs. 37.9%; p<0.001). In multivariable analysis, after adjusting for recognized prognostic factors and potential confounders, UA>or=7.7 mg/dl and per change in 1 mg/dl of UA was associated with an increased risk of mortality (HR 1.45, CI 95%=1.03-2.44; p=0.03 and HR 1.08, CI 95%=1.01-1.15; p=0.03, respectively). CONCLUSION UA serum levels is an independent predictor of all-cause mortality in an unselected patients admitted with AHF.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2011

Resultados de la estrategia farmacoinvasiva y de la angioplastia primaria en la reperfusión del infarto con elevación del segmento ST. Estudio con resonancia magnética cardiaca en la primera semana y en el sexto mes

Vicente Bodí; Eva Rumiz; Pilar Merlos; Julio Núñez; Maria P. Lopez-Lereu; Jose V. Monmeneu; Fabian Chaustre; David Moratal; Isabel Trapero; Maria L. Blasco; Ricardo Oltra; Rafael Sanjuán; Francisco J. Chorro; Àngel Llàcer; Juan Sanchis

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES Pharmacoinvasive strategy represents an attractive alternative to primary angioplasty. Using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging we compared the left ventricular outcome of the pharmacoinvasive strategy and primary angioplasty for the reperfusion of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. METHODS Cardiovascular magnetic resonance was performed 1 week and 6 months after infarction in two consecutive cohorts of patients included in a prospective university hospital ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction registry. During the period 2004-2006, 151 patients were treated with pharmacoinvasive strategy (thrombolysis followed by routine non-immediate angioplasty). During the period 2007-2008, 93 patients were treated with primary angioplasty. A propensity score matched population was also evaluated. RESULTS At 1-week cardiovascular magnetic resonance, pharmacoinvasive strategy and primary angioplasty patients showed a similar extent of area at risk (29±15 vs. 29±17%, P=.9). Non-significant differences were detected by cardiovascular magnetic resonance at 1 week and at 6 months in infarct size, salvaged myocardium, microvascular obstruction, ejection fraction, end-diastolic volume index and end-systolic volume index (P>.2 in all cases). The same trend was observed in 1-to-1 propensity score matched patients. The rate of major adverse cardiac events (death and/or re-infarction) at 1 year was 6% in pharmacoinvasive strategy and 7% in primary angioplasty patients (P=.7). CONCLUSIONS A pharmacoinvasive strategy including thrombolysis and routine non-immediate angioplasty represents a widely available and logistically attractive approach that yields identical short-term and long-term cardiovascular magnetic resonance-derived left ventricular outcome compared to primary angioplasty.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2012

Differential mortality association of loop diuretic dosage according to blood urea nitrogen and carbohydrate antigen 125 following a hospitalization for acute heart failure

Julio Núñez; Eduardo Núñez; Gema Miñana; Vicent Bodí; Gregg C. Fonarow; Vicente Bertomeu-González; Patricia Palau; Pilar Merlos; Silvia Ventura; Francisco J. Chorro; Pau Llàcer; Juan Sanchis

Recent observations in chronic stable heart failure suggest that high‐dose loop diuretics (HDLDs) have detrimental prognostic effects in patients with high blood urea nitrogen (BUN), but recent findings have also indicated that diuretics may improve renal function. Carbohydrate antigen 125 (CA125) has been shown to be a surrogate of systemic congestion. We sought to explore whether BUN and CA125 modulate the mortality risk associated with HDLDs following a hospitalization for acute heart failure (AHF).


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2013

Long-term Prognostic Value of a Comprehensive Assessment of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Indexes After an ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Pilar Merlos; Maria P. Lopez-Lereu; Jose V. Monmeneu; Juan Sanchis; Julio Núñez; Clara Bonanad; Ernesto Valero; Gema Miñana; Fabián Chaustre; Cristina Gómez; Ricardo Oltra; Lorena Palacios; María J. Bosch; Vicente Navarro; Àngel Llàcer; Francisco J. Chorro; Vicente Bodí

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES A variety of cardiac magnetic resonance indexes predict mid-term prognosis in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction patients. The extent of transmural necrosis permits simple and accurate prediction of systolic recovery. However, its long-term prognostic value beyond a comprehensive clinical and cardiac magnetic resonance evaluation is unknown. We hypothesized that a simple semiquantitative assessment of the extent of transmural necrosis is the best resonance index to predict long-term outcome soon after a first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. METHODS One week after a first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction we carried out a comprehensive quantification of several resonance parameters in 206 consecutive patients. A semiquantitative assessment (altered number of segments in the 17-segment model) of edema, baseline and post-dobutamine wall motion abnormalities, first pass perfusion, microvascular obstruction, and the extent of transmural necrosis was also performed. RESULTS During follow-up (median 51 months), 29 patients suffered a major adverse cardiac event (8 cardiac deaths, 11 nonfatal myocardial infarctions, and 10 readmissions for heart failure). Major cardiac events were associated with more severely altered quantitative and semiquantitative resonance indexes. After a comprehensive multivariate adjustment, the extent of transmural necrosis was the only resonance index independently related to the major cardiac event rate (hazard ratio=1.34 [1.19-1.51] per each additional segment displaying>50% transmural necrosis, P<.001). CONCLUSIONS A simple and non-time consuming semiquantitative analysis of the extent of transmural necrosis is the most powerful cardiac magnetic resonance index to predict long-term outcome soon after a first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.


European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2013

Echocardiographic estimation of pulmonary arterial systolic pressure in acute heart failure. Prognostic implications.

Pilar Merlos; Julio Núñez; Juan Sanchis; Gema Miñana; Patricia Palau; Vicente Bodí; Oliver Husser; Enrique Santas; Lourdes Bondanza; Francisco J. Chorro

BACKGROUND Prognostic implications of echocardiographic assessment of pulmonary hypertension (PH) in non-selected patients hospitalized for acute heart failure (AHF) are not clearly defined. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between echocardiography-derived PH in AHF and 1-year all-cause mortality. METHODS We prospectively included 1210 consecutive patients admitted for AHF. Patients with significant heart valve disease were excluded. Pulmonary arterial systolic pressure (PASP) was estimated using transthoracic echocardiography during hospitalization (mean time after admission 96±24h). Patients were categorized as follows: non-measurable, normal PASP (PASP≤35mmHg), mild (PASP 36-45mmHg), moderate (PASP 46-60mmHg) and severe PH (PASP >60mmHg). The independent association between PASP and 1-year mortality was assessed with Cox regression analysis. RESULTS At 1-year follow-up, 232 (19.2%) deaths were registered. PASP was measured in 502 (41.6%) patients with a median of 46 [38-55] mmHg. The distribution of population was: 708 (58.5%), 76 (6.3%), 147 (12.1%), 190 (15.7%) and 89 (7.4%) for non-measurable, normal PASP, mild, moderate and severe PH, respectively. One-year mortality was lower for patients with normal PASP (1.32 per 10 person-years), intermediate for patients with non-measurable, mild and moderate PH (2.48, 2.46 and 2.62 per 10 persons-year, respectively) and higher for those with severe PH (4.89 per 10 person-years). After multivariate adjustment, only patients with PASP >60mmHg displayed significant adjusted increase in the risk of 1-year all-cause mortality, compared to patients with normal PASP (HR=2.56; CI 95%: 1.05-6.22, p=0.038). CONCLUSIONS In AHF, severe pulmonary hypertension derived by echocardiography is an independent predictor of 1-year-mortality.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2011

Effectiveness of the relative lymphocyte count to predict one-year mortality in patients with acute heart failure.

Julio Núñez; Eduardo Núñez; Gema Miñana; Juan Sanchis; Vicent Bodí; Eva Rumiz; Patricia Palau; Myriam Olivares; Pilar Merlos; Clara Bonanad; Luis Mainar; Àngel Llàcer

Several works have endorsed a significant role of the immune system and inflammation in the pathogenesis of heart failure. As indirect evidence, an association between a low relative lymphocyte count (RLC%) and worse outcomes found in this population has been suggested. Nevertheless, the role of RLC% for risk stratification in a large and nonselected population of patients with acute heart failure (AHF) has not yet been determined. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine the association between low RLC% and 1-year mortality in patients with AHF and consequently to define whether it has any role for early risk stratification. A total of 1,192 consecutive patients admitted for AHF were analyzed. Total white blood cell and differential counts were measured on admission. RLC% (calculated as absolute lymphocyte count/total white blood cell count) was categorized in quintiles and its association with all-cause mortality at 1 year assessed using Cox regression. At 1 year, 286 deaths (24%) were identified. A negative trend was observed between 1-year mortality rates and quintiles of RLC%: 31.5%, 27.2%, 23.1%, 23%, and 15.5% in quintiles 1 to 5, respectively (p for trend <0.001). After thorough covariate adjustment, only patients in the lowest quintile (<9.7%) showed an increased risk for mortality (hazard ratio 1.76, 95% confidence interval 1.17 to 2.65, p = 0.006). When RLC% was modeled with restricted cubic splines, a stepped increase in risk was observed patients in quintile 1: those with RLC% values <7.5% and <5% showed 1.95- and 2.66-fold increased risk for death compared to those in the top quintile. In conclusion, in patients with AHF, RLC% is a simple, widely available, and inexpensive biomarker, with potential for identifying patients at increased risk for 1-year mortality.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2010

Impacto pronóstico de una estrategia invasiva en el síndrome coronario agudo sin elevación del segmento ST según la presencia o no de disfunción sistólica

Patricia Palau; Julio Núñez; Juan Sanchis; Vicent Bodí; Eva Rumiz; Eduardo Núñez; Gema Miñana; Pilar Merlos; Cristina Gómez; Lorenzo Fácila; Francisco J. Chorro; Àngel Llàcer

Introduccion y objetivos Escasa evidencia respalda la implantacion de una estrategia invasiva (EI) en pacientes con sindrome coronario agudo sin elevacion del segmento ST (SCASEST) y disfuncion sistolica (DS). El objetivo de este trabajo es evaluar el impacto pronostico atribuible a una EI en sujetos con SCASEST segun tengan DS o no. Metodos Se incluyo a 972 pacientes consecutivos ingresados por SCASEST (descenso del segmento ST y/o elevacion de troponina I). Se definio la DS como fraccion de eyeccion Resultados El 23,4% presento DS. Un total de 303 (31%) pacientes alcanzaron el objetivo primario, hecho que fue mas frecuente en los pacientes con DS (el 49,8 frente al 25,5%; p Conclusiones La presencia de DS permite la identificacion de los SCASEST que mas se benefician de aplicar una EI.

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Eva Rumiz

University of Valencia

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Luis Mainar

University of Valencia

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