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Dive into the research topics where Richard G. Axell is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard G. Axell.


BJUI | 2013

Definitions of terms, processes and a minimum dataset for transperineal prostate biopsies: a standardization approach of the Ginsburg Study Group for Enhanced Prostate Diagnostics.

Timur H. Kuru; Karan Wadhwa; Richard T.M. Chang; Lina Maria Carmona Echeverria; Matthias Roethke; Alexander Polson; Giles Rottenberg; Brendan Koo; Edward M. Lawrence; Jonas Seidenader; Vincent Gnanapragasam; Richard G. Axell; Wilfried Roth; Anne Warren; Andrew Doble; Gordon Muir; Rick Popert; Heinz Peter Schlemmer; Boris Hadaschik; Christof Kastner

To define terms and processes and agree on a minimum dataset in relation to transperineal prostate biopsy procedures and enhanced prostate diagnostics. To identify the need for further evaluation and establish a collaborative research practice.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2014

Right ventricular dysfunction in chronic thromboembolic obstruction of the pulmonary artery: a pressure-volume study using the conductance catheter

Colm McCabe; Paul A. White; Stephen P. Hoole; Richard G. Axell; Andrew N. Priest; Deepa Gopalan; Dolores Taboada; Robert M. Ross; N W Morrell; Leonard M. Shapiro; Joanna Pepke-Zaba

Pressure-volume loops describe dynamic ventricular performance, relevant to patients with and at risk of pulmonary hypertension. We used conductance catheter-derived pressure-volume loops to measure right ventricular (RV) mechanics in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary arterial obstruction at different stages of pathological adaptation. Resting conductance catheterization was performed in 24 patients: 10 with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), 7 with chronic thromboembolic disease without pulmonary hypertension (CTED), and 7 controls. To assess the validity of conductance measurements, RV volumes were compared in a subset of 8 patients with contemporaneous cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). Control, CTED, and CTEPH groups showed different pressure-volume loop morphology, most notable during systolic ejection. Prolonged diastolic relaxation was seen in patients with CTED and CTEPH [tau = 56.2 ± 6.7 (controls) vs. 69.7 ± 10.0 (CTED) vs. 67.9 ± 6.2 ms (CTEPH), P = 0.02]. Control and CTED groups had lower afterload (Ea) and contractility (Ees) compared with the CTEPH group (Ea = 0.30 ± 0.10 vs. 0.52 ± 0.24 vs. 1.92 ± 0.70 mmHg/ml, respectively, P < 0.001) (Ees = 0.44 ± 0.20 vs. 0.59 ± 0.15 vs. 1.13 ± 0.43 mmHg/ml, P < 0.01) with more efficient ventriculoarterial coupling (Ees/Ea = 1.46 ± 0.30 vs. 1.27 ± 0.36 vs. 0.60 ± 0.18, respectively, P < 0.001). Stroke volume assessed by CMR and conductance showed closest agreement (mean bias +9 ml, 95% CI -1 to +19 ml) compared with end-diastolic volume (+48 ml, -16 to 111 ml) and end-systolic volume (+37 ml, -21 to 94 ml). RV conductance catheterization detects novel alteration in pressure-volume loop morphology and delayed RV relaxation in CTED, which distinguish this group from controls. The observed agreement in stroke volume assessed by CMR and conductance suggests RV mechanics are usefully measured by conductance catheter in chronic thromboembolic obstruction.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2016

Functional assessment and transplantation of the donor heart after circulatory death

S. Messer; Richard G. Axell; Simon Colah; Paul A. White; Marian Ryan; A. Page; Barbora Parizkova; Kamen Valchanov; Christopher W. White; Darren H. Freed; Euan A. Ashley; John Dunning; Martin Goddard; Jayan Parameshwar; Christopher J. E. Watson; Thomas Krieg; Ayyaz Ali; Steven Tsui; Stephen R. Large

BACKGROUND After a severe shortage of brain-dead donors, the demand for heart transplantation has never been greater. In an attempt to increase organ supply, abdominal and lung transplant programs have turned to the donation after circulatory-determined death (DCD) donor. However, because heart function cannot be assessed after circulatory death, DCD heart transplantation was deemed high risk and never adopted routinely. We report a novel method of functional assessment of the DCD heart resulting in a successful clinical program. METHODS Normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) was used to restore function to the arrested DCD heart within the donor after exclusion of the cerebral circulation. After weaning from support, DCD hearts underwent functional assessment with cardiac-output studies, echocardiography, and pressure-volume loops. In the feasibility phase, hearts were transported perfused before evaluation of function in modified working mode extracorporeally. After the establishment of a reliable assessment technique, hearts with demonstrable good function were then selected for clinical transplantation. RESULTS NRP was instituted in 13 adult DCD donors, median age of 33 years (interquartile range [IQR], 28-38 years), after a median ischemic time from withdrawal to perfusion of 24 minutes (IQR, 21-29; range, 17-146 minutes). Two of 4 hearts in the feasibility phase were unsuitable for transplantation after functional assessment. Nine DCD hearts were transplanted in the clinical phase, with 100% survival. The median intensive care duration was 5 days (IQR, 4-5 days), with 2 patients requiring mechanical support. There were no episodes of rejection (total, 1,436 patient-days; range, 48-297). During the same period, we performed 20 standard heart transplants using brain-dead donors. CONCLUSIONS NRP allows rapid reperfusion and functional assessment of the DCD donor heart, ensuring only viable hearts are selected for transplantation. This technique minimizes the risk of primary graft dysfunction and maximizes confidence in DCD heart transplantation, realizing a 45% increase in our heart transplant activity.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2015

Pre-treatment with glucagon-like Peptide-1 protects against ischemic left ventricular dysfunction and stunning without a detected difference in myocardial substrate utilization.

Liam M. McCormick; Stephen P. Hoole; Paul A. White; Philip A. Read; Richard G. Axell; Sophie J Clarke; Michael Sullivan; N. West; David P. Dutka

OBJECTIVES This study sought to determine whether pre-treatment with intravenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)(7-36) amide could alter myocardial glucose use and protect the heart against ischemic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction during percutaneous coronary intervention. BACKGROUND GLP-1 has been shown to have favorable cardioprotective effects, but its mechanisms of action remain unclear. METHODS Twenty patients with preserved LV function and single-vessel left anterior descending coronary artery disease undergoing elective percutaneous coronary intervention were studied. A conductance catheter was placed into the LV, and pressure-volume loops were recorded at baseline, during 1-min low-pressure balloon occlusion (BO), and at 30-min recovery. Patients were randomized to receive an infusion of either GLP-1(7-36) amide at 1.2 pmol/kg/min or saline immediately after baseline measurements. Simultaneous coronary artery and coronary sinus blood sampling was performed at baseline and after BO to assess transmyocardial glucose concentration gradients. RESULTS BO caused both ischemic LV dysfunction and stunning in the control group but not in the GLP-1 group. Compared with control subjects, the GLP-1 group had a smaller reduction in LV performance during BO (delta dP/dTmax, -4.3 vs. -19.0%, p = 0.02; delta stroke volume, -7.8 vs. -26.4%, p = 0.05), and improved LV performance at 30-min recovery. There was no difference in transmyocardial glucose concentration gradients between the 2 groups. CONCLUSIONS Pre-treatment with GLP-1(7-36) amide protects the heart against ischemic LV dysfunction and improves the recovery of function during reperfusion. This occurs without a detected change in myocardial glucose extraction and may indicate a mechanism of action independent of an effect on cardiac substrate use. (Effect of Glucgon-Like-Peptide-1 [GLP-1] on Left Ventricular Function During Percutaneous Coronary Intervention [PCI]; ISRCTN77442023).


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017

Outcome after heart transplantation from donation after circulatory-determined death donors

Simon Messer; Aravinda Page; Richard G. Axell; Marius Berman; Jules Hernández-Sánchez; Simon Colah; Barbora Parizkova; Kamen Valchanov; John Dunning; E. Pavlushkov; Sendhil K. Balasubramanian; Jayan Parameshwar; Yasir Abu Omar; Martin Goddard; Stephen Pettit; Clive Lewis; Anna Kydd; David P. Jenkins; Christopher J. E. Watson; C. Sudarshan; Pedro Catarino; Marie Findlay; Ayyaz Ali; Steven Tsui; Stephen R. Large

BACKGROUND The requirement for heart transplantation is increasing, vastly outgrowing the supply of hearts available from donation after brain death (DBD) donors. Transplanting hearts after donation after circulatory-determined death (DCD) may be a viable additive alternative to DBD donors. This study compared outcomes from the largest single-center experience of DCD heart transplantation against matched DBD heart transplants. METHODS DCD hearts were retrieved using normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) or direct procurement and perfusion (DPP). During NRP, perfusion was restored to the arrested heart within the donor with the exclusion of the cerebral circulation, whereas DPP hearts were removed directly. All hearts were maintained on machine perfusion during transportation. A retrospective cohort of DBD heart transplants, matched for donor and recipient characteristics, was used as a comparison group. The primary outcome measure of this study (set by the United Kingdom regulatory body) was 90-day survival. RESULTS There were 28 DCD heart transplants performed during the 25-month study period. Survival at 90 days was not significantly different between DCD and matched DBD transplant recipients (DCD, 92%; DBD, 96%; p = 1.0). Hospital length of stay, treated rejection episodes, allograft function, and 1-year survival (DCD, 86%; DBD, 88%; p = 0.98) were comparable between groups. The method of retrieval (NRP or DPP) was not associated with a difference in outcome. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that heart transplantation from DCD heart donation provides comparable short-term outcomes to traditional DBD heart transplants and can serve to increase heart transplant activity in well-selected patients.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2015

RV diastolic dysfunction: time to re-evaluate its importance in heart failure

Richard G. Axell; Stephen P. Hoole; James Hampton-Till; Paul A. White

Right ventricular (RV) diastolic dysfunction was first reported as an indicator for the assessment of ventricular dysfunction in heart failure a little over two decades ago. However, the underlying mechanisms and precise role of RV diastolic dysfunction in heart failure remain poorly described. Complexities in the structure and function of the RV make the detailed assessment of the contractile performance challenging when compared to its left ventricular (LV) counterpart. LV dysfunction is known to directly affect patient outcome in heart failure. As such, the focus has therefore been on LV function. Nevertheless, a strategy for the diagnosis and assessment of RV diastolic dysfunction has not been established. Here, we review the different causal mechanisms underlying RV diastolic dysfunction, summarising the current assessment techniques used in a clinical environment. Finally, we explore the role of load-independent indices of RV contractility, derived from the conductance technique, to fully interrogate the RV and expand our knowledge and understanding of RV diastolic dysfunction. Accurate assessment of RV contractility may yield further important prognostic information that will benefit patients with diastolic heart failure.


Physiological Reports | 2017

Ventriculo‐arterial coupling detects occult RV dysfunction in chronic thromboembolic pulmonary vascular disease

Richard G. Axell; S. Messer; Paul A. White; Colm McCabe; Andrew N. Priest; Thaleia Statopoulou; Maja Drozdzynska; Jamie Viscasillas; Elizabeth C. Hinchy; James Hampton-Till; Hatim Alibhai; N W Morrell; Joanna Pepke-Zaba; Stephen R. Large; Stephen P. Hoole

Chronic thromboembolic disease (CTED) is suboptimally defined by a mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) <25 mmHg at rest in patients that remain symptomatic from chronic pulmonary artery thrombi. To improve identification of right ventricular (RV) pathology in patients with thromboembolic obstruction, we hypothesized that the RV ventriculo‐arterial (Ees/Ea) coupling ratio at maximal stroke work (Ees/Eamax sw) derived from an animal model of pulmonary obstruction may be used to identify occult RV dysfunction (low Ees/Ea) or residual RV energetic reserve (high Ees/Ea). Eighteen open chested pigs had conductance catheter RV pressure‐volume (PV)‐loops recorded during PA snare to determine Ees/Eamax sw. This was then applied to 10 patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) and ten patients with CTED, also assessed by RV conductance catheter and cardiopulmonary exercise testing. All patients were then restratified by Ees/Ea. The animal model determined an Ees/Eamax sw = 0.68 ± 0.23 threshold, either side of which cardiac output and RV stroke work fell. Two patients with CTED were identified with an Ees/Ea well below 0.68 suggesting occult RV dysfunction whilst three patients with CTEPH demonstrated Ees/Ea ≥ 0.68 suggesting residual RV energetic reserve. Ees/Ea > 0.68 and Ees/Ea < 0.68 subgroups demonstrated constant RV stroke work but lower stroke volume (87.7 ± 22.1 vs. 60.1 ± 16.3 mL respectively, P = 0.006) and higher end‐systolic pressure (36.7 ± 11.6 vs. 68.1 ± 16.7 mmHg respectively, P < 0.001). Lower Ees/Ea in CTED also correlated with reduced exercise ventilatory efficiency. Low Ees/Ea aligns with features of RV maladaptation in CTED both at rest and on exercise. Characterization of Ees/Ea in CTED may allow for better identification of occult RV dysfunction.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2017

Stunning and Right Ventricular Dysfunction Is Induced by Coronary Balloon Occlusion and Rapid Pacing in Humans: Insights From Right Ventricular Conductance Catheter Studies

Richard G. Axell; Joel P. Giblett; Paul A. White; Andrew Klein; James Hampton‐Til; Michael O'Sullivan; Denise Braganza; William R. Davies; N. West; Cameron G. Densem; Stephen P. Hoole

Background We sought to determine whether right ventricular stunning could be detected after supply (during coronary balloon occlusion [BO]) and supply/demand ischemia (induced by rapid pacing [RP] during transcatheter aortic valve replacement) in humans. Methods and Results Ten subjects with single‐vessel right coronary artery disease undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention with normal ventricular function were studied in the BO group. Ten subjects undergoing transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement were studied in the RP group. In both, a conductance catheter was placed into the right ventricle, and pressure volume loops were recorded at baseline and for intervals over 15 minutes after a low‐pressure BO for 1 minute or a cumulative duration of RP for up to 1 minute. Ischemia‐induced diastolic dysfunction was seen 1 minute after RP (end‐diastolic pressure [mm Hg]: 8.1±4.2 versus 12.1±4.1, P<0.001) and BO (end‐diastolic pressure [mm Hg]: 8.1±4.0 versus 8.7±4.0, P=0.03). Impairment of systolic and diastolic function after BO remained at 15‐minutes recovery (ejection fraction [%]: 55.7±9.0 versus 47.8±6.3, P<0.01; end‐diastolic pressure [mm Hg]: 8.1±4.0 versus 9.2±3.9, P<0.01). Persistent diastolic dysfunction was also evident in the RP group at 15‐minutes recovery (end‐diastolic pressure [mm Hg]: 8.1±4.1 versus 9.9±4.4, P=0.03) and there was also sustained impairment of load‐independent indices of systolic function at 15 minutes after RP (end‐systolic elastance and ventriculo‐arterial coupling [mm Hg/mL]: 1.25±0.31 versus 0.85±0.43, P<0.01). Conclusions RP and right coronary artery balloon occlusion both cause ischemic right ventricular dysfunction with stunning observed later during the procedure. This may have intraoperative implications in patients without right ventricular functional reserve.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2015

THE ACUTE EFFECTS OF SELECTIVE SITE RIGHT VENTRICULAR PACING ON LEFT AND RIGHT VENTRICULAR HEMODYNAMIC FUNCTION IN A NORMAL HEART POPULATION

Stuart Tan; James Hampton-Till; Paul A. White; Richard G. Axell; David J. Farwell; Stuart Harris

Right Ventricular Apical (RVA) pacing causes a non-physiological activation of the myocardium and can be associated with clinical complications. Clinical evidence supporting a benefit to pacing in alternative RV sites is conflicted. The present study was undertaken using conductance catheters to


Clinical Engineering#R##N#A Handbook for Clinical and Biomedical Engineers | 2014

Chapter 13 – Cardiology

Richard G. Axell

The heart is the pump responsible for circulating blood around the body, delivering essential minerals to the body, and carrying away waste product. This chapter describes two routine physiological measurement techniques used to analyse the electrophysiological and biomechanical function of the heart. Echocardiography ultrasound is routinely used to noninvasively monitor fluid flow and cardiovascular wall structure and movement. Doppler ultrasound physics are introduced and how changes in blood velocity can be measured and used to determine cardiac performance. Electrocardiography (ECG) is routinely used to noninvasively monitor electrophysiological signals generated during the cardiac cycle. Three- and 12-lead ECGs are extensively used within a healthcare environment to provide information on the electrical characteristics of the heart.

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Paul A. White

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Andrew Doble

University of Cambridge

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Anne Warren

Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Brendan Koo

University of Cambridge

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