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Dive into the research topics where Timothy E. Paterick is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy E. Paterick.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2008

Medical Informed Consent: General Considerations for Physicians

Timothy J. Paterick; Geoff V. Carson; Marjorie C. Allen; Timothy E. Paterick

Medical informed consent is essential to the physicians ability to diagnose and treat patients as well as the patients right to accept or reject clinical evaluation, treatment, or both. Medical informed consent should be an exchange of ideas that buttresses the patient-physician relationship. The consent process should be the foundation of the fiduciary relationship between a patient and a physician. Physicians must recognize that informed medical choice is an educational process and has the potential to affect the patient-physician alliance to their mutual benefit. Physicians must give patients equality in the covenant by educating them to make informed choices. When physicians and patients take medical informed consent seriously, the patient-physician relationship becomes a true partnership with shared decision-making authority and responsibility for outcomes. Physicians need to understand informed medical consent from an ethical foundation, as codified by statutory law in many states, and from a generalized common-law perspective requiring medical practice consistent with the standard of care. It is fundamental to the patient-physician relationship that each partner understands and accepts the degree of autonomy the patient desires in the decision-making process.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2012

Left Ventricular Noncompaction: A 25-Year Odyssey

Timothy E. Paterick; Matt M. Umland; M. Fuad Jan; Khawaja Afzal Ammar; Christopher Kramer; Bijoy K. Khandheria; James B. Seward; A. Jamil Tajik

Left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) is a cardiomyopathy associated with sporadic or familial disease, the latter having an autosomal dominant mode of transmission. The clinical features associated with LVNC vary from asymptomatic to symptomatic patients, with the potential for heart failure, supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias, thromboembolic events, and sudden cardiac death. Echocardiography is the diagnostic modality of choice, revealing the pathognomonic features of a thick, bilayered myocardium; prominent ventricular trabeculations; and deep intertrabecular recesses. Widespread use and advances in the technology of echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging are increasing awareness of LVNC, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is improving the ability to stage the severity of the disease and potential for adverse clinical consequences. Study of LVNC through research in embryology, imaging, and genetics has allowed enormous strides in the understanding of this heterogeneous disease over the past 25 years.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2012

Myocardial mechanics: understanding and applying three-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography in clinical practice.

Khawaja Afzal Ammar; Timothy E. Paterick; Bijoy K. Khandheria; M. Fuad Jan; Christopher Kramer; Matt M. Umland; Alix Tercius; Lisa Baratta; A. Jamil Tajik

Speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) is an emerging tool to characterize and quantify myocardial segmental and rotational mechanics. This literature review is aimed at clinical and academic cardiologists to provide: (1) a conceptual framework of STE to initiate understanding of myocardial mechanics; (2) evidence that three‐dimensional (3D) STE overcomes the problems of time‐consuming data acquisition and postprocessing seen with two‐dimensional STE; and (3) illustrative clinical cases with analysis of myocardial mechanics via 3D STE to show the incremental value of strain in clinical decision making.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2012

The ABCs of left ventricular assist device echocardiography: a systematic approach

Khawaja Afzal Ammar; Matt M. Umland; Christopher Kramer; Nasir Z Sulemanjee; M. Fuad Jan; Bijoy K. Khandheria; James B. Seward; Timothy E. Paterick

Echocardiography is an important imaging modality used to determine the indication of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation for patients with advanced heart failure (HF) and for serial follow-up to make management decisions in patient care post-implant. Continuous axial-flow LVAD therapy provides effective haemodynamic support for the failing left ventricle, improving both the clinical functional status and quality of life. Echocardiographers must develop a systematic approach to echocardiographic assessment of LVAD implantation and post-LVAD implant cardiac morphology and physiology. This approach must include the evaluation of left and right heart chamber morphology and physiology and the anatomy and physiology of the inflow and outflow cannulas and the rotor pump, and the determination of the degree of tricuspid regurgitation and the presence of interatrial shunts and aortic regurgitation. Collaboration among the echocardiography and HF/transplant teams is essential to obtain this comprehensive evaluation. We outline a systematic approach to evaluating patients with HF who have failed conventional therapy and require LVAD therapy as a bridge to cardiac transplantation or destination therapy.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Cardioncology: State of the heart

Maria Chiara Todaro; Lilia Oreto; Rubina Qamar; Timothy E. Paterick; Scipione Carerj; Bijoy K. Khandheria

Cardiotoxicity caused by chemotherapy is a concerning reality plaguing oncologists and cardiologists. The coexistence of cancer and cardiovascular diseases in the same patient is more common due to the aging population and improvement of chemotherapeutic drug effectiveness. We review the incidence and clinical features of cardiotoxicity caused by some of the most common chemotherapeutic drugs to provide the cardiologist with information regarding general cardiovascular toxicity, early left ventricular dysfunction detection, cardiac damage prevention and follow-up. In conclusion, awareness of this emerging problem has important clinical implications as only highly specialized care will prevent patients who successfully overcome cancer from being defeated by the side effects of anticancer therapy.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2013

Aortopathies: Etiologies, Genetics, Differential Diagnosis, Prognosis and Management

Timothy E. Paterick; Julie Ann Humphries; Khawaja Afzal Ammar; M. Fuad Jan; Rachel Loberg; Michelle Bush; Bijoy K. Khandheria; A. Jamil Tajik

Aortic root and ascending aortic dilatation are indicators associated with risk of aortic dissection, which varies according to underlying etiologic associations, indexed aortic root size, and rate of progression. Typical aortic involvement is most commonly seen in syndromic cases for which there is increasing evidence that aortic aneurysm represents a spectrum of familial inheritance associated with variable genetic penetrance and phenotypic expression. Aortic root and ascending aortic dimensions should be measured routinely with echocardiography. Pharmacologic therapy may reduce the rate of progression. Timing of surgical intervention is guided by indexed aortic size and rate of change of aortic root and ascending aorta dimensions. Lifelong surveillance is recommended.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2012

Use of echocardiography to evaluate the cardiac effects of therapies used in cancer treatment: what do we know?

Lilia Oreto; Maria Chiara Todaro; Matt M. Umland; Christopher Kramer; Rubina Qamar; Scipione Carerj; Bijoy K. Khandheria; Timothy E. Paterick

Cardiologists and oncologists today face the daunting challenge of identifying patients at risk for late-onset left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction from the use of various chemotherapeutic agents. Currently, the most widely used method in clinical practice for monitoring the potential of chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity is calculation of LV ejection fraction. The use of LV ejection fraction to determine whether to continue or discontinue the use of chemotherapeutic agents is limited, because decreases in LV ejection fraction frequently occur late and can be irreversible. These limitations have led to the exploration of diastolic function and newer modalities that assess myocardial mechanics to identify sensitive and specific variables that can predict the occurrence of late systolic function. The cancer therapies associated with cardiotoxicity are reviewed in this report. Additionally, the authors evaluate the role of present-day echocardiographic parameters, complementary noninvasive imaging modalities, and biomarkers in the prediction of cardiotoxicity. The authors address the evolving role of cardioprotective agents and potential therapies to prevent or reverse the progression of LV systolic dysfunction. Finally, they provide some ideas regarding future directions to enhance the knowledge of predicting late-onset LV systolic dysfunction secondary to cancer therapy.


Cardiology in Review | 2001

Endothelial function and cardiovascular prevention: role of blood lipids, exercise, and other risk factors.

Timothy E. Paterick; Gerald F. Fletcher

Multifactorial risk factor modification is proven to positively influence morbidity and mortality from both cardiovascular disease and stroke. The vascular endothelium has recently been a focus of interest in cardiovascular prevention. Data suggest that vascular endothelial dysfunction may contribute to the pathophysiology of clinical ischemia, especially angina, myocardial infarction, and sudden death. Endothelial dysfunction includes abnormalities of vasomotor tone (constriction and dilation), balance between fibrinolysis and thrombosis, control of the inflammatory response, and growth of vascular smooth muscle. Cardiovascular prevention interventions have been studied extensively and there are considerable data supporting a beneficial effect on endothelial dysfunction. The interventions that are clearly effective in improving endothelial function are diet and lipid-lowering therapy (especially with statin drugs), use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, hormone replacement therapy, vitamin E, and proper physical exercise. Many challenging issues remain unsolved, however, and the endothelium at both the molecular and cellular levels must be further investigated for both research and clinical interests.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2014

Echocardiography: profiling of the athlete's heart

Timothy E. Paterick; Tia Gordon; Denise Spiegel

Cardiovascular physiologic remodeling associated with athleticism may mimic many of the features of genetic and acquired heart disease. The most pervasive dilemma is distinguishing between normal and abnormal physiologic remodeling in an athletes heart. Imaging examinations, such as magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography, which focus predominantly on anatomy, and electrocardiography, which monitors electrical components, do not simultaneously evaluate cardiac anatomy and physiology. Despite nonlinear anatomic and electrical remodeling, the athletes heart retains normal or supernormal myocyte function, whereas a diseased heart has various degrees of pathophysiology. Echocardiography is the only cost-effective, validated imaging modality that is widely available and capable of simultaneously quantifying variable anatomic and physiologic features. Doppler echocardiography substantially redefines the understanding of normal remodeling from preemergent and overt disease.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2012

Cardiac imaging modalities with ionizing radiation: the role of informed consent.

Timothy E. Paterick; M. Fuad Jan; Zachary R. Paterick; A. Jamil Tajik; Thomas C. Gerber

Informed consent ideally results in patient autonomy and rational health care decisions. Frequently, patients face complex medical decisions that require a delicate balancing of anticipated benefits and potential risks, which is the concept of informed consent. This balancing process requires an understanding of available medical evidence and alternative medical options, and input from experienced physicians. The informed consent doctrine places a positive obligation on physicians to partner with patients as they try to make the best decision for their specific medical situation. The high prevalence and mortality related to heart disease in our society has led to increased cardiac imaging with modalities that use ionizing radiation. This paper reviews how physicians can meet the ideals of informed consent when considering cardiac imaging with ionizing radiation, given the limited evidence for risks and benefits. The goal is an informed patient making rational choices based on available medical information.

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A. Jamil Tajik

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Bijoy K. Khandheria

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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M. Fuad Jan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Matt M. Umland

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anushree Agarwal

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Christopher Kramer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Haroon Yousaf

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Michelle Bush

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mirza Nubair Ahmad

University of Wisconsin System

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