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Florim Cuculi

Bio: Florim Cuculi is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myocardial infarction & Percutaneous coronary intervention. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 116 publications receiving 3911 citations. Previous affiliations of Florim Cuculi include University of Fribourg & University Hospital of Basel.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patients with takotsubo cardiomyopathy had a higher prevalence of neurologic or psychiatric disorders than did those with an acute coronary syndrome and physical triggers, acute neurologics or psychiatric diseases, high troponin levels, and a low ejection fraction on admission were independent predictors for in-hospital complications.
Abstract: BackgroundThe natural history, management, and outcome of takotsubo (stress) cardiomyopathy are incompletely understood. MethodsThe International Takotsubo Registry, a consortium of 26 centers in Europe and the United States, was established to investigate clinical features, prognostic predictors, and outcome of takotsubo cardiomyopathy. Patients were compared with age- and sex-matched patients who had an acute coronary syndrome. ResultsOf 1750 patients with takotsubo cardiomyopathy, 89.8% were women (mean age, 66.8 years). Emotional triggers were not as common as physical triggers (27.7% vs. 36.0%), and 28.5% of patients had no evident trigger. Among patients with takotsubo cardiomyopathy, as compared with an acute coronary syndrome, rates of neurologic or psychiatric disorders were higher (55.8% vs. 25.7%) and the mean left ventricular ejection fraction was markedly lower (40.7±11.2% vs. 51.5±12.3%) (P<0.001 for both comparisons). Rates of severe in-hospital complications including shock and death were ...

1,721 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The 12-month incidence of ScT reached 3% and could be significantly reduced when an optimized implantation strategy was employed, an effect that remained significant when adjusted for multivariable propensity score.

295 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In acute MI, pre-contrast T1-mapping allows assessment of the extent of myocardial damage and might become an important complementary technique to LGE and T2W for identification of reversibleMyocardial injury and prediction of functional recovery in acute MI.
Abstract: Current cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) methods, such as late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and oedema imaging (T2W) used to depict myocardial ischemia, have limitations. Novel quantitative T1-mapping techniques have the potential to further characterize the components of ischemic injury. In patients with myocardial infarction (MI) we sought to investigate whether state-of the art pre-contrast T1-mapping (1) detects acute myocardial injury, (2) allows for quantification of the severity of damage when compared to standard techniques such as LGE and T2W, and (3) has the ability to predict long term functional recovery. 3T CMR including T2W, T1-mapping and LGE was performed in 41 patients [of these, 78% were ST elevation MI (STEMI)] with acute MI at 12-48 hour after chest pain onset and at 6 months (6M). Patients with STEMI underwent primary PCI prior to CMR. Assessment of acute regional wall motion abnormalities, acute segmental damaged fraction by T2W and LGE and mean segmental T1 values was performed on matching short axis slices. LGE and improvement in regional wall motion at 6M were also obtained. We found that the variability of T1 measurements was significantly lower compared to T2W and that, while the diagnostic performance of acute T1-mapping for detecting myocardial injury was at least as good as that of T2W-CMR in STEMI patients, it was superior to T2W imaging in NSTEMI. There was a significant relationship between the segmental damaged fraction assessed by either by LGE or T2W, and mean segmental T1 values (P < 0.01). The index of salvaged myocardium derived by acute T1-mapping and 6M LGE was not different to the one derived from T2W (P = 0.88). Furthermore, the likelihood of improvement of segmental function at 6M decreased progressively as acute T1 values increased (P < 0.0004). In acute MI, pre-contrast T1-mapping allows assessment of the extent of myocardial damage. T1-mapping might become an important complementary technique to LGE and T2W for identification of reversible myocardial injury and prediction of functional recovery in acute MI.

258 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Raban Jeger1, Ahmed Farah, Marc-Alexander Ohlow, Norman Mangner2, Norman Mangner3, Sven Möbius-Winkler, Gregor Leibundgut, Daniel Weilenmann4, Jochen Wöhrle, Stefan Richter, Matthias Schreiber, Felix Mahfoud, Axel Linke2, Axel Linke3, Frank-Peter Stephan1, Christian Mueller1, Peter Rickenbacher1, Michael Coslovsky1, Nicole Gilgen1, Stefan Osswald1, Christoph Kaiser1, Bruno Scheller, Peter Buser, Michael Kühne, Michael J. Zellweger, Christian Sticherling, Bastian Wein, Raphael Twerenbold, Gregor Fahrni, Björn Plicht, Berthold Struck, Ismet Önal, Bodo Cremers, Yvonne P. Clever, Sebastian Ewen, Stephan Schirmer, Michael Böhm, Andreas Wagner, Bernward Lauer, Georg Stachel, Robert Höllriegel, Ephraim B. Winzer, Hans Rickli, Peter Ammann, Philipp Haager, Lukas Trachsel, Lucas Joerg, Dominique Nüssli, Hans Roelli, Micha T. Maeder, Franziska Rohner, Sinisa Markovic, Rima Paliskyte, Dominik Buckert, Belal Awad, Paul Erne, Peiman Jamshidi, Florim Cuculi, Ioannis Kapos, Stefan Toggweiler, Florian Riede, Tudor Constantin Pörner, Karsten Lenk, Michel Noutsias, Ralf Surber, Gudrun Dannberg, Markus Franz, Sylvia Otto, Robert Zweiker, Ella Niederl, Sabine Perl, Burkert Pieske, Albrecht Schmidt, Olev Luha, Dirk von Lewinski, Florian Krackhardt, Behrouz Kherad, Timo Jerichow, Christian Butter, Michael Neuss, Grit Tambor, Frank Hölschermann, Leonhard Bruch, Sebastian Winkler, Corinna Lenz, Mirko Seidel, Boris Keweloh, Alexandra Röttgen, Steffen Bohl, Alexander Wolf, Andreas Hoffmann 
TL;DR: In small native coronary artery disease, DCB was non-inferior to DES regarding MACE up to 12 months, with similar event rates for both treatment groups.

224 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jelena-R. Ghadri1, Ken Kato1, Victoria L. Cammann1, Sebastiano Gili1, Stjepan Jurisic1, Davide Di Vece1, Alessandro Candreva1, Katharina J. Ding1, Jozef Micek1, Konrad A. Szawan1, Beatrice Bacchi1, Rahel Bianchi1, Rena A. Levinson2, Manfred Wischnewsky3, Burkhardt Seifert1, Susanne A. Schlossbauer1, Rodolfo Citro, Eduardo Bossone, Thomas Münzel, Maike Knorr, Susanne Heiner, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo4, Jennifer Franke5, Annahita Sarcon6, L. Christian Napp7, Miłosz Jaguszewski8, Michel Noutsias9, Hugo A. Katus5, Christof Burgdorf, Heribert Schunkert10, Holger Thiele11, Johann Bauersachs7, Carsten Tschöpe12, Burkert Pieske12, Lawrence Rajan13, Guido Michels14, Roman Pfister14, Alessandro Cuneo, Claudius Jacobshagen15, Gerd Hasenfuß15, Mahir Karakas16, Wolfgang Koenig10, Wolfgang Rottbauer17, Samir M. Said18, Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus18, Adrian P. Banning19, Florim Cuculi, Richard Kobza, Thomas Fischer20, Tuija Vasankari21, K.E. Juhani Airaksinen21, Grzegorz Opolski22, Rafal Dworakowski13, Philip MacCarthy13, Christoph Kaiser23, Stefan Osswald23, Leonarda Galiuto24, Filippo Crea24, Wolfgang Dichtl, Klaus Empen25, Stephan B. Felix25, Clément Delmas, Olivier Lairez, Ibrahim El-Battrawy26, Ibrahim Akin26, Martin Borggrefe26, John D. Horowitz27, Martin Kozel28, Petr Tousek28, Petr Widimský28, Ekaterina Gilyarova, Alexandra Shilova, Mikhail Gilyarov, David E. Winchester29, Christian Ukena, Jeroen J. Bax30, Abhiram Prasad31, Michael Böhm, Thomas F. Lüscher32, Frank Ruschitzka1, Christian Templin1 
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that TTS can either be benign or a life-threating condition depending on the inciting stress factor, and a new classification based on triggers is proposed, which can serve as a clinical tool to predict short- and long-term outcomes of TTS.

192 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: This dissertation aims to provide a history of web exceptionalism from 1989 to 2002, a period chosen in order to explore its roots as well as specific cases up to and including the year in which descriptions of “Web 2.0” began to circulate.
Abstract: Kristian Thygesen∗ (Denmark) Joseph S. Alpert∗ (USA) Allan S. Jaffe (USA) Bernard R. Chaitman (USA) Jeroen J. Bax (The Netherlands) David A. Morrow (USA) Harvey D. White∗ (New Zealand) Hans Mickley (Denmark) Filippo Crea (Italy) Frans Van de Werf (Belgium) Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci (

3,355 citations

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TL;DR: Alice K. Jacobs, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair Jeffrey L. Anderson, PhD, CCNS, CCRN, FAH, Chair-Elect - The first female FACC-FAHA board member to be elected in the history of the sport.
Abstract: Alice K. Jacobs, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair Jeffrey L. Anderson, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair-Elect Nancy Albert, PhD, CCNS, CCRN, FAHA Mark A. Creager, MD, FACC, FAHA Steven M. Ettinger, MD, FACC Robert A. Guyton, MD, FACC Jonathan L. Halperin, MD, FACC, FAHA Judith S. Hochman, MD, FACC, FAHA

3,040 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The medical profession should play a central role in evaluating the evidence related to drugs, devices, and procedures for the detection, management, and prevention of disease as mentioned in this paper, and when properly applied, expert analysis of available data on the benefits and risks of these therapies and procedures can

2,495 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/AmericanHeart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines, and the AmericanCollege of Physicians, American Association for Thoracic Surgery, Preventive Cardiovascular Nurses Association, Society for CardiovascularAngiography and Interventions, and Society of ThorACic Surgeons
Abstract: Jeffrey L. Anderson, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair Jonathan L. Halperin, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair-Elect Alice K. Jacobs, MD, FACC, FAHA, Immediate Past Chair 2009–2011 [§§][1] Sidney C. Smith, Jr, MD, FACC, FAHA, Past Chair 2006–2008 [§§][1] Cynthia D. Adams, MSN, APRN-BC, FAHA[§§][1] Nancy M

2,469 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A correction has been published: European Heart Journal, ehaa895, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa-895.
Abstract: A correction has been published: European Heart Journal, ehaa895, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa895

2,361 citations