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Pier lambiase

pier.lambiase@uclh.nhs.uk

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Johnny Gutierrez, Gottfried E Konecny, Kyu Hong, Alexander Burges, Timothy D Henry, Pier D Lambiase, Wai Lee Wong, Y Gloria Meng (2008)  A new ELISA for use in a 3-ELISA system to assess concentrations of VEGF splice variants and VEGF(110) in ovarian cancer tumors.   Clin Chem 54: 3. 597-601 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which affects tumor angiogenesis, is expressed as different splice variants, including the major isoforms VEGF(165) and VEGF(121), and can be cleaved by plasmin to generate VEGF(110). The amount of VEGF(121) and VEGF(110) in biological samples has not been well studied. METHODS: We developed an ELISA that detects VEGF(165) and VEGF(121) equally, but does not detect VEGF(110). We used this ELISA together with 2 other ELISAs, one detecting VEGF(165) and the other detecting VEGF(165), VEGF(121), and VEGF(110) equally, to assess the concentrations of VEGF(121) and VEGF(110) in ovarian cancer tumors. RESULTS: The median concentrations in ovarian cancer tumor lysates were 0.61 (range <0.055-74) fmol/mg protein for VEGF(165), 1.4 (range <0.20-500) fmol/mg protein for VEGF(165) plus VEGF(121), and 2.3 (range <0.079-520) fmol/mg protein for total VEGF including VEGF(110) (n = 248). VEGF concentrations measured by the 3 ELISAs were highly correlated (r = 0.91-0.94). Median estimated VEGF(121) and VEGF(110) concentrations were 0.77 and 0.58 fmol/mg protein, respectively. In lysates with measurable VEGF(165) and total VEGF concentrations, mean VEGF(165) was approximately 31% (SD 23%) of the total VEGF (n = 217). In contrast, VEGF(165) constituted approximately half of the total circulating VEGF. CONCLUSION: VEGF(165), VEGF(121), and VEGF(110) may be present at significant amounts in ovarian cancer tumors.
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Dominic P S Rogers, Stefania Marazia, Anthony W Chow, Pier D Lambiase, Martin D Lowe, Michael Frenneaux, William J McKenna, Perry M Elliott (2008)  Effect of biventricular pacing on symptoms and cardiac remodelling in patients with end-stage hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.   Eur J Heart Fail 10: 5. 507-513 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Biventricular (BiV) pacing is an established therapy for heart failure in ischaemic and dilated cardiomyopathy. Its effects in end-stage hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) are unknown. AIMS: To assess the potential benefits of BiV pacing in patients with symptomatic end-stage HCM. METHODS: Twenty patients with non-obstructive HCM (12 male, mean age 57+/-13 years), left bundle branch block and symptoms of heart failure refractory to medical therapy underwent implantation of a BiV device. NYHA class, echocardiographic parameters and exercise capacity were assessed before and after implantation. RESULTS: At a mean follow-up of 13+/-6 months, an improvement of at least one NYHA class was reported in 8 (40%) patients. A clinical response was associated with an increase in ejection fraction (from 41+/-14% to 50+/-12%, p=0.009), and reductions in left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (from 57+/-6 mm to 52+/-7 mm, p=0.031) and left atrial diameter (from 65+/-8 mm to 57+/-6 mm, p=0.005). Percentage predicted peak oxygen consumption was unchanged in responders but significantly declined in non-responders (p=0.029). CONCLUSIONS: BiV pacing improved heart failure symptoms in a significant proportion of patients with end-stage HCM. Symptomatic improvement was associated with reverse remodelling of the left atrium and ventricle.
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Dominic P S Rogers, Fiona Walker, Anthony W C Chow, Pier D Lambiase (2008)  Biventricular device implantation in a patient with congenitally corrected transposition and left-sided superior vena cava.   Pacing Clin Electrophysiol 31: 4. 499-502 Apr  
Abstract: An increasing number of patients with congenital heart disease are surviving into adulthood and some have indications for device therapy. Complex anatomical abnormalities may hinder the operator and require the adaptation of standard implantation techniques. We present the first report of successful biventricular ICD implantation in a patient with mesocardia, congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries, pulmonary atresia, and a left superior vena cava draining into the coronary sinus. This case posed challenges in lead placement due to both complex anatomy and the risk of inappropriate device therapies secondary to far-field oversensing.
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2007
 
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Dominic P S Rogers, Pier D Lambiase, Anthony W C Chow (2007)  Successful coronary sinus lead replacement despite total venous occlusion using femoral pull through, two operator counter-traction and subclavian venoplasty.   J Interv Card Electrophysiol 19: 1. 69-71 Jun  
Abstract: The majority of patients presenting for lead extraction have indications for a replacement lead. Venous stenosis is common in recipients of pacing leads and can impede ipsilateral lead replacement. Recanalization through an existing tract after lead extraction allows successful lead placement but may require complex hybrid lead extraction and revascularization techniques. We present a case in which a combination of femoral lead extraction with complete guidewire pull-through, two operator external counter-traction and subclavian venoplasty was used to successfully replace a coronary sinus lead in a patient with total subclavian venous occlusion.
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2006
 
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PMID 
Dominic P S Rogers, Pier D Lambiase, Mehul Dhinoja, Martin D Lowe, Anthony W C Chow (2006)  Right atrial angiography facilitates transseptal puncture for complex ablation in patients with unusual anatomy.   J Interv Card Electrophysiol 17: 1. 29-34 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The number of transseptal punctures performed worldwide has increased exponentially with the development of ablation therapies for atrial arrhythmias. Safe access into the left atrium in these procedures is often complicated by abnormal anatomy. We assessed the potential of right atrial angiography to facilitate transseptal puncture for atrial ablation. METHODS AND RESULTS: We examined all transseptal punctures performed for complex left atrial ablation in our centre over a 29-month period. In cases where conventional transseptal techniques failed, we performed orthogonal right atrial angiography to define cardiac anatomy and orientation. During the study period, 255 transseptal procedures were performed. Of these, 16 cases were complicated by distorted atrial anatomy, extreme cardiac rotation or unexpected location of the atria in relation to the diaphragm, preventing left atrial access using conventional fluoroscopy. The application of right atrial angiography facilitated successful transseptal puncture in all patients when use of conventional mapping catheters and fluoroscopy proved unhelpful. There were no complications relating to right atrial angiography. CONCLUSION: These cases highlight a number of difficulties encountered when performing transseptal punctures. Previously reported adjunctive techniques require specialised equipment, general anaesthesia or multiple catheters that may be unavailable or impede the procedure. Right atrial angiography is a simple and safe adjunct to conventional techniques to facilitate complex transseptal procedures.
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2005
 
DOI   
PMID 
M Sermesant, K Rhode, G I Sanchez-Ortiz, O Camara, R Andriantsimiavona, S Hegde, D Rueckert, P Lambiase, C Bucknall, E Rosenthal, H Delingette, D L G Hill, N Ayache, R Razavi (2005)  Simulation of cardiac pathologies using an electromechanical biventricular model and XMR interventional imaging.   Med Image Anal 9: 5. 467-480 Oct  
Abstract: Simulating cardiac electromechanical activity is of great interest for a better understanding of pathologies and for therapy planning. Design and validation of such models is difficult due to the lack of clinical data. XMR systems are a new type of interventional facility in which patients can be rapidly transferred between X-ray and MR systems. Our goal is to design and validate an electromechanical model of the myocardium using XMR imaging. The proposed model is computationally fast and uses clinically observable parameters. We present the integration of anatomy, electrophysiology, and motion from patient data. Pathologies are introduced in the model and simulations are compared to measured data. Initial qualitative comparison on the two clinical cases presented is encouraging. Once fully validated, these models will make it possible to simulate different interventional strategies.
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Richard J Edwards, Simon R Redwood, Pier D Lambiase, Michael S Marber (2005)  The effect of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and a K+(ATP) channel opener on warm up angina.   Eur Heart J 26: 6. 598-606 Mar  
Abstract: AIMS: In various models, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and K+(ATP) channel openers can potentiate and mimic ischaemic preconditioning, respectively. Our aim was to determine whether these characteristics are shared by the phenomenon of warm up in angina, often regarded as a surrogate of ischaemic preconditioning. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty patients with ischaemic heart disease were assigned in a double blind, randomized cross-over design to equivalent pressor doses of nicorandil 20 mg bid, enalapril 10 mg bid, losartan 25 mg bid, or placebo for 3 days. Patients underwent three consecutive exercise tolerance tests on each medication separated by a 1-week interval. Each patient underwent 12 exercise tests in total and 13 patients completed the study. On each medication the second exercise was separated from the first by 15 min of rest and the third exercise was performed 90 min after the second to control for training. The time to 0.1 mV ST depression and rate pressure product at 0.1 mV ST depression increased significantly in all groups during exercise two compared with exercise one. Nicorandil reduced angina but did not attenuate this warm up effect. This benefit of first exercise waned by test three with placebo, losartan, and nicorandil, but not with enalapril. CONCLUSION: In contrast to predictions based on ischaemic preconditioning the magnitude of the warm up was apparently unaltered by nicorandil, losartan, or enalapril, however its duration seemed to be extended by enalapril. Thus ischaemic preconditioning and warm up angina are likely to have differing pharmacological profiles suggesting a diverse underlying mechanism.
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Kawal S Rhode, Maxime Sermesant, David Brogan, Sanjeet Hegde, John Hipwell, Pier Lambiase, Eric Rosenthal, Clifford Bucknall, Shakeel A Qureshi, Jaswinder S Gill, Reza Razavi, Derek L G Hill (2005)  A system for real-time XMR guided cardiovascular intervention.   IEEE Trans Med Imaging 24: 11. 1428-1440 Nov  
Abstract: The hybrid magnetic resonance (MR)/X-ray suite (XMR) is a recently introduced imaging solution that provides new possibilities for guidance of cardiovascular catheterization procedures. We have previously described and validated a technique based on optical tracking to register MR and X-ray images obtained from the sliding table XMR configuration. The aim of our recent work was to extend our technique by providing an improved calibration stage, real-time guidance during cardiovascular catheterization procedures, and further off-line analysis for mapping cardiac electrical data to patient anatomy. Specially designed optical trackers and a dedicated calibration object have resulted in a single calibration step that can be efficiently checked and updated before each procedure. An X-ray distortion model has been implemented that allows for distortion correction for arbitrary c-arm orientations. During procedures, the guidance system provides a real-time combined MR/X-ray image display consisting of live X-ray images with registered recently acquired MR derived anatomy. It is also possible to reconstruct the location of catheters seen during X-ray imaging in the MR derived patient anatomy. We have applied our registration technique to 13 cardiovascular catheterization procedures. Our system has been used for the real-time guidance of ten radiofrequency ablations and one aortic stent implantation. We demonstrate the real-time guidance using two exemplar cases. In a further two cases we show how off-line analysis of registered image data, acquired during electrophysiology study procedures, has been used to map cardiac electrical measurements to patient anatomy for two different types of mapping catheters. The cardiologists that have used the guidance system suggest that real-time XMR guidance could have substantial value in difficult interventional and electrophysiological procedures, potentially reducing procedure time and delivered radiation dose. Also, the ability to map measured electrical data to patient specific anatomy provides improved visualization and a path to investigation of cardiac electromechanical models.
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2004
 
PMID 
P D Lambiase, M S Marber (2004)  Myocardial gene and cell delivery.   Heart 90: 1. 1-2 Jan  
Abstract: Although we now have the tools to introduce vectors and stem cells into specific myocardial locations, these devices are yet to be matched by comparable advances in molecular virology, cell biology, and our understanding of the pathophysiology of ischaemic heart disease
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Pier D Lambiase, Richard J Edwards, Prodromos Anthopoulos, Salman Rahman, Y Gloria Meng, Clifford A Bucknall, Simon R Redwood, Jeremy D Pearson, Michael S Marber (2004)  Circulating humoral factors and endothelial progenitor cells in patients with differing coronary collateral support.   Circulation 109: 24. 2986-2992 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The mechanisms underlying the variation in collateral formation between patients, even with similar patterns of coronary artery disease, remain unclear. This study investigates whether circulating humoral or cellular factors can provide an insight into this variation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Thirty patients with isolated left anterior descending coronary artery disease underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with collateral flow index (CFI) determined using a pressure wire. Patients with inadequate (CFI <0.25) compared with those with adequate (CFI > or =0.25) collateral support had, or tended to have, lower concentrations of coronary sinus growth factors and plasma exerting a weaker effect on endothelial cell migration and angiogenesis in vitro. However, there was an inverse correlation between serum mitogenicity and CFI (r=-0.61, P<0.01). No significant differences were detected between the 2 groups in plasma levels of total vascular endothelial growth factor, vascular endothelial growth factor165, or placental growth factor. There was a strong positive correlation between numbers of CD34/CD133-positive circulating hemopoietic precursor cells and CFI (r=0.75, P<0.001). In patients with inadequate, compared with those with adequate, CFI, the numbers of differentiated endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) appearing in the circulation and in culture were significantly reduced by 75% (P<0.05) and 70% (P<0.05), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, inadequate coronary collateral development is associated with reduced numbers of circulating EPCs and impaired chemotactic and proangiogenic but not mitogenic activity. These findings are consistent with current efforts to enhance collateral formation by augmentation of circulating EPCs.
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PMID 
P D Lambiase, A Rinaldi, J Hauck, M Mobb, D Elliott, S Mohammad, J S Gill, C A Bucknall (2004)  Non-contact left ventricular endocardial mapping in cardiac resynchronisation therapy.   Heart 90: 1. 44-51 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Up to 30% of patients with heart failure do not respond to cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT). This may reflect placement of the coronary sinus lead in regions of slow conduction despite optimal positioning on current criteria. OBJECTIVES: To characterise the effect of CRT on left ventricular activation using non-contact mapping and to examine the electrophysiological factors influencing optimal left ventricular lead placement. METHODS: and results: 10 patients implanted with biventricular pacemakers were studied. In six, the coronary sinus lead was found to be positioned in a region of slow conduction with an average conduction velocity of 0.4 m/s, v 1.8 m/s in normal regions (p < 0.02). Biventricular pacing with the left ventricle paced 32 ms before the right induced the optimal mean velocity time integral and timing for fusion of depolarisation wavefronts from the right and left ventricular pacing sites. Pacing outside regions of slow conduction decreased left ventricular activation time and increased cardiac output and dP/dt(max) significantly. CONCLUSIONS: In patients undergoing CRT for heart failure, non-contact mapping can identify regions of slow conduction. Significant haemodynamic improvements can occur when the site of left ventricular pacing is outside these slow conduction areas. Failure of CRT to produce clinical benefits may reflect left ventricular lead placement in regions of slow conduction which can be overcome by pacing in more normally activating regions.
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2003
 
PMID 
Pier D Lambiase, Richard J Edwards, Michael R Cusack, Clifford A Bucknall, Simon R Redwood, Michael S Marber (2003)  Exercise-induced ischemia initiates the second window of protection in humans independent of collateral recruitment.   J Am Coll Cardiol 41: 7. 1174-1182 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to examine if exercise-induced ischemia initiated late preconditioning in humans that becomes manifest during subsequent exercise and serial balloon occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD). BACKGROUND: The existence of late preconditioning in humans is controversial. We therefore compared myocardial responses to exercise-induced and intracoronary balloon inflation-induced ischemia in two groups of patients subjected to different temporal patterns of ischemia. METHODS: Thirty patients with stable angina secondary to single-vessel LAD disease underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) after two separate exercise tolerance test (ETT) protocols designed to investigate isolated early preconditioning (IEP) alone or the second window of protection (SWOP). The IEP subjects underwent three sequential ETTs at least two weeks before PCI. The SWOP subjects underwent five sequential ETTs commencing 24 h before PCI. RESULTS: During PCI there was no significant difference in intracoronary pressure-derived collateral flow index (CFI) between groups (IEP = 0.15 +/- 0.13, SWOP = 0.19 +/- 0.15). In SWOP patients, compared with the initial ETT, the ETT performed 24 h later had a 40% (p < 0.001) increase in time to 0.1-mV ST depression and a 60% (p < 0.05) decrease in ventricular ectopic frequency. During the first balloon inflation, peak ST elevation was reduced by 49% (p < 0.05) in the SWOP versus the IEP group, and the dependence on CFI observed in the IEP group was abolished (analysis of covariance, p < 0.05). The significant attenuation of ST elevation (47%, p < 0.005) seen at the time of the second inflation in the IEP patients was not seen in the SWOP patients. CONCLUSIONS: Exercise-induced ischemia triggers late preconditioning in humans, which becomes manifest during exercise and PCI. This is the first evidence that ischemia induced by coronary occlusion is attenuated in humans by a late preconditioning effect induced by exercise.
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2002
 
PMID 
N Kapur, P Lambiase, R D Rakhit, J Pearce, G Orchard, E Calonje, P M Dowd (2002)  Local and systemic expression of basic fibroblast growth factor in a patient with familial glomangioma.   Br J Dermatol 146: 3. 518-522 Mar  
Abstract: Glomangiomas are rare cutaneous tumours composed of glomus cells, which are modified smooth muscle cells. The aetiology of this condition is thought to involve a mutation in a novel gene acting to regulate angiogenesis. We report a patient from a large family with three generations affected by familial multiple glomangiomas. We hypothesized that the growth factors basic fibroblast growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor, which stimulate/regulate angiogenesis could be involved in the pathogenesis of these lesions. Therefore, using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and immunohistochemistry, respectively, we measured systemic and tissue levels of these growth factors in a patient with familial glomangiomas. In addition, we investigated endothelial mitogenicity of the patient's serum as a functional assay of systemic growth factor activity.
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R J Edwards, S R Redwood, P D Lambiase, E Tomset, R D Rakhit, M S Marber (2002)  Antiarrhythmic and anti-ischaemic effects of angina in patients with and without coronary collaterals.   Heart 88: 6. 604-610 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the changes in the manifestations of myocardial ischaemia during sequential angina episodes caused by exercise or coronary artery occlusion are collateral dependent. METHODS: 40 patients awaiting percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty for an isolated left anterior descending artery stenosis underwent three sequential treadmill exercise tests, with the second exertion separated from the first by 15 minutes, and from the third by 90 minutes; 28 patients subsequently completed two (> 180 s) sequential intracoronary balloon inflations with measurement of collateral flow index from mean coronary artery wedge, aortic, and coronary sinus pressures. RESULTS: On second compared with first exercise, time to 0.1 mV ST depression (mean (SD): 340 (27) v 266 (25) s) and rate-pressure product at 0.1 mV ST depression (22 068 (725) v 19 586 (584) beats/min/mm Hg) were increased (all p < 0.005), while angina and ventricular ectopic beat frequency were diminished (p < 0.05). This advantage, which had waned by the third effort, was independent of collateral flow index. Similarly, at the end of the second compared with the first coronary occlusion, ventricular tachycardia (21% v 0%, p < 0.05), ST elevation (0.47 (0.07) v 0.33 (0.05) mV, p < 0.005), and angina severity (6.1 (0.7) v 4.6 (0.7) units, p < 0.005) were reduced despite similar collateral flow indices. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with coronary artery disease, ventricular arrhythmias, ST deviation, and angina are reduced during a second exertion or during a second coronary occlusion. This protective effect can occur independently of collateral recruitment. These characteristics, together with the breadth and temporal pattern of protection, are consistent with ischaemic preconditioning.
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Michael R Cusack, Michael S Marber, Pier D Lambiase, Clifford A Bucknall, Simon R Redwood (2002)  Systemic inflammation in unstable angina is the result of myocardial necrosis.   J Am Coll Cardiol 39: 12. 1917-1923 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: We investigated whether the source of the acute phase response in unstable angina (UA) lay within the culprit coronary plaque or distal myocardium. BACKGROUND: An inflammatory response is an important component of the acute coronary syndromes. However, its origin and mechanism remain unclear. METHODS: In 94 stable patients undergoing coronary angiography, the relationship between systemic levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP) and extent of atherosclerosis was studied. The temporal relationship between these markers and troponin T (TnT) was determined in 91 patients with UA. Cytokine levels were measured in the aortic root and coronary sinus of 36 unstable patients. RESULTS: There was no relationship found between stable coronary atherosclerosis and inflammatory marker levels. Compared with this group, admission levels of IL-6 (3.6 +/- 0.3 ng/ml vs. 10.7 +/- 1.7 ng/ml, p < 0.05) and CRP (2.3 +/- 0.1 mg/l vs. 4.6 +/- 0.6 mg/l, p < 0.05) were elevated in patients with UA. In this group, IL-6 and CRP remained elevated in those who subsequently experienced major adverse cardiac events. This inflammatory response occurred in parallel to the appearance of TnT. Both TNF-alpha (19.2 +/- 3.4 ng/ml vs. 17.1 +/- 3.3 ng/ml, p < 0.001) and IL-6 (10.3 +/- 1.4 ng/ml vs. 7.7 +/- 1.1 ng/ml, p < 0.01) were elevated in the coronary sinus compared with aortic root in patients with UA. This was principally observed in those who were TnT positive. There was no cytokine gradient across the culprit plaque. CONCLUSIONS: There is an intracardiac inflammatory response in UA that appears to be the result of low-grade myocardial necrosis. The ruptured plaque does not appear to contribute to the acute phase response.
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2001
1996
 
PMID 
P Lambiase, J P Seery, S D Taylor-Robinson, J N Thompson, J M Hughes, J R Walters (1996)  Resolution of panniculitis after placement of pancreatic duct stent in chronic pancreatitis.   Am J Gastroenterol 91: 9. 1835-1837 Sep  
Abstract: The association of panniculitis and pancreatitis is well described. However, panniculitis remains a relatively uncommon manifestation of pancreatic inflammation. We report a case in which treatment of pancreatitis by the placement of a pancreatic stent led to simultaneous resolution of both the pancreatitis and the associated panniculitis. There are no other reports in the literature demonstrating resolution of panniculitis subsequent to stent placement or definitive surgery.
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