Videos | Cardiogenic Shock | July 15, 2020

VIDEO: New Research in Cardiogenic Shock at Tufts Medical Center

Navin Kapur, M.D., FAHA, FACC, FSCAI, director, Acute Mechanical Circulatory Support Program and executive director of The Cardiovascular Center for Research and Innovation (CVCRI), Tufts Medical Center, explains the research being done by the Cardiogenic Shock Working Group, which is headed by Tufts. 

The Cardiogenic Shock Working Group (CSWG) has created a patient registry now includes 15-20 centers in the United States and data on more than 2,000 patients who suffered shock either from heart failure or acute myocardial infarction (MI). It also includes hemodynamic data on more than 1,100 patients. It also includes all types of mechanical circulatory support devices, from intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP),  incrementally higher levels with a percutaneous Impella pump, TandemHeart, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).

Research last year showed three types of phenotype profiles in cardiogenic shock patients, including non-congested, cardio-renal and cardio-renal-hepatic. Kapur also said there is evidence that there is venous involvement that needs to be considered in future research.

The large amount of variables in the patient data from the CSWG is partly examined by artificial intelligence (AI), which helped identify the three shock phenotype profiles.

 

 

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