Vascular Disease and Surgery

About

Heart transplantation surgery has become the standard treatment for selected patients with end-stage heart failure. Improvements in immunosuppressant, donor procurement, surgical techniques, and post-transplant care have resulted in a substantial decrease in acute allograft rejection, which had previously significantly limited survival of heart transplant recipients.

The number of heart transplants performed worldwide over the last decade has continued to increase annually.

Current challenges include older age of both recipients and donors; an increasing number of transplants performed with mechanical circulatory support; the growing use of combined organ transplants (now more than 4% of all heart transplants); and a high proportion of sensitised patients (those with pre-formed antibodies against human leukocyte antigens, which increased the risk of organ rejection).

Articles

Pharmacologic Cardiac Stress (PS-SPECT): Still Valuable for Prognosis in Chronic Coronary Syndrome

Published:

25 April 2023

Citation:

European Cardiology Review 2023;18:e34.

The Relationship between Neutrophil to Lymphocyte Ratio with Rehospitalisation and Mortality in Patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome

Published:

25 April 2023

Citation:

European Cardiology Review 2023;18:e29.

Anticoagulant Therapy in Coronary Artery Disease

Published:

18 April 2023

Citation:

European Cardiology Review 2023;18:e14.

Biomarkers and CV Risk

Published:

18 April 2023

Citation:

European Cardiology Review 2023;18:e13.