Mariam Tahir Siddiqi, Hassan Abbas Abdullah, Kamran Dawood, Sadaf Hanif, Arsalan Masood, and Muhammad Ijaz Bhatti. 2024. “Early Detection of Subclinical LV Dysfunction in Hypertensive Patients With Myocardial Performance Index on Doppler Echo”. The Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases 19 (3). https://doi.org/10.55958/jcvd.v19i3.143.

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<doi_batch xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/schema/4.3.6" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1" xmlns:ai="http://www.crossref.org/AccessIndicators.xsd" version="4.3.6" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.crossref.org/schema/4.3.6 https://www.crossref.org/schemas/crossref4.3.6.xsd">
  <head>
    <doi_batch_id>_1778482144</doi_batch_id>
    <timestamp>1778482144</timestamp>
    <depositor>
      <depositor_name>Ahmad Noeman</depositor_name>
      <email_address>picjcvd@gmail.com</email_address>
    </depositor>
    <registrant>Punjab Institute of Cardiology, Lahore</registrant>
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    <journal>
      <journal_metadata>
        <full_title>The Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases</full_title>
        <abbrev_title>J Cardiovasc Dis</abbrev_title>
        <issn media_type="electronic">2309-9739</issn>
        <issn media_type="print">2309-3544</issn>
      </journal_metadata>
      <journal_issue>
        <publication_date media_type="online">
          <month>02</month>
          <day>27</day>
          <year>2026</year>
        </publication_date>
        <journal_volume>
          <volume>21</volume>
        </journal_volume>
        <issue>3</issue>
      </journal_issue>
      <journal_article xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1" publication_type="full_text" metadata_distribution_opts="any">
        <titles>
          <title>Kidney Dysfunction and the Risk of Slow-Flow / No-Reflow During Primary PCI for Acute Myocardial Infarction</title>
        </titles>
        <contributors>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="first" language="en">
            <given_name>Masood Ali Akbar</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Kashif Zafar</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Mohsin Asgher</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Salman Munir</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Atif Imran</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
          <person_name contributor_role="author" sequence="additional" language="en">
            <given_name>Hamid Khalil</given_name>
            <surname/>
          </person_name>
        </contributors>
        <jats:abstract xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1">
          <jats:p>Background:&#13;
Primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) is considered the gold standard treatment for patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), as it significantly lowers both short and long-term mortality. This procedure successfully restores normal blood flow (TIMI-3 flow) in the infarct-related artery (IRA). Compromised kidney function is a recognized predictor of increased mortality and complications in STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI (pPCI). This adverse prognostic effect can appear even with a mild reduction in renal function. Several studies have also identified impaired kidney function as an independent risk factor for the development of the slow-flow or no-reflow (SF/NR) phenomenon.&#13;
 &#13;
Objective: To see the association of kidney dysfunction with patients having slow-flow/no- reflow phenomenon in STEMI patients undergoing pPCI and to evaluate its prognostic effect on short-term mortality in our local population&#13;
 &#13;
Material and Methods: The prospective observational study was conducted from 20-01-2025 to 15-05-2025 at the Cardiology Department, PIC Lahore. Patients of both genders age ranging from 18-75 years were enrolled to investigate the association between estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) or serum creatinine and the incidence of SF/NR who were undergoing pPCI.&#13;
Results: Total enrollment of 227 patients having mean age 56.1 years, 154(68.0%) males and 73(32.0%) females, in which 16(7.0%) developed slow-flow/no-reflow post-PCI. Duration of pain, A.Fib, complete heart block, and heart failure have statistically significant differences as p- value &lt; 0.05 and poorer baseline renal function, as evidenced by a lower eGFR (76.5±5.4 vs. 89.6±1.0 mL/min/1.73m², p=0.001). Angiographically, the no-reflow group had higher rates of pre- procedural total occlusion (TIMI 0 flow) and lower stent implantation rates. Mortality 1(6.3%) observed in slow / no-flow group with an insignificant p-value 0.141. Increasing age is an independent predictor, with each additional year raising the odds of slow/no-flow by about 4%. Hypertension doubled the likelihood of developing no-reflow p-value 0.020.&#13;
Conclusion: Impaired renal function significantly predicts slow-flow/no-reflow following primary PCI, underscoring the need for renal-based risk stratification before intervention&#13;
 </jats:p>
        </jats:abstract>
        <publication_date media_type="online">
          <month>03</month>
          <day>02</day>
          <year>2026</year>
        </publication_date>
        <doi_data>
          <doi>10.55958/jcvd.v21i3.282</doi>
          <resource>https://jcvdcme.com/index.php/Journal/article/view/282</resource>
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          <collection property="text-mining"/>
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    </journal>
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