Publications
Below you can find a list of our published research.
Below you can find a list of our published research.
8892 results
Cited 37 times since 2018 (4.7 per year) source: EuropePMC
Kardiologia polska, Volume 76, Issue 1, 1 1 2018, Pages 1-62 [2017 ESC/EACTS Guidelines for the management of valvular heart disease]. Baumgartner H, Falk V, Bax JJ, Bonis M, Hamm C, Holm PJ, Iung B, Lancellotti P, Lansac E, Munoz DR, Rosenhek R, Sjögren J, Mas PT, Vahanian A, Walther T, Wendler O, Windecker S, Zamorano JL
Cited 10 times since 2017 (1.3 per year) source: EuropePMC
Journal of cardiac failure, Volume 24, Issue 3, 29 5 2017, Pages 137-145 Effects of Transcatheter Mitral Valve Repair With MitraClip on Left Ventricular and Atrial Hemodynamic Load and Myocardial Wall Stress. van Wijngaarden SE, Kamperidis V, Al-Amri I, van der Kley F, Schalij MJ, Ajmone Marsan N, Bax JJ, Delgado V
Aims: To evaluate the effects of MitraClip on left ventricular (LV) and left atrial (LA) myocardial wall stress as assessed with the use of N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) and strain imaging. Methods and results: Sixty-five patients with symptomatic moderate and severe mitral regurgitation (MR; age 75 ± 9 y, 57% male, 89% functional MR) treated with the use of MitraClip were evaluated. Patients were divided according to 6-month NT-proBNP tertiles. Changes in echocardiograph... Abstract
Cited 52 times since 2017 (6.7 per year) source: EuropePMC
Circulation research, Volume 122, Issue 3, 28 4 2017, Pages 444-456 Adenosine-to-Inosine Editing of MicroRNA-487b Alters Target Gene Selection After Ischemia and Promotes Neovascularization. van der Kwast RVCT, van Ingen E, Parma L, Peters HAB, Quax PHA, Nossent AY
Rationale: Adenosine-to-inosine editing of microRNAs has the potential to cause a shift in target site selection. 2'-O-ribose-methylation of adenosine residues, however, has been shown to inhibit adenosine-to-inosine editing. Objective: To investigate whether angiomiR miR487b is subject to adenosine-to-inosine editing or 2'-O-ribose-methylation during neovascularization. Methods and results: Complementary DNA was prepared from C57BL/6-mice subjected to hindlimb ischemia. Using Sanger s... Abstract
Cited 251 times since 2017 (32.1 per year) source: EuropePMC
Circulation research, Volume 122, Issue 3, 27 4 2017, Pages e5-e16 MUSCLEMOTION: A Versatile Open Software Tool to Quantify Cardiomyocyte and Cardiac Muscle Contraction In Vitro and In Vivo. Sala L, van Meer BJ, Tertoolen LGJ, Bakkers J, Bellin M, Davis RP, Denning C, Dieben MAE, Eschenhagen T, Giacomelli E, Grandela C, Hansen A, Holman ER, Jongbloed MRM, Kamel SM, Koopman CD, Lachaud Q, Mannhardt I, Mol MPH, Mosqueira D, Orlova VV, Passier R, Ribeiro MC, Saleem U, Smith GL, Burton FL, Mummery CL
Rationale: There are several methods to measure cardiomyocyte and muscle contraction, but these require customized hardware, expensive apparatus, and advanced informatics or can only be used in single experimental models. Consequently, data and techniques have been difficult to reproduce across models and laboratories, analysis is time consuming, and only specialist researchers can quantify data. Objective: Here, we describe and validate an automated, open-source software tool (MUSCLEMOTION) ada... Abstract
Cited 297 times since 2017 (38 per year) source: EuropePMC
Nature genetics, Volume 50, Issue 1, 22 4 2017, Pages 26-41 Protein-altering variants associated with body mass index implicate pathways that control energy intake and expenditure in obesity. Turcot V, Lu Y, Highland HM, Schurmann C, Justice AE, Fine RS, Bradfield JP, Esko T, Giri A, Graff M, Guo X, Hendricks AE, Karaderi T, Lempradl A, Locke AE, Mahajan A, Marouli E, Sivapalaratnam S, Young KL, Alfred T, Feitosa MF, Masca NGD, Manning AK, Medina-Gomez C, Mudgal P, Ng MCY, Reiner AP, Vedantam S, Willems SM, Winkler TW, Abecasis G, Aben KK, Alam DS, Alharthi SE, Allison M, Amouyel P, Asselbergs FW, Auer PL, Balkau B, Bang LE, Barroso I, Bastarache L, Benn M, Bergmann S, Bielak LF, Blüher M, Boehnke M, Boeing H, Boerwinkle E, Böger CA, Bork-Jensen J, Bots ML, Bottinger EP, Bowden DW, Brandslund I, Breen G, Brilliant MH, Broer L, Brumat M, Burt AA, Butterworth AS, Campbell PT, Cappellani S, Carey DJ, Catamo E, Caulfield MJ, Chambers JC, Chasman DI, Chen YI, Chowdhury R, Christensen C, Chu AY, Cocca M, Collins FS, Cook JP, Corley J, Corominas Galbany J, Cox AJ, Crosslin DS, Cuellar-Partida G, D'Eustacchio A, Danesh J, Davies G, Bakker PIW, Groot MCH, Mutsert R, Deary IJ, Dedoussis G, Demerath EW, Heij
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified >250 loci for body mass index (BMI), implicating pathways related to neuronal biology. Most GWAS loci represent clusters of common, noncoding variants from which pinpointing causal genes remains challenging. Here we combined data from 718,734 individuals to discover rare and low-frequency (minor allele frequency (MAF) < 5%) coding variants associated with BMI. We identified 14 coding variants in 13 genes, of which 8 variants were in ge... Abstract
Cited 8 times since 2017 (1 per year) source: EuropePMC
Scientific reports, Volume 7, Issue 1, 21 3 2017, Pages 18039 Leukocyte-Associated Immunoglobulin-like Receptor-1 is regulated in human myocardial infarction but its absence does not affect infarct size in mice. Ellenbroek GHJM, de Haan JJ, van Klarenbosch BR, Brans MAD, van de Weg SM, Smeets MB, de Jong S, Arslan F, Timmers L, Goumans MTH, Hoefer IE, Doevendans PA, Pasterkamp G, Meyaard L, de Jager SCA
Heart failure after myocardial infarction (MI) depends on infarct size and adverse left ventricular (LV) remodelling, both influenced by the inflammatory response. Leukocyte-associated immunoglobulin-like receptor 1 (LAIR-1) is an inhibitory receptor of ITAM-dependent cell activation, present on almost all immune cells. We investigated regulation of LAIR-1 leukocyte expression after MI in patients and hypothesized that its absence in a mouse model of MI would increase infarct size and adverse re... Abstract
Cited 1 times since 2017 (0.1 per year) source: EuropePMC
JACC. Clinical electrophysiology, Volume 3, Issue 13, 18 3 2017, Pages 1519-1522 Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy With Multipoint Left Ventricular Lead Pacing. Bax JJ, Delgado V
Cited 91 times since 2017 (11.6 per year) source: EuropePMC
Nurse education in practice, Volume 29, 15 3 2017, Pages 127-132 Undergraduate nursing students' experience related to their clinical learning environment and factors affecting to their clinical learning process. Arkan B, Ordin Y, Yılmaz D
Clinical education is an essential part of nursing education. The purpose of this study was to explore nurse students' experiences related to cinical learning environments, factors effecting to clinical learning process. Descriptive qualitative design was used in this study, and data were collected from 2nd class nursing student (n = 14). The study took the form of in-depth interviews between August-October 2015. The qualitative interviews were analyzed by using simple content analysis. Dat... Abstract
Cited 4 times since 2017 (0.5 per year) source: EuropePMC
The American journal of cardiology, Volume 121, Issue 5, 11 2 2017, Pages 537-543 Gender-Specific Differences in All-Cause Mortality Between Incomplete and Complete Revascularization in Patients With ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction and Multi-Vessel Coronary Artery Disease. Dimitriu-Leen AC, Hermans MPJ, van Rosendael AR, van Zwet EW, van der Hoeven BL, Bax JJ, Scholte AJHA
The best revascularization strategy (complete vs incomplete revascularization) in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is still debated. The interaction between gender and revascularization strategy in patients with STEMI on all-cause mortality is uncertain. The aim of the present study was to evaluate gender-specific difference in all-cause mortality between incomplete and complete revascularization in patients with STEMI and multi-vessel coronary artery disease. The study p... Abstract
Cited 56 times since 2017 (7.1 per year) source: EuropePMC
European journal of heart failure, Volume 20, Issue 4, 11 2 2017, Pages 663-673 Nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics identifies phenylalanine as a novel predictor of incident heart failure hospitalisation: results from PROSPER and FINRISK 1997. Delles C, Rankin NJ, Boachie C, McConnachie A, Ford I, Kangas A, Soininen P, Trompet S, Mooijaart SP, Jukema JW, Zannad F, Ala-Korpela M, Salomaa V, Havulinna AS, Welsh P, Würtz P, Sattar N
Aims: We investigated the association between quantified metabolite, lipid and lipoprotein measures and incident heart failure hospitalisation (HFH) in the elderly, and examined whether circulating metabolic measures improve HFH prediction. Methods and results: Overall, 80 metabolic measures from the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER) trial were measured by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (n = 5341; 182 HFH events during 2.7-year follow-up). We repea... Abstract
Cited 5 times since 2017 (0.6 per year) source: EuropePMC
The American journal of cardiology, Volume 121, Issue 5, 11 2 2017, Pages 570-578 Relation of Overall and Abdominal Adiposity With Electrocardiogram Parameters of Subclinical Cardiovascular Disease in Individuals Aged 45 to 65 Years (from the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity Study). Elffers TW, de Mutsert R, Lamb HJ, Maan AC, Macfarlane PW, Willems van Dijk K, Rosendaal FR, Jukema JW, Trompet S
Overall and abdominal obesity are well-established risk factors for cardiometabolic disease. However, associations of overall and abdominal adiposity with electrocardiographic (ECG) markers of subclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD) have not yet been fully elucidated. Therefore, we investigated these associations in a population without preexisting CVD. We performed cross-sectional analyses in the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity Study. Body mass index (BMI), total body fat, and waist circum... Abstract
Cited 2 times since 2017 (0.3 per year) source: EuropePMC
PloS one, Volume 12, Issue 12, 11 2 2017, Pages e0188970 A model for warfare in stratified small-scale societies: The effect of within-group inequality. Pandit S, Pradhan G, van Schaik C
In order to predict the features of non-raiding human warfare in small-scale, socially stratified societies, we study a coalitionary model of war that assumes that individuals participate voluntarily because their decisions serve to maximize fitness. Individual males join the coalition if war results in a net economic and thus fitness benefit. Within the model, viable offensive war ensues if the attacking coalition of males can overpower the defending coalition. We assume that the two groups wil... Abstract
Cited 9 times since 2017 (1.1 per year) source: EuropePMC
Cardiology in the young, Volume 28, Issue 3, 10 2 2017, Pages 403-408 The evaluation of arterial stiffness of essential hypertension and white coat hypertension in children: a case-control study. Tokgöz ST, Yılmaz D, Tokgöz Y, Çelik B, Bulut Y
Background: The aim of this study was to determine and compare cardiovascular risks by assessing arterial stiffness in children with essential hypertension and white coat hypertension. Methods: Paediatric patients followed up with essential hypertension and white coat hypertension diagnoses and with no established end organ damage were involved in the study. Arterial stiffness in children included in the study was evaluated and compared by using the oscillometric device (Mobil-O-Graph) method. R... Abstract
Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Volume 28, Issue 3, 9 2 2017, Pages 459-465 Spiro-1-benzofuranpiperidinylalkanoic acids as a novel and selective sphingosine S1P<sub>5</sub> receptor agonist chemotype. Stoit AR, Lange JHM, Coolen HKAC, Rensink A, van den Hoogenband A, den Hartog AP, van Schaik S, Kruse CG
The synthesis and SAR of a novel class of spirobenzofuranpiperidinyl-derived alkanoic acids 6-34 as sphingosine S1P5 receptor agonists are described. The target compounds generally elicit high S1P5 receptor agonistic potencies and in general are selective against both S1P1 and S1P3 receptor subtypes. The key compound 32 shows a high bioavailability of 73% and a CNS/plasma ratio of 0.8 after oral administration in rats. Abstract
Cited 2 times since 2017 (0.3 per year) source: EuropePMC
Physiological genomics, Volume 50, Issue 2, 8 2 2017, Pages 102-103 Association of complement receptor 1 gene polymorphisms with cognitive function. Zijlstra LE, Jukema JW, Mooijaart SP, de Vries MA, Stott DJ, Castro Cabezas M, Trompet S
Previous evidence suggest involvement of the complement receptor 1 (CR1) in development of Alzheimer's disease. We investigated the association of CR1 gene polymorphisms with cognitive function in older subjects. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the CR1 region on chromosome 1 ( n = 73) were assessed in 5,244 participants in the PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (51.9% female, mean age 75.3 yr). Linear regression, adjusted for age, sex, country, and use of... Abstract
Cited 36 times since 2017 (4.6 per year) source: EuropePMC
Circulation, Volume 137, Issue 14, 8 2 2017, Pages 1463-1471 Effect of Losartan on Right Ventricular Dysfunction: Results From the Double-Blind, Randomized REDEFINE Trial (Right Ventricular Dysfunction in Tetralogy of Fallot: Inhibition of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System) in Adults With Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot. Bokma JP, Winter MM, van Dijk AP, Vliegen HW, van Melle JP, Meijboom FJ, Post MC, Berbee JK, Boekholdt SM, Groenink M, Zwinderman AH, Mulder BJM, Bouma BJ
Background: The effect of angiotensin II receptor blockers on right ventricular (RV) function is still unknown. Angiotensin II receptor blockers are beneficial in patients with acquired left ventricular dysfunction, and recent findings have suggested a favorable effect in symptomatic patients with systemic RV dysfunction. The current study aimed to determine the effect of losartan, an angiotensin II receptor blocker, on subpulmonary RV dysfunction in adults after repaired tetralogy of Fallot. Me... Abstract
Cited 12 times since 2017 (1.5 per year) source: EuropePMC
Infection control and hospital epidemiology, Volume 39, Issue 1, 7 1 2017, Pages 32-39 Quantifying Hospital-Acquired Carriage of Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase-Producing Enterobacteriaceae Among Patients in Dutch Hospitals. Kluytmans-van den Bergh MFQ, van Mens SP, Haverkate MR, Bootsma MCJ, Kluytmans JAJW, Bonten MJM, SoM Study Group and the R-GNOSIS Study Group
BACKGROUND Extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) are emerging worldwide. Contact precautions are recommended for known ESBL-E carriers to control the spread of ESBL-E within hospitals. OBJECTIVE This study quantified the acquisition of ESBL-E rectal carriage among patients in Dutch hospitals, given the application of contact precautions. METHODS Data were used from 2 cluster-randomized studies on isolation strategies for ESBL-E: (1) the SoM study, performed in 14 Du... Abstract
Cited 14 times since 2017 (1.8 per year) source: EuropePMC
PloS one, Volume 12, Issue 12, 5 1 2017, Pages e0189139 Z-disc protein CHAPb induces cardiomyopathy and contractile dysfunction in the postnatal heart. van Eldik W, den Adel B, Monshouwer-Kloots J, Salvatori D, Maas S, van der Made I, Creemers EE, Frank D, Frey N, Boontje N, van der Velden J, Steendijk P, Mummery C, Passier R, Beqqali A
Aims: The Z-disc is a crucial structure of the sarcomere and is implicated in mechanosensation/transduction. Dysregulation of Z-disc proteins often result in cardiomyopathy. We have previously shown that the Z-disc protein Cytoskeletal Heart-enriched Actin-associated Protein (CHAP) is essential for cardiac and skeletal muscle development. Furthermore, the CHAP gene has been associated with atrial fibrillation in humans. Here, we studied the misregulated expression of CHAP isoforms in heart disea... Abstract
Cited 16 times since 2017 (2 per year) source: EuropePMC
Scientific reports, Volume 7, Issue 1, 4 1 2017, Pages 16826 Monocyte gene expression in childhood obesity is associated with obesity and complexity of atherosclerosis in adults. Keustermans GC, Kofink D, Eikendal A, de Jager W, Meerding J, Nuboer R, Waltenberger J, Kraaijeveld AO, Jukema JW, Sels JW, Garssen J, Prakken BJ, Asselbergs FW, Kalkhoven E, Hoefer IE, Pasterkamp G, Schipper HS
Childhood obesity coincides with increased numbers of circulating classical CD14++CD16- and intermediate CD14++CD16+ monocytes. Monocytes are key players in the development and exacerbation of atherosclerosis, which prompts the question as to whether the monocytosis in childhood obesity contributes to atherogenesis over the years. Here, we dissected the monocyte gene expression profile in childhood obesity using an Illumina microarray platform on sorted monocytes of 35 obese children and 16 lean... Abstract
Cited 10 times since 2017 (1.3 per year) source: EuropePMC
Journal of general internal medicine, Volume 33, Issue 2, 4 1 2017, Pages 182-188 External Validation of a Tool Predicting 7-Year Risk of Developing Cardiovascular Disease, Type 2 Diabetes or Chronic Kidney Disease. Rauh SP, Rutters F, van der Heijden AAWA, Luimes T, Alssema M, Heymans MW, Magliano DJ, Shaw JE, Beulens JW, Dekker JM
Background: Chronic cardiometabolic diseases, including cardiovascular disease (CVD), type 2 diabetes (T2D) and chronic kidney disease (CKD), share many modifiable risk factors and can be prevented using combined prevention programs. Valid risk prediction tools are needed to accurately identify individuals at risk. Objective: We aimed to validate a previously developed non-invasive risk prediction tool for predicting the combined 7-year-risk for chronic cardiometabolic diseases. Design: The prev... Abstract