-
L. Fusini,
F. Veronesi,
P. Gripari,
F. Maffessanti,
C. Corsi,
F. Alamanni,
M. Zanobini,
M. Naliato, G. Tamborini,
M. Pepi,
E.G. Caiani
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Mitral valve (MV) repair is the preferred treatment for mitral regurgitation associated with organic MV prolapse (MVP). Our goal was to describe the dynamic changes in mitral annulus (MA) geometry after annuloplasty, using custom software for MA tracking from transthoracic real-time 3D echocardiography (RT3DE). Forty-four MVP patients, divided into 2 subgroups (RIG and FLEX), were studied by RT3DE the day before, at 3 and 6 months after surgery. RT3DE was also obtained in 20 normal (NL) subjects. MA was tracked frame-by-frame and several parameters were computed. As expected, MVP had an enlarged MA and a reduced planarity compared to NL. Annuloplasty resulted in reduced area both in RIG and FLEX and in a more planar MA shape. Interestingly, at 3 and 6 months, FLEX height was greater than RIG, due to different ring design. This analysis gives new insights in the in-vivo performance of the implanted rings, offering a new tool in the clinical decision process and follow-up.
Computing in Cardiology, 2010; 10/2010
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Mitral valve (MV) repair is the preferential treatment for mitral regurgitation (MR) associated with degenerative MV disease, and the functional benefits of early surgery are known. Our goal was to evaluate the changes in LV shape following MV repair, using a new method based on real-time 3D echocardiography (RT3DE). Fifty patients with severe asymptomatic MR were enrolled. Transthoracic RT3DE imaging was performed the day before, 6 and 12 months after MV repair. A group of 66 normal subjects (NL) was studied as a reference. LV 3D shape indices of sphericity (S) and conicity (C) were computed. Post-operatively, LV volumes were decreased compared to pre-surgical values. EF was slightly decreased 6 months after surgery, but restored at 12 months. Modifications in end-diastolic LV shape were found: prior to surgery, S was elevated and C was decreased compared to NL; at 6 months, these changes were reversed with no further improvement at 12 months. Early MV repair in asymptomatic patients is associated with changes in LV shape which remodels to near normal morphology. Novel 3D shape analysis based on RT3DE, allows serial examination of the complex relationship between LV performance and shape.
Computers in Cardiology, 2009; 10/2009
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Finite element models are an innovative tool for the biomechanical analysis of dynamic cardiac structures, such as the mitral valve. Still, existing models are limited by a simplified description of valve morphology. We aimed at overcoming such limitation by integrating into a mitral valve structural finite element model the information about annulus and papillary muscles geometry and dynamics, obtained in humans by analysis of real time 3D echocardiographic images. The model was used to simulate valve closure from end diastole to systolic peak and to analyze the valve biomechanics. Simulated valvular dynamics and leaflets coaptation were realistic, and all gathered quantitative results were consistent with experimental findings from literature. This novel approach may lead to the development of a patient-specific modeling tool for clinical purposes.
Computers in Cardiology, 2008; 10/2008
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To evaluate the prevalence of atrial thrombi in patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing different anticoagulation regimens before cardioversion; to evaluate the usefulness of transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE) guided cardioversion to prevent thromboembolic complications; and to correlate the presence of atrial thrombi with clinical and echocardiographic data.
757 consecutive patients admitted as candidates for cardioversion of atrial fibrillation were enrolled in the study. They were divided into four groups: effective conventional oral anticoagulation, short term anticoagulation, ineffective oral anticoagulation or subtherapeutic anticoagulation, and effective oral anticoagulation with a duration of < 3 weeks for various clinical reasons. All patients underwent TOE before cardioversion; in the presence of atrial thrombi or extreme left atrial echo contrast, cardioversion was postponed. The incidence of thromboembolic events was evaluated after cardioversion.
Atrial thrombi were detected in 48 of the 757 (6.3%) patients. No significant differences in the percentage of atrial thrombosis were found in the four study groups. Patients with atrial thrombosis were older and had a higher percentage of mitral prosthetic valves, lower left ventricular ejection fraction, more severe atrial spontaneous echo contrast, and lower Doppler left atrial appendage velocities. 648 patients were scheduled for cardioversion. Cardioversion was successful in 89% of patients without any major thromboembolic event.
The prevalence of atrial thrombosis before cardioversion despite different treatments with anticoagulants is about 7% and a TOE guided approach may prevent the risk of embolic events.
Heart (British Cardiac Society) 07/2006; 92(7):933-8. · 4.22 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In essential hypertension, the lower limit of autoregulation of coronary flow shifts to higher perfusion and the hypertensive ventricle is at a higher than normal risk of ischemia, and less able to tolerate acute reduction of coronary perfusion pressure. Little is known about pattern of coronary flow in isolated systolic hypertension, a pathologic condition in which the elevated systolic blood pressure is associated with a lower than normal vascular compliance and normal or slightly greater than normal mean arterial pressure and vascular resistance.
To evaluate the effects of rapid normalization of blood pressure on coronary blood flow in isolated systolic hypertension.
We subjected 20 patients with isolated systolic hypertension to intraoperative hemodynamic and transesophageal echocardiographic monitoring during peripheral vascular surgery. Coronary flow velocity integrals and diameters in the left anterior descending coronary artery were evaluated under baseline conditions and after normalization of blood pressure, which occurred spontaneously during anesthesia (10 cases; group 1A) or was induced by infusion of nitrate (10 cases, group 1B).
After normalization of systolic blood pressure integrals decreased significantly only for patients in group 1A; percentage changes of diameter were significantly greater for patients in group 1B. Therefore, coronary blood flow after normalization of systolic blood pressure increased for patients in group 1B (by 28+/-25%) and decreased for patients in group 1A (by 30+/-21%). Changes in integrals were inversely related to those in diameter (r= -0.72, P < 0.001); for patients in group 1A changes in coronary perfusion pressure and diameter were related to those of integrals (r= 0.94; P < 0.0005).
In isolated systolic hypertension, despite there being similar changes of the systolic blood pressure, administration of nitrates caused a marked increase of coronary flow through direct effects on coronary circulation, whereas spontaneous normotension was associated with a significant reduction of coronary flow.
Coronary Artery Disease 06/2001; 12(4):259-65. · 1.24 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Echocardiography is a well-established and accurate method for the evaluation of cardiac anatomy and function in patients with heart failure. In this review we summarize the role of echocardiography not only in assessing right ventricular anatomy and function, but also in the prediction of prognosis and in the study of ventricular interaction.
Italian heart journal. Supplement: official journal of the Italian Federation of Cardiology 11/2000; 1(10):1304-10.
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The normal human heart behaves as a single functional unit during preload reduction; adaptations of the left ventricle to head-up tilting is mediated through ventricular interdependence and biventricular-lung interaction.
We hypothesized that reduction of venous return in dilated cardiomyopathy is likely to have a great effect on ventricular chamber geometry and filling. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of gradual head-up tilting in normal subjects and in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, addressing special attention to right (RV) and left ventricular (LV) dimensions, geometry, and filling, and to biventricular-lung interaction.
Twenty normal subjects and 23 patients with moderate heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy were studied with two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography in supine position and after 20 degrees, 40 degrees, and 60 degrees tilting. Right ventricular and LV dimensions, LV geometry, and tricuspid, mitral, and pulmonary venous flow patterns were recorded at each step of the study. Geometric changes of the LV were evaluated by measurements of volumes and diameters in the apical four-chamber view (which identifies the interventricular septum and lateral wall) and apical two-chamber view (which identifies the inferior and anterior wall of the LV).
In the two groups, tilting was associated with reduction of RV area and LV diameter and volumes; percent variations in LV diameter and volumes recorded in four-chamber view were lower at each step of tilting than with those derived from the two-chamber view in controls and in patients. In normal subjects, mitral and tricuspid peak early flow velocities were decreased at any tilting level; peak late velocities were unchanged; peak velocity of systolic forward flow of the pulmonary vein was reduced, diastolic forward flow was unchanged, and the difference in duration between reverse pulmonary flow and forward mitral A wave was reduced. Doppler findings were qualitatively similar in patients, but tilting induced a more marked redistribution of LV filling to late diastole because of a significant increase in atrial contribution.
Preload reduction by tilting induces profound effects on left and right dimensions, geometry, and filling in normal and dilated heart; reduction or RV dimensions are associated with changes in LV ventricular geometry (minimal reduction in septal-lateral diameter, marked reduction in anterior-posterior diameter), redistribution of right and left diastolic filling to late diastole, and redistribution of pulmonary venous flow to early diastole. These mechanisms are probably due to a favorable interaction between heart and lungs, which increases compliance within the pericardial space and facilitates redistribution of flow from the lungs. Even a minimal amount of preload reduction causes more marked effects in LV filling patterns in dilated cardiomyopathy than in normal hearts, confirming that ventricular interaction and pericardial constraint are increased when heart volume enlarges.
Clinical Cardiology 10/2000; 23(9):665-72. · 2.15 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We aimed to assess the differences in the adaptive response of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) compared with normal subjects, as well as any association with increased susceptibility to the test.
Diastolic function contributes importantly in the adaptation of the normal heart to head-up tilting. This mechanism may be disturbed by an impaired relaxation in HCM.
Twenty-one male patients with HCM (46 +/- 6 years old) and 22 healthy men (44 +/- 8 years) were studied using Doppler echocardiography after 1 and 10 min of head-up tilting at 20 degrees, 40 degrees and 60 degrees.
In control subjects, tilting was associated with 1) a predominance of diastolic pulmonary venous flow and early left ventricular (LV) filling (atrium functioning as an open conduit); 2) right ventricular (RV) shrinkage; and 3) no LV dimensional variations. In patients with HCM, tilting was associated with 1) a prevalence of systolic pulmonary venous flow (atrium functioning as a reservoir in which filling depends on atrial relaxation and compliance) and late diastolic transmitral flow (atrium working as a booster pump); 2) LV shrinkage; and 3) no RV dimension variations. These mechanisms did not prevent stroke volume (SV) from decreasing at 40 degrees and 60 degrees in both groups. Because of a lower increase in heart rate (HR), a reduction in cardiac output (CO) was greater in patients with HCM. The responses were similar after 1 and 10 min of tilting in control subjects, whereas in patients, blood pressure (BP), SV and LV dimension fell more after 10 min.
Adaptation of the normal heart to tilting is based on a ventricular interaction and LV diastolic properties; HCM relies on left atrial diastolic and systolic functions. An inadequate HR reaction to a fall in BP and SV in HCM (depressed reflexogenic activity) contributes to making CO more vulnerable by greater and more prolonged displacements.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology 08/2000; 36(1):185-93. · 14.16 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In hypertension, coronary artery disease (CAD) can be overestimated by stress electrocardiography (ECG) and scintigraphy due to frequent false-positive results. Exercise tests are also limited by an excessive blood pressure increase, and pharmacologic pressure normalization decreases the accuracy of the test. The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of exercise echocardiography as an alternative test for CAD detection in hypertension, both before and after adequate blood pressure control. We studied 59 hypertensive and 59 normotensive patients undergoing coronary angiography for chest pain. Upright bicycle exercise ECG and echocardiographic tests were performed in each group in the absence of therapy; in hypertensives, the tests were repeated a day apart after blood pressure normalization with sublingual nifedipine. Significant CAD (lumen narrowing >50%) was detected in 22 hypertensive and 41 normotensive patients. In the two groups, sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of exercise echocardiography performed before treatment were not statistically different (95%, 94%, 94% in hypertensives and 82%, 77%, 83% in normotensives, respectively), but were significantly higher than for the exercise ECG test (68%, 70%, and 69%, respectively). After blood pressure lowering, exercise echocardiography sensitivity slightly decreased (91%), whereas specificity (100%) and diagnostic accuracy (96%) did not vary; on the contrary, exercise ECG sensitivity decreased to 45%. Therefore, according to our data, exercise echocardiography can be an accurate test and more reliable than exercise ECG to detect CAD in normotensives as well as in hypertensives. Normalization of blood pressure with nifedipine does not affect its accuracy, but markedly reduces the sensitivity of exercise ECG.
American Journal of Hypertension 07/2000; 13(7):796-801. · 3.18 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The purposes of this study were to compare the accuracy of multiplane vs. biplane transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in the diagnosis of aortic dissection and aortic intramural haematoma, and to test whether these techniques provide all the diagnostic information required to make management decisions.
Fifty-eight consecutive patients with clinically suspected aortic dissection were studied with multiplane TEE; all cases who required surgery underwent intraoperative monitoring with multiplane TEE. The following multiplane TEE data were analysed: the angle between current and 0 degrees plane at which each view was obtained; the success rate in the evaluation of true and false lumen, entry tear, coronary artery involvement, aortic regurgitation, pericardial effusion. Advantages of multiplane over biplane TEE have been evaluated by the demonstration of usefulness of views obtained in planes other than 0 degrees-20 degrees or 70 degrees-110 degrees, assuming that with manipulation of a biplane probe a 20 degrees arc could be added to the conventional horizontal and vertical planes. On the basis of TEE findings, aortic dissection was confirmed in 36 cases (18 type A, 12 type B, six intramural haematoma). The specificity and sensitivity of TEE in terms of the presence or absence of aortic dissection or intramural haematoma were 100%. An additional clinical value of multiplane over biplane TEE in the evaluation of ascending aorta, aortic arch, entry tears and coronary artery involvement was demonstrated. All cases with type A aortic dissection or intramural haematoma involving the ascending aorta had an operation that was performed immediately after the diagnosis (hospital mortality, 13%). Patients with type B aortic dissection were treated medically; 25% of these cases were operated later (hospital mortality, 0%).
Multiplane and biplane TEE have excellent and similar accuracies in the evaluation of aortic dissection and intramural haematoma. Multiplane TEE improves the visualization of coronary arteries, aortic arch and entry tears; it appears to be an ideal method as the sole diagnostic approach before surgery in type A aortic dissection.
European Heart Journal – Cardiovascular Imaging 04/2000; 1(1):72-9. · 2.32 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: 1. In a supine position, the heart fills to close to the limits of pericardial constraint and the pericardium may act to redistribute central blood volume from the left side of the heart back to the more compliant lung. 2. We probed whether, and through which mechanisms, a redistribution of blood from the lungs to the left heart occurs during vertical displacement and compensates for reduced venous return. 3. We investigated 16 normal volunteers with Doppler-echocardiography during 20 degrees, 40 degrees and 60 degrees head-up tilting. Tilting was stopped at 10 min in 10 subjects (group 1) and at 45 min in 6 subjects (group 2). 4. At 10 min we observed a reduction in right ventricular diastolic dimension and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, as estimated by the difference between the duration of the pulmonary venous flow during atrial contraction (Z wave) and that of the mitral A wave. We also recorded a decrease during systole (X wave) and an increase during diastole (Y wave) of the pulmonary venous forward flow velocity. These variations were evident at 20 degrees and became progressively greater with increasing degrees of tilting. In group 2, changes at 10 min and at 45 min for any degree of displacement were similar. 5. A decrease in right ventricular dimensions (ventricular interdependence) and underfilling of the lung compartment due to volume redistribution to the periphery (diminished lung contribution to pericardial constraint) augment compliance within the pericardial space, reduce downstream pressure for pulmonary venous return and move the pulmonary venous flow predominantly to ventricular diastole, allowing diastolic filling. 6. During head-up tilting a favourable interaction between heart and lungs increases compliance within the pericardial space and facilitates redistribution of blood from the lungs, resulting in a sustained compensation for the reduced venous return.
Clinical Science 08/1997; 93(1):13-20. · 4.61 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In hypertension, several factors disturb coronary circulation and the metabolic reserve of the heart. This study was undertaken to test whether in hypertensive patients global and regional left ventricular (LV) function is related during exercise to the presence of significant coronary stenosis and whether lowering of coronary perfusion pressure through rapid normalization of the diastolic pressure may modify the dynamics of the left ventricle. Thirty-five patients with mild to moderate hypertension undergoing coronary angiography for the evaluation of chest pain were included in the study; upright bicycle exercise echocardiography tests were performed without therapy and 1 day later 1 h after sublingual administration of nifedipine. LV ejection fraction and regional wall motion scores were evaluated and compared at baseline, peak exercise, immediate postexercise, and recovery phases in each test through digital on-line storing of echocardiographic images. Twenty-one patients had normal coronary arteries (group 1) and 14 significant coronary stenoses (group 2); age, gender, heart rate, blood pressure, left ventricular diameter and mass index, and ejection fraction were similar in the two groups. At peak exercise LV ejection fraction slightly increased in group 1, whereas it slightly decreased in group 2 (both during the test without therapy and after nifedipine administration). All patients in group 1 had normal left ventricular wall motion during exercise; 13 of 14 patients in group 2 had LV wall motion abnormalities at peak exercise. Nifedipine did not produce any effect on LV regional wall motion in group 1, but it induced significant changes in LV regional wall motion in seven patients in group 2. Changes in LV wall motion between the two test groups were related to the number of the stenotic coronary vessels: the normal exercise test before and after therapy and the two normalized tests after nifedipine administration were in fact observed in patients with one-vessel disease, whereas worsening or changes in the site of ischemia were observed only in patients with multivessel disease. Regional and global left ventricular dynamics during exercise is mainly dependent on the existence of significant coronary artery disease. Rapid decrease of blood pressure does not alter the regional dynamics of the left ventricle during exercise in patients without coronary artery disease, but it may induce normalization, worsening, or changes in the site of wall motion abnormalities in hypertensives with significant coronary stenoses.
American Journal of Hypertension 04/1997; 10(3):297-305. · 3.18 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: This study evaluates flow patterns of the left anterior descending and circumflex coronary arteries by multiplane transesophageal echocardiography in 25 patients with aortic valve stenosis, and assesses the relation between coronary flow characteristics and anatomic and hemodynamic parameters.
The American Journal of Cardiology 01/1997; 78(11):1303-6. · 3.37 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The purpose was to identify the basic circulatory adjustments to the erect position in man and what the role may be of the heart-lung coupling. Requirements for this study are that: subjects be normal, changes in posture be gradual; pulmonary venous flow, ventricular filling and output be assessed; the methods be noninvasive. In 10 normal men (mean age 34 +/- 8 years) the flow pattern in the right upper pulmonary vein and through the atrioventricular mitral valve, and the right and left ventricular (RV and LV) end-diastolic dimensions were assessed with Doppler echocardiography, in the supine position, after 20, 40 and 60 degrees tilting for 10 min. At 20 degrees displacement: blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume and LV dimension did not change: RV dimension reduced: pulmonary venous forward flow velocity diminished during systole (X wave) and rose in diastole (Y wave); E wave velocity of the mitral flow and the E/A ratio reduced (consistent with a lower atrioventricular pressure gradient); difference between duration of the pulmonary venous flow reversal during atrial contraction (Z wave) and duration of the mitral A wave (the difference is an index of LV end-diastolic pressure) also diminished, suggesting an improvement of LV compliance. Tilting at 40 and 60 degrees were associated with increase in heart rate and diastolic blood pressure; decrease in systolic blood pressure and stroke volume; reduction of diastolic dimension of both ventricles; some enhancement of the flow changes already described. X was related to stroke volume while supine (r = 0.75; p < 0.01) and not during tilting; at any level of tilting, X/Y ratio was inversely related to the E/A ratio and directly related to the difference in duration between Z and A. During vertical displacement, blood shifts from lungs to systemic circulation resulting in: contribution to replenishment of the arterial side of the circuit; enhancement in LV compliance, due to reduction of RV diastolic volume (interdependence) and pericardial constraint; facilitation and predominance of blood drainage for the lungs during ventricular diastole. Thus, the basic adaptation to erect positioning in man seems to be a mechanical one, mainly consisting of an interplay between heart and lungs. Increase in heart rate and vasoconstriction appear to be supportive mechanisms at more vertical postures.
Cardiologia (Rome, Italy) 01/1997; 42(1):69-76.
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Calcification of the mitral annulus is always a technical complication in mitral surgery and standard procedures are often difficult to perform; mitral valve replacement can be dangerous with a high risk of perioperative heart rupture, and reconstructive surgery is often contraindicated. Nevertheless in this case of posterior leaflet prolapse with annular calcification valve repair was performed, after complete calcium debridement causing annulus disruption and atrio-ventricular discontinuity, by means of a straddling atrio-ventricular pericardial patch and the sliding leaflet technique.
The Journal of heart valve disease 10/1996; 5(5):567-9. · 0.81 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We investigated 7 patients with chronic congestive heart failure undergoing dynamic cardiomyoplasty with intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography. Biventricular wrapping acutely modified right or left ventricular geometry, but did not induce acute restriction to left ventricular filling.
The American Journal of Cardiology 05/1996; 77(9):783-7. · 3.37 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: This study was undertaken to test whether multiplane transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) offers advantages in comparison with biplane TEE in the intraoperative monitoring during cardiac surgery. A diagnostic multiplane TEE was performed in 400 patients in the immediate preoperative and postoperative periods. We systematically acquired cardiac images from the gastric fundus, lower esophagus, and upper esophagus; complete views of the descending aorta were also recorded. Usefulness of the different views in providing essential additional clinical information compared with exclusive transverse (0 to 20 degrees) and longitudinal (70 to 110 degrees) planes of the biplane TTE was assessed assuming that with manipulation of a biplane probe, a 20 degrees are could be added to the conventional horizontal and vertical planes. A high success rate of each view was demonstrated; anatomy and pathologic condition were best visualized in oblique planes. The method proved to be particularly useful in the preoperative and postoperative phases of aortic dissection (27 cases), aortic (65 cases) and mitral (35 cases) valve replacement, mitral valve repair (38 cases), left ventricular aneurysmectomy (25 cases), bleeding from proximal suture of an aortic heterograft (2 cases), and positioning of left ventricular hemopump (2 cases). Additional regional wall motion abnormalities of the right (four cases) and left ventricle (six cases) not appreciated in 0 to 20 degrees or 70 to 110 degrees planes were detected. Multiplane TEE is a useful clinical tool during intraoperative monitoring of cardiac surgery. Most structures of the heart and great vessels lie on oblique planes, while other views are optimized with the aid of slight angle corrections. This method improves the evaluation of anatomy and pathologic condition of the heart and great vessels, of native and prosthetic valves, and of left and right ventricular function.
Chest 03/1996; 109(2):305-11. · 5.25 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The study sought to probe whether the adaptation of the right ventricle to reduced preload may influence that of the left ventricle (interdependence) and whether and how this mechanism contributes to maintain an adequate pump function.
A study like this requires that subjects be normal, restraint of venous return be gradual, systolic function and diastolic filling and dimensions of either ventricle be monitored.
Of 30 healthy men (mean [+/- SD] age 35 +/- 7 years) studied with Doppler echocardiography, 20 were studied in the supine position and after 20 degrees, 40 degrees and 60 degrees tilting for 10 min; the remaining 10 subjects were also studied at the same levels of tilting for 45 min.
At 20 degrees, heart rate, blood pressure and stroke volume were steady; the diastolic right ventricular area was reduced (p < 0.001); and the end-diastolic dimension of the left ventricle did not vary. Tilting at 40 degrees and 60 degrees increased heart rate and diastolic pressure, decreased systolic pressure and stroke volume and reduced the diastolic dimensions of both ventricles. At any tilting level, right and left peak early inflow velocities (E) were decreased, peak late velocities (A) were unchanged, and E/A ratios were reduced, suggesting that the atrial-ventricular pressure difference was diminished bilaterally and that the atrial contribution to ventricular filling was maintained. Tachycardia at 40 degrees and 60 degrees tilting was not associated with enhancement of left ventricular fiber fractional shortening or mean velocity of shortening for any corresponding end-systolic wall stress; changes in heart rate also did not correlate with those in fiber fractional shortening and velocity of shortening. The adaptive responses to the same degrees of tilting for a duration of 45 min were comparable to those at 10 min.
With moderate restraint of venous return, the left ventricle maintains filling and output in response to a reduction in right ventricular diastolic volume, which increases left ventricular compliance (interdependence), and to the pulmonary blood reservoir, which compensates for an immediate decrease in right ventricular stroke volume. The decreased lung blood volume would facilitate right ventricular ejection, resulting in a normal stroke output despite the reduced preload. Thus, mechanical adjustments fully compensate for moderate reduction of venous return. A more severe reduction requires chronotropic support for the maintenance of cardiac output. With prolongation of tilting time to 45 min, adaptive mechanisms do not become exhausted in normal persons.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology 01/1996; 26(7):1732-40. · 14.16 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: An abnormal coronary perfusion pressure is probably the major determinant of altered myocardial perfusion in aortic regurgitation; ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic function may also be involved. This study was undertaken to investigate the respective roles of these two variables.
Using multiplane transesophageal echocardiography, we evaluated the coronary Doppler flow velocity in the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery in 15 patients with aortic regurgitation before and immediately after valve replacement. The ratios of diastolic:systolic velocity integral and early:late diastolic velocity integral were correlated against coronary perfusion pressure, pulmonary wedge pressure and Doppler echocardiographic indices of left ventricular diastolic function. Patients were compared with 10 subjects without valvular diseases.
Aortic regurgitation was associated with a reduction of the coronary diastolic:systolic velocity integral ratio and increment in the early:late diastolic velocity integral ratio. The latter correlated positively with early:late diastolic ratio of mitral flow velocity, pulmonary wedge pressure and left ventricular mass index. Soon after valve replacement, a decrease in pulmonary wedge pressure and a rise in coronary perfusion pressure were seen. Both the echo-Doppler parameters related to diastolic function and the systodiastolic distribution of coronary flow returned to normal. This indicates that diastolic dysfunction rather than left ventricular mass may be related to a disordered myocardial perfusion.
In aortic regurgitation, a relationship exists between diastolic ventricular function and coronary flow phasic distribution. Valve replacement improves the former and normalizes the latter. Echo-Doppler parameters of diastolic dysfunction identify patients with worse coronary perfusion and might represent an additional criterion in the preoperative evaluation of patients with aortic regurgitation.
Coronary Artery Disease 09/1995; 6(8):635-43. · 1.24 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A 34-year-old patient with benign superior vena cava syndrome (SVCS) was treated with thrombolytic therapy, balloon angioplasty, and placement of two peripheral Palmaz stents. Embolization of one stent to the right atrium occurred 10 min after successful implantation. This serious complication was successfully managed by percutaneous transcatheter technique with retrieval from the right atrium and subsequent deployment into the right external iliac vein of the lost stent. Complete resolution of SVCS symptoms occurred within 24 hr and moderate superior vena cava restenosis was successfully dilated 8 months later. At 12-month follow-up the patient continues to be asymptomatic.
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis 03/1995; 34(2):162-6.