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Doppler-derived myocardial systolic strain rate is a strong index of left ventricular contractility

Authors :
Jeanne K. Drinko
Peter L. Castro
Michael L. Main
Jill Odabashian
Neil L. Greenberg
Mario J. Garcia
Agnese Travaglini
Michael S. Firstenberg
James D. Thomas
L. Leonardo Rodriguez
Source :
Circulation. 105(1)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Background — Myocardial fiber strain is directly related to left ventricular (LV) contractility. Strain rate can be estimated as the spatial derivative of velocities (dV/ds) obtained by tissue Doppler echocardiography (TDE). The purposes of the study were (1) to determine whether TDE-derived strain rate may be used as a noninvasive, quantitative index of contractility and (2) to compare the relative accuracy of systolic strain rate against TDE velocities alone. Methods and Results — TDE color M-mode images of the interventricular septum were recorded from the apical 4-chamber view in 7 closed-chest anesthetized mongrel dogs during 5 different inotropic stages. Simultaneous LV volume and pressure were obtained with a combined conductance–high-fidelity pressure catheter. Peak elastance (E max ) was determined as the slope of end-systolic pressure-volume relationships during caval occlusion and was used as the gold standard of LV contractility. Peak systolic TDE myocardial velocities (S m ) and peak (ε′ p ) and mean (ε′ m ) strain rates obtained at the basal septum were compared against E max by linear regression. E max as well as TDE systolic indices increased during inotropic stimulation with dobutamine and decreased with the infusion of esmolol. A stronger association was found between E max and ε′ p ( r =0.94, P y =0.29 x +0.46) and ε′ m ( r =0.88, P m ( r =0.75, P Conclusions — TDE-derived ε′ p and ε′ m are strong noninvasive indices of LV contractility. These indices appear to be more reliable than S m , perhaps by eliminating translational artifact.

Details

ISSN :
15244539
Volume :
105
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ae534fbc4c48f2b88971d313fd87175