Long axis electromechanics during dobutamine stress in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction
Open Access
- 1 October 2001
- Vol. 86 (4) , 397-404
- https://doi.org/10.1136/heart.86.4.397
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To dissociate the effect of inotropy from activation change during dobutamine stress on left ventricular long axis function in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). METHODS 25 patients with CAD and normal left ventricular cavity size and 30 with cavity dilatation—18 with normal activation (DCM-NA) and 12 with left bundle branch block (DCM-LBBB)—were compared with 20 controls. 12 lead ECG and septal long axis echograms were assessed at rest and peak dobutamine stress. Amplitude, shortening and lengthening velocities, postejection shortening, Q wave to onset of shortening (Q-OS), and A2 to onset of lengthening (A2-OL) were measured. Inotropy was evaluated from peak aortic acceleration. RESULTS In controls, amplitude, shortening and lengthening velocities, and peak aortic acceleration increased with stress; QRS, Q-OS, and A2-OL shortened (all p < 0.001); and contraction remained coordinate. In the group of patients with CAD and normal left ventricular cavity size, shortening velocity and peak aortic acceleration increased with stress (p < 0.005). However, amplitude and lengthening velocity did not change, QRS, Q-OS, and A2-OL lengthened (p < 0.01), and incoordination appeared. Results were similar in the group with DCM-NA. In the DCM-LBBB group, shortening velocity and peak aortic acceleration increased modestly with stress (p < 0.01) but amplitude, lengthening velocity, QRS, Q-OS, A2-OL, and incoordination remained unchanged. Overall, change in shortening velocity correlated with that in peak aortic acceleration (r 2 = 0.71), in amplitude with that in lengthening velocity (r 2 = 0.74), and in QRS with both Q-OS (r 2 = 0.69) and A2-OL (r 2 = 0.63). CONCLUSION The normal long axis response to dobutamine reflects both inotropy and rapid activation. In CAD, inotropy is preserved with development of ischaemia but the normal increase in amplitude is lost and prolonged activation delays the time course of shortening, causing pronounced incoordination. Overall, shortening rate uniformly reflects inotropy while lengthening rate depends mainly on systolic amplitude rather than primary diastolic involvement, even with overt ischaemia.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electromechanical interrelations during dobutamine stress in normal subjects and patients with coronary artery disease: comparison of changes in activation and inotropic stateHeart, 2001
- EditorialsEuropean Heart Journal, 1999
- Abnormal subendocardial function in restrictive left ventricular disease.Heart, 1994
- Absent septal q wave: a marker of the effects of abnormal activation pattern on left ventricular diastolic function.Heart, 1994
- Effect of left bundle branch block on diastolic function in dilated cardiomyopathy.Heart, 1991
- Usefulness of systolic excursion of the mitral anulus as an index of left ventricular systolic functionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1991
- Evaluation of left ventricular systolic and diastolic dysfunction during transient myocardial ischemia produced by angioplastyJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1987
- Left ventricular fibre architecture in man.Heart, 1981
- Analysis of left ventricular wall movement during isovolumic relaxation and its relation to coronary artery disease.Heart, 1976
- Measurement of instantaneous left ventricular dimension and filling rate in man, using echocardiography.Heart, 1973