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Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography

Publication date: 2002-01-01
Volume: 15 12
Publisher: Elsevier

Author:

Kukulski, Tomasz
Jamal, Fadi ; D'hooge, Jan ; Bijnens, Bart ; De Scheerder, Ivan ; Sutherland, George

Keywords:

Adult, Aged, Angioplasty, Transluminal, Percutaneous Coronary, Blood Flow Velocity, Collateral Circulation, Coronary Disease, Diastole, Echocardiography, Doppler, Female, Heart, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, ROC Curve, Regional Blood Flow, Sensitivity and Specificity, Severity of Illness Index, Systole, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems, Cardiovascular System & Cardiology, LEFT-VENTRICULAR FUNCTION, TWO-DIMENSIONAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, MYOCARDIAL-ISCHEMIA, DOPPLER-ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, DOBUTAMINE STRESS, ARTERY OCCLUSION, WALL-MOTION, DYSFUNCTION, REPERFUSION, HUMANS, Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary, Radiography, 1102 Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology, Cardiovascular System & Hematology, 3201 Cardiovascular medicine and haematology

Abstract:

Ultrasound-derived natural strain rate and strain are new Doppler myocardial imaging (DMI) parameters, which can measure local deformation independently of overall heart motion and thus could better characterize local contractility than DMI velocities alone. This study was undertaken to evaluate the relative benefits of regional velocity, strain rate, and strain measurements in detecting the range of acute changes in regional myocardial function in the "at-risk" zone during coronary angioplasty. Sixty-one patients (aged 63 +/- 12, 18 women) with stable angina pectoris were studied before, at the end of, and during recovery from a 60-second percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) balloon occlusion. High frame rate (147 fps) color DMI regional velocity data were derived from basal posterior (parasternal view) and mid, apical septal (apical view) "at-risk" segments as well as from the corresponding segments in healthy subjects and analyzed offline for velocity (VEL), strain rate (SR), and strain (epsilon) measurements. Coronary occlusion resulted in the reduction in VEL(SYS), SR(SYS), and epsilon(SYS) values for both radial (RCA/CX occlusion) and longitudinal data (LAD occlusion) in all segments analyzed. Velocity parameters alone failed to distinguish between baseline and occlusive measurements in the "at-risk" segments with visually abnormal baseline function. SR(SYS) and epsilon(SYS) had a higher diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity 75%, 80% and specificity 80%, 82%, respectively) than VEL(SYS) velocity alone (sensitivity 68%, specificity 65%,) for identifying acute ischemia in either baseline normal and abnormal segments. DMI-derived indexes can identify and quantify the spectrum of acute systolic and diastolic ischemic changes induced during clinical PTCA. The quantitation of regional deformation rather than motion would appear to be more appropriate in detecting and quantifying acute ischemic changes in myocardial function, especially in segments with pre-existing abnormal function.