Cardiovascular Ultrasound (Aug 2005)

Right ventricular dyssynchrony in patients with pulmonary hypertension is associated with disease severity and functional class

  • Murali Srinivas,
  • Suffoletto Matthew,
  • Rajagopalan Navin,
  • Dohi Kaoru,
  • López-Candales Angel,
  • Gorcsan John,
  • Edelman Kathy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-7120-3-23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
p. 23

Abstract

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Abstract Background Abnormalities in right ventricular function are known to occur in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. Objective Test the hypothesis that chronic elevation in pulmonary artery systolic pressure delays mechanical activation of the right ventricle, termed dyssynchrony, and is associated with both symptoms and right ventricular dysfunction. Methods Fifty-two patients (mean age 46 ± 15 years, 24 patients with chronic pulmonary hypertension) were prospectively evaluated using several echocardiographic parameters to assess right ventricular size and function. In addition, tissue Doppler imaging was also obtained to assess longitudinal strain of the right ventricular wall, interventricular septum, and lateral wall of the left ventricle and examined with regards to right ventricular size and function as well as clinical variables. Results In this study, patients with chronic pulmonary hypertension had statistically different right ventricular fractional area change (35 ± 13 percent), right ventricular end-systolic area (21 ± 10 cm2), right ventricular Myocardial Performance Index (0.72 ± 0.34), and Eccentricity Index (1.34 ± 0.37) than individuals without pulmonary hypertension (51 ± 5 percent, 9 ± 2 cm2, 0.27 ± 0.09, and 0.97 ± 0.06, p Conclusion Lower peak longitudinal right ventricular wall strain and significantly delayed time-to-peak strain values, consistent with right ventricular dyssynchrony, were found in a small heterogeneous group of patients with chronic pulmonary hypertension when compared to individuals without pulmonary hypertension. Furthermore, right ventricular dyssynchrony was associated with disease severity and compromised functional class.

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