4.7 Article

Myocardial Injury and Cardiac Reserve in Patients With Heart Failure and Preserved Ejection Fraction

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 72, Issue 1, Pages 29-40

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2018.04.039

Keywords

biomarkers; exercise; heart failure; hemodynamics; HFpEF; troponin T

Funding

  1. Mayo Clinic
  2. Uehara Memorial Foundation, Japan
  3. National Institutes of Health [T32 HL007111, RO1 HL126638, RO1 HL128526, UO1 HL125205, U10 HL110262]
  4. Abbott Laboratories
  5. Amgen
  6. AstraZeneca
  7. Daiichi-Sankyo
  8. GlaxoSmithKline
  9. Merck Co.
  10. Roche Diagnostics Corporation
  11. Takeda Global Research and Development Center
  12. Waters Technologies Corporation
  13. Czech Healthcare Research Grant agency (AZV) [17-28784A]

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BACKGROUND Cardiac reserve is depressed in patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The mechanisms causing this are poorly understood. OBJECTIVES The authors hypothesized that myocardial injury might contribute to the hemodynamic derangements and cardiac reserve limitations that are present in HFpEF. Markers of cardiomyocyte injury, central hemodynamics, ventricular function, and determinants of cardiac oxygen supply-demand balance were measured. METHODS Subjects with HFpEF (n = 38) and control subjects without heart failure (n = 20) underwent cardiac catheterization, echocardiography, and expired gas analysis at rest and during exercise. Central venous blood was sampled to measure plasma high-sensitivity troponin T levels as an index of cardiomyocyte injury. RESULTS Compared with control subjects, troponins were more than 2-fold higher in subjects with HFpEF at rest and during exercise (p < 0.0001). Troponin levels were directly correlated with left ventricular (LV) filling pressures (r = 0.52; p < 0.0001) and diastolic dysfunction (r = -0.43; p = 0.002). Although myocardial oxygen demand was similar, myocardial oxygen supply was depressed in HFpEF, particularly during exercise (coronary perfusion pressuretime integral; 44 +/- 9 mmHg x s x min(-1) x l x dl(-1) vs. 30 +/- 9 mmHg x s x min(-1) x l x dl(-1); p < 0.0001), and reduced indices of supply were correlated with greater myocyte injury during exercise (r = -0.44; p = 0.0008). Elevation in troponin with exercise was directly correlated with an inability to augment LV diastolic (r = -0.40; p = 0.02) and systolic reserve (r = -0.57; p = 0.0003), greater increases in LV filling pressures (r = 0.55; p < 0.0001), blunted cardiac output response (r = -0.44; p = 0.002), and more severely depressed aerobic capacity in HFpEF. CONCLUSIONS Limitations in LV functional reserve and the hemodynamic derangements that develop secondary to these limitations during exercise in HFpEF are correlated with the severity of cardiac injury, assessed by plasma levels of troponin T. Further study is warranted to determine the mechanisms causing myocyte injury in HFpEF and the potential role of ischemia, and to identify and test novel interventions targeted to these mechanisms. EXEC [Study of Exercise and Heart Function in Patients With Heart Failure and Pulmonary Vascular Disease]; (C) 2018 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.

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