4.8 Article

Myocardial strain by Doppler echocardiography - Validation of a new method to quantify regional myocardial function

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 102, Issue 10, Pages 1158-1164

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.CIR.102.10.1158

Keywords

echocardiography; strain; ischemia; ultrasonics; contractility

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Background-Myocardial strain is a measure of regional deformation, and by definition, negative strain means shortening and positive strain, elongation. This study investigates whether myocardial strain can be measured by Doppler echocardiography as the time integral of regional velocity gradients, using sonomicrometry as reference method. Methods and Results-In 13 anesthetized dogs, myocardial longitudinal strain was measured on apical images as the time integral of regional Doppler velocity gradients. Ultrasonic segment-length crystals were placed near the left ventricular (LV) apex and near the base. Apical ischemia was induced by occluding the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), and preload was increased by saline. Percentage systolic strain by Doppler correlated well with strain by sonomicrometry (y=0.82x-1.79, r=0.92, P<0.01). During LAD occlusion, apical myocardium became dyskinetic, as indicated by positive strain values and negative Doppler velocities. At the LV base, myocardial strain by Doppler, strain by sonomicrometry, and velocity of shortening by sonomicrometry (dL/dt) were unchanged during epical ischemia. However, myocardial Doppler velocities at the base decreased from 4.21 +/-0.7 (+/-SEM) to 2.7+/-0.4 cm/s (P<0.05), probably reflecting loss of motion caused by tethering to apical segments. Volume loading increased myocardial Doppler velocities from 2.2+/-0.3 to 4.1+/0.8 cm/s (P<0.05) and Doppler-derived strain from -12+/-1% to -22+/-2% (P<0.05), whereas peak LV elastance remained unchanged. Conclusions-Myocardial strain by Doppler echocardiography may represent a new, powerful method for quantifying regional myocardial function and is less influenced by tethering effects than Doppler tissue imaging. Like myocardial Doppler velocities, strain is markedly load-dependent.

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