4.5 Article

Combined Echocardiographic and Cardiopulmonary Exercise to Assess Determinants of Exercise Limitation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

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MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.echo.2020.09.014

关键词

Cardiopulmonary exercise; Echocardiography; COPD; Exercise physiology

资金

  1. Mirowski Family Foundation, Inc.

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The study found that exercise intolerance in COPD patients is mainly due to issues related to cardiac function, hemodynamics, and peripheral oxygen extraction, rather than simply obstructive lung function. In addition, chronic heart failure, restricted stroke volume, exercise-induced elevation in left filling pressure, and peripheral factors were identified as common problems in COPD patients.
Background: Current methods do not allow a thorough assessment of causes associated with limited exercise capacity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: Twenty patients with COPD and 20 matched control subjects were assessed using combined cardiopulmonary and stress echocardiographic testing. Various echocardiographic parameters (left ventricular [LV] volumes, right ventricular [RV] area, ejection fraction, stroke volume, S', and E/e' ratio) and ventilatory parameters (peak oxygen consumption [VO2] and A-VO2 difference) were measured to evaluate LV and RV function, hemodynamics, and peripheral oxygen extraction (A-VO2 difference). Results: Significant differences (both between groups and for group-by-time interaction) were seen in exercise responses (LV volume, RV area, LV volume/RV area ratio, S', E/e' ratio, tricuspid regurgitation grade, heart rate, stroke volume, and VO2). The major mechanisms of reduced exercise tolerance in patients with COPD were bowing of the septumto the left in 12 (60%), abnormal increases in E/e' ratio in 12 (60%), abnormal stroke volume reserve in 16 (80%), low peak A-VO2 difference in 10 (50%), chronotropic incompetence in 13 (65%), or a combination of severalmechanisms. Patients with COPD and poor exercise tolerance showed attenuated increases in stroke volume, heart rate, and A-VO2 difference and exaggerated changes in LV/RV ratio and LV compliance (ratio of LV volume to E/e' ratio) compared with patients with COPD with good exercise tolerance. Conclusions: Combined cardiopulmonary and stress echocardiographic testing can be helpful in determining individual mechanisms of exercise intolerance in patients with COPD. In patients with COPD, exercise intolerance is predominantly the result of chronotropic incompetence, limited stroke volume reserve, exercise-induced elevation in left filling pressure, and peripheral factors and not simply obstructive lung function. Limited stroke volume is related to abnormal RV contractile reserve and reduced LV compliance introduced through septal flattening and direct ventricular interaction.

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