期刊
CIRCULATION
卷 101, 期 23, 页码 2703-2709出版社
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.CIR.101.23.2703
关键词
heart failure; bundle-branch block; pacing; magnetic resonance imaging; mechanics
资金
- NHLBI NIH HHS [HL-62028, HL-45683] Funding Source: Medline
Background-VDD pacing can enhance systolic function in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and discoordinate contraction; however, identification of patients likely to benefit is unclear. We tested predictors of systolic responsiveness on the basis of global parameters as well as directly assessed mechanical dyssynchrony. Methods and Results-Twenty-two DCM patients with conduction delay were studied by cardiac catheterization with a dual-sensor micromanometer to measure LV and aortic pressures during sinus rhythm and LV free-wall pacing. Pacing enhanced isovolumetric (dP/dt(max)) and ejection-phase (pulse pressure, PP) systolic function by 35+/-21% and 16.4+/-11%, respectively, and these changes correlated directly (r=0.7, P=0.001). %Delta dP/dt(max) was weakly predicted by baseline QRS (r=0.6, P<0.02), more strongly by baseline dP/dt(max) (r=0.7, P=0.001), and best by bidiscriminate analysis combining baseline dP/dt(max) less than or equal to 700 mm Hg/s and QRS greater than or equal to 155 ms to predict %adP/dt(max) greater than or equal to 25% and %Delta PP greater than or equal to 10% (P<0.0005, chi(2)), with no false-positives. Benefit could not be predicted by %Delta QRS. To test whether basal mechanical dyssynchrony predicted responsiveness to LV pacing, circumferential strains were determined at approximate to 80 sites throughout the LV by tagged MRI in 8 DCM patients and 7 additional control subjects. Strain variance at time of maximal shortening indexed dyssynchrony, averaging 28.0+/-7.1% in normal subjects versus 201.4+/-84.3% in DCM patients (P=0.001). Mechanical dyssynchrony also correlated directly with %Delta dP/dt(max) (r=0.85, P=0.008). Conclusions-These results show that although mechanical dyssynchrony is a key predictor for pacing efficacy in DCM patients with conduction delay, combining information about QRS and basal dP/df(max) provides an excellent tool to identify maximal responders.
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