A Comparative Study of Systolic and Diastolic Mechanical Synchrony in Canine, Primate, and Healthy and Failing Human Hearts.
Authors
Zhu, Tiangang
Lei, Ming
Wang, Zhilong
Zhang, Rongli
Zhang, Yan
Jin, Wenying
Yu, Chao
Huang, Christopher L-H
Liu, Dongyue
Zheng, Wen
Liu, Yuli
Quan, Xin
Kong, Lingyun
Liang, Siying
Zhang, Xiuqin
Publication Date
2021Journal Title
Front Cardiovasc Med
ISSN
2297-055X
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Volume
8
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Zhu, T., Lei, M., Wang, Z., Zhang, R., Zhang, Y., Jin, W., Yu, C., et al. (2021). A Comparative Study of Systolic and Diastolic Mechanical Synchrony in Canine, Primate, and Healthy and Failing Human Hearts.. Front Cardiovasc Med, 8 https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2021.750067
Abstract
Aim: Mechanical dyssynchrony (MD) is associated with heart failure (HF) and may be prognostically important in cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Yet, little is known about its patterns in healthy or diseased hearts. We here investigate and compare systolic and diastolic MD in both right (RV) and left ventricles (LV) of canine, primate and healthy and failing human hearts. Methods and Results: RV and LV mechanical function were examined by pulse-wave Doppler in 15 beagle dogs, 59 rhesus monkeys, 100 healthy human subjects and 39 heart failure (HF) patients. This measured RV and LV pre-ejection periods (RVPEP and LVPEP) and diastolic opening times (Q-TVE and Q-MVE). The occurrence of right (RVMDs) and left ventricular systolic mechanical delay (LVMDs) was assessed by comparing RVPEP and LVPEP values. That of right (RVMDd) and left ventricular diastolic mechanical delay (LVMDd) was assessed from the corresponding diastolic opening times (Q-TVE and Q-MVE). These situations were quantified by values of interventricular systolic (IVMDs) and diastolic mechanical delays (IVMDd), represented as positive if the relevant RV mechanical events preceded those in the LV. Healthy hearts in all species examined showed greater LV than RV delay times and therefore positive IVMDs and IVMDd. In contrast a greater proportion of the HF patients showed both markedly increased IVMDs and negative IVMDd, with diastolic mechanical asynchrony negatively correlated with LVEF. Conclusion: The present IVMDs and IVMDd findings have potential clinical implications particularly for personalized setting of parameter values in CRT in individual patients to achieve effective treatment of HF.
Keywords
diastolic interventricular mechanical delays (IVMDd), interventricular mechanical delays (IVMD), mechanical synchrony, pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography, systolic interventricular mechanical delays (IVMDs)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2021.750067
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330601
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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