1. Dobutamine stress MRI in repaired tetralogy of Fallot with chronic pulmonary regurgitation: A comparison with healthy volunteers
- Author
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Parish, Victoria, Valverde, Israel, Kutty, Shelby, Head, Catherine, Qureshi, Shakeel A., Sarikouch, Samir, Greil, Gerald, Schaeffter, Tobias, Razavi, Reza, and Beerbaum, Philipp
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DOBUTAMINE , *CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging , *TETRALOGY of Fallot , *LUNG abnormalities , *CHRONIC diseases , *HEART ventricles , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Abstract: Background: To compare the ventricular response to dobutamine stress between adult patients with chronic pulmonary regurgitation (PR) after repair of tetralogy of Fallot (r-TOF) and healthy volunteers using a staged dobutamine stress MR (DS-MR) protocol. Methods: Eighteen r-TOF patients (median age 31.9years, range 16.2–60.1) with severe PR and 10 healthy controls (median age 40.6years, range 23.9–51.8) completed staged DS-MR (baseline, 10 and 20μg/kg/min) with ventricular volumetry and pulmonary flow quantification. Comparative analysis involved 3-way ANOVA, t-test, regression analysis, and coefficient of variance. Results: All controls had significant increase of ejection fraction (EF) at each stress level for both ventricles (normal contractile reserve, all p<0.05). In r-TOF patients (RV-EDV 126±27ml/m2, RV-EF 55±7%, LV-EF 58±6%, PR-fraction 43±15%), low-dose DS-MR at 10μg/kg/min demonstrated normal biventricular contractile reserve as seen in volunteers. On increase from 10 to 20μg/kg/min a subgroup showed worsening ejection fraction (n=8, p<0.05), mainly due to lack of reduction or even increase of RV-ESV, while the remainder responded with further reduction of RV-ESV and RV-EDV (n=10, p<0.05) and a non-significant trend to increased EF. This different response could not be predicted at baseline. Conclusions: In r-TOF patients with chronic PR, DS-MR at 10μg/kg/min showed normal biventricular systolic response compared with controls. Increase to 20μg/kg/min provoked abnormal RV-ESV response in some r-TOF patients, suggesting presence of ventricular systolic dysfunction not evident at rest. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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