1. Which Diastolic Pressure Should Be Used to Assess Diastolic Function?
- Author
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Aslanger, Emre, Yıldırımtürk, Özlem, Akaslan, Dursun, Öz, Melih, Güngör, Barış, Ataş, Halil, and Mutlu, Bülent
- Subjects
DIASTOLIC blood pressure ,CARDIAC catheterization ,DATABASES ,HEART failure ,RETENTION of urine ,HEALTH care industry ,MEDICAL screening - Abstract
Background: Although high left ventricular filling pressures [left ventricular (LV) enddiastolic pressure or pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP)] are widely taken as surrogates for LV diastolic dysfunction, the actual distending pressure that governs LV diastolic stretch is transmural pressure difference (ΔP
TM ). Clinically, preferring ΔPTM over PCWP may improve diagnostic and therapeutic decision-making. We aimed to compare the clinical implications of diastolic function characterization based on PCWP or ΔPTM . Methods: We retrospectively screened our hospital database for adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of heart failure who underwent right heart catheterization. Echocardiographic diastolic dysfunction was graded according to the current guidelines. LV end-diastolic properties were assessed with construction of complete end-diastolic pressure-volume relationship (EDPVR) curves using the single-beat method. Survival status was checked via the electronic national health-care system. Results: A total of 693 cases were identified in our database; the final study population comprised 621 cases. ΔPTM -based, but not PCWP-based, EDPVR diastolic stiffness constants were significantly predictive of advanced diastolic dysfunction. PCWP-based diastolic stiffness constants were not able to predict 5-year mortality, whereas ΔPTM -based EDPVR stiffness constants and volumes all turned out to have significant predictive power for 5-year mortality. Conclusion: Left ventricular diastolic function assessment can be improved using ΔPTM instead of PCWP. As ΔPTM ultimately linked to right-sided functions, this approach emphasizes the limitations of taking LV diastolic function as an isolated phenomenon and underlines the need for a complete hemodynamic assessment involving the right heart in therapeutic and prognostic decision-making processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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