1. Dynamic Ventricular Dyssynchrony
- Author
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Stephane Lafitte, Marianne Berrhouet, Michel Haïssaguerre, Stéphane Garrigue, Marianne Lafitte, Raymond Roudaut, Anthony N. DeMaria, Karim Serri, Patricia Reant, Sylvain Reuter, Jacques Clémenty, Pierre Jaïs, Valerie Lebouffos, and Pierre Bordachar
- Subjects
Mitral regurgitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac output ,Ischemic cardiomyopathy ,business.industry ,Physical exercise ,medicine.disease ,Heart failure ,Internal medicine ,Circulatory system ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Cardiology ,cardiovascular diseases ,Exertion ,Ventricular dyssynchrony ,business ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES We sought to assess the effects of exercise on ventricular dyssynchrony in patients with normal and depressed left ventricular (LV) function. BACKGROUND Asynchronous myocardial contraction adversely influences ventricular function and is associated with a poor prognosis in heart failure. Exercise-induced changes in ventricular dyssynchrony may be an important determinant of dynamic changes in cardiac output and mitral regurgitation. METHODS A total of 65 consecutive heart failure patients and 50 matched healthy control patients underwent exercise echocardiography. Conventional and tissue Doppler parameters were measured before and during symptom-limited exercise. Left ventricular dyssynchrony was defined as the standard deviation of 12 LV segmental electromechanical delays. Analysis of the control group allowed delimitation of normal cutoff values. RESULTS In patients with normal left ventricular function, exercise did not modify the extent of LV asynchrony. In contrast, in heart failure patients, LV dyssynchrony increased by at least 20% in 34%, remained stable in 37%, and decreased by at least 20% in 29%. Moreover, 26% of heart failure patients had either exercise induction or normalization of ventricular dyssynchrony. A significant association was found between exercise-induced changes in dyssynchrony and the presence of ischemic cardiomyopathy (p < 0.05). Rest-exercise differences in ventricular dyssynchrony were correlated with changes in cardiac output and mitral regurgitation (r = -0.63 and 0.56, respectively). CONCLUSIONS In heart failure patients, exercise can alter the magnitude of ventricular dyssynchrony. Some patients have a response to exertion with induction of ventricular dyssynchrony, whereas others show normalization. Changes in ventricular dyssynchrony during exercise correlate with alterations in cardiac output and mitral regurgitation.
- Published
- 2006
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