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Predictors of low exercise cardiac output in patients with severe pulmonic regurgitation

Authors :
Antoine Legendre
F. Raimondi
Jean-Philippe Jais
Florence Pontnau
Damien Bonnet
Clément Karsenty
Victor Waldmann
Diala Khraiche
Magalie Ladouceur
Gilles Soulat
Laurence Iserin
Source :
Heart. 107:223-228
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

Background and objectivesChronic pulmonic regurgitation (PR) following repair of congenital heart disease (CHD) impairs right ventricular function that impacts peak exercise cardiac index (pCI). We aimed to estimate in a non-invasive way pCI and peak oxygen consumption (pVO2) and to evaluate predictors of low pCI in patients with significant residual pulmonic regurgitation after CHD repair.MethodWe included 82 patients (median age 19 years (range 10–54 years)) with residual pulmonic regurgitation fraction >40%. All underwent cardiac MRI and cardiopulmonary testing with measurement of pCI by thoracic impedancemetry. Low pCI was defined 2.ResultsLow pCI was found in 18/82 patients. Peak indexed stroke volume (pSVi) tended to compensate chronotropic insufficiency only in patients with normal pCI (r=−0.31, p=0.01). Below 20 years of age, only 5/45 patients had low pCI but near-normal (≥6.5 L/min/m2). pVO2 (mL/kg/min) was correlated with pCI (r=0.58, p=0.0002) only in patients aged >20 years. Left ventricular stroke volume in MRI correlated with pSVi only in the group of patients with low pCI (r=0.54, p=0.02). No MRI measurements predicted low pCI. In multivariable analysis, only age predicted a low pCI (OR=1.082, 95% CI 1.035 to 1.131, p=0.001) with continuous increase of risk with age.ConclusionsIn patients with severe PR, pVO2 is a partial reflection of pCI. Risk of low pCI increases with age. No resting MRI measurement predicts low haemodynamic response to exercise. Probably more suitable to detect ventricular dysfunction, pCI measurement could be an additional parameter to take into account when considering pulmonic valve replacement.

Details

ISSN :
1468201X and 13556037
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f94e66ee8817ab152a11bfbbb03db7dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2020-317550