Prevalence and inter-relationship of different Doppler measures of dyssynchrony in patients with heart failure and prolonged QRS: a report from CARE-HF
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) improves mortality and morbidity in heart failure patients with wide QRS. Observational studies suggest that patients having more left ventricular dyssynchrony pre-implantation obtain greater benefit on ventricular function and symptoms with CRT. AIM: To provide an analysis of the prevalence and type of dyssynchrony in patients included in the CARE-HF trial. METHODS: 100 patients 67 (58 to 71) years were examined with echocardiography including tissue doppler imaging before receiving a CRT-pacemaker. Atrio-ventricular dyssynchrony (LVFT/RR) was defined as left ventricular filling time <40% of the RR-interval. Inter-ventricular mechanical delay (IVMD) was measured as the difference in onset of Doppler-flow in the pulmonary and aortic outflow tracts >40 ms. Intra-ventricular (regional) dyssynchrony in a 16-segment model was expressed either as a delayed longitudinal contraction (DLC) during the postsystolic phase or by tissue synchronisation imaging (TSI) with a predefined time-difference in systolic maximal velocities >85 ms. RESULTS: LVFT/RR was present in 34% and IVMD in 60% of patients while intra-ventricular dyssynchrony was present in 85% (DLC) and 86% (TSI) with a high agreement between the measures (Kappascore 0.86-1.00), indicating the methods being interchangeable. Patients with cardiomyopathy (53%) were more likely to have LVFT/RR <40% (45% vs. 21% (p= 0.02)) and more segments affected by intra-ventricular dyssynchrony 4(3, 5) vs. 3(1, 4), p = 0.002, compared to patients with ischemic heart disease. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of intra-ventricular dyssynchrony is high in patients with heart failure, wide QRS and depressed systolic function. Most important, TSI appears to be a fast and reliable method to identify patients with intra-ventricular dyssynchrony likely to benefit from CRT.
Date Issued
2009-01-07
Date Acceptance
2009-01-07
Citation
Cardiovascular Ultrasound, 2009, 7
ISSN
1476-7120
Publisher
BioMed Central
Journal / Book Title
Cardiovascular Ultrasound
Volume
7
Copyright Statement
© Edner et al. 2009. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
License URL
Identifier
PII: 1476-7120-7-1
Subjects
Aged
Comorbidity
Echocardiography
Female
Heart Failure
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
New York
Prevalence
Reproducibility of Results
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Sensitivity and Specificity
Statistics as Topic
Ventricular Dysfunction, Left
Cardiovascular System & Hematology
1103 Clinical Sciences
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
1