BACKGROUND: There are few studies of cardiac autonomic nervous activity (CANA) in patients with congenital heart disease. Methods and Results-We evaluated CANA in 54 patients after closure of an atrial/ventricular septal defect (group A), 54 patients after successful right ventricular outflow tract reconstruction (RVOTR) (group B1), 35 RVOTR patients with residual stenosis (group B2), and 47 controls. Cardiac parasympathetic nervous activity (PSNA) was estimated by heart rate (HR) change after cholinergic blockade, HR variability, and arterial baroreflex sensitivity (BRS). Cardiac sympathetic nervous activity was estimated by the heart-to-mediastinum (123)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine activity ratio (H/M) and HR increase after isoproterenol infusion (ss). HR response (DeltaHR) and peak oxygen uptake (VO(2)) were measured by exercise test. There was no difference in ss among study groups. Group A exhibited mildly impaired PSNA, which recovered 1 year after surgery, and no change in H/M. Impaired PSNA and low H/M were found in groups B1 and B2 compared with controls (P<0.001), although the PSNA tended to recover 1 year after re-RVOTR. In group B1, PSNA and ss were related to DeltaHR, and BRS correlated inversely with the number of surgical procedures and age at RVOTR and positively correlated with the follow-up period, whereas DeltaHR correlated with peak VO(2) (P<0.01 to 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: After RVOTR, postsynaptic ss-sensitivity is maintained and is important in DeltaHR during exercise, as is PSNA, although ventricular sympathetic denervation is common. Impaired PSNA immediately after RVOTR improves with improved DeltaHR and results in future amelioration of aerobic capacity, whereas ventricular sympathetic reinnervation is uncertain.
BACKGROUND: There are few studies of cardiac autonomic nervous activity (CANA) in patients with congenital heart disease. Methods and Results-We evaluated CANA in 54 patients after closure of an atrial/ventricular septal defect (group A), 54 patients after successful right ventricular outflow tract reconstruction (RVOTR) (group B1), 35 RVOTR patients with residual stenosis (group B2), and 47 controls. Cardiac parasympathetic nervous activity (PSNA) was estimated by heart rate (HR) change after cholinergic blockade, HR variability, and arterial baroreflex sensitivity (BRS). Cardiac sympathetic nervous activity was estimated by the heart-to-mediastinum (123)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine activity ratio (H/M) and HR increase after isoproterenol infusion (ss). HR response (DeltaHR) and peak oxygen uptake (VO(2)) were measured by exercise test. There was no difference in ss among study groups. Group A exhibited mildly impaired PSNA, which recovered 1 year after surgery, and no change in H/M. Impaired PSNA and low H/M were found in groups B1 and B2 compared with controls (P<0.001), although the PSNA tended to recover 1 year after re-RVOTR. In group B1, PSNA and ss were related to DeltaHR, and BRS correlated inversely with the number of surgical procedures and age at RVOTR and positively correlated with the follow-up period, whereas DeltaHR correlated with peak VO(2) (P<0.01 to 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: After RVOTR, postsynaptic ss-sensitivity is maintained and is important in DeltaHR during exercise, as is PSNA, although ventricular sympathetic denervation is common. Impaired PSNA immediately after RVOTR improves with improved DeltaHR and results in future amelioration of aerobic capacity, whereas ventricular sympathetic reinnervation is uncertain.
Authors: Vegard Bruun Wyller; J Philip Saul; Riccardo Barbieri; Charlotte de Lange; Einar Hopp; Ingvild B Norum; Erik Thaulow Journal: Am J Cardiol Date: 2008-07-31 Impact factor: 2.778