AIMS: Recording coronary arteries' flow by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography (TTDE) is a new task. Despite several studies concerning the left anterior descending artery (LAD) exist, the same for posterior descending coronary artery (PD) do not. Reported feasibility is not more than 76%. The aim of the study was to try to improve feasibility by using an additional two-dimensional view as a guide. METHODS AND RESULTS: PD flow recording was performed in 35 consecutive unselected patients under the guidance of the usual two-dimensional modified view [a two-chamber view (2-C)], and with a new four-chamber modified view (4-C). A semi-quantitative growing-quality score (from 0 to 3 points) to the trace was given. Contrast enhancement was used if PD was not visualized without it. The overall feasibility was 80%. A good or very good velocity signal (TTDE score > or = 2) was observed in 48% of patients without contrast enhancement. Time for first visualization of PD was short and significantly lower in 2-C than in 4-C (66 +/- 39 vs 90 +/- 70 s, respectively, P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: TTDE recording of PD flow gained better feasibility being guided by two views. Maximal time for first visualization of PD was less than 3 min.
AIMS: Recording coronary arteries' flow by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography (TTDE) is a new task. Despite several studies concerning the left anterior descending artery (LAD) exist, the same for posterior descending coronary artery (PD) do not. Reported feasibility is not more than 76%. The aim of the study was to try to improve feasibility by using an additional two-dimensional view as a guide. METHODS AND RESULTS:PD flow recording was performed in 35 consecutive unselected patients under the guidance of the usual two-dimensional modified view [a two-chamber view (2-C)], and with a new four-chamber modified view (4-C). A semi-quantitative growing-quality score (from 0 to 3 points) to the trace was given. Contrast enhancement was used if PD was not visualized without it. The overall feasibility was 80%. A good or very good velocity signal (TTDE score > or = 2) was observed in 48% of patients without contrast enhancement. Time for first visualization of PD was short and significantly lower in 2-C than in 4-C (66 +/- 39 vs 90 +/- 70 s, respectively, P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: TTDE recording of PD flow gained better feasibility being guided by two views. Maximal time for first visualization of PD was less than 3 min.
Authors: Juan M Jiménez; Varesh Prasad; Michael D Yu; Christopher P Kampmeyer; Abdul-Hadi Kaakour; Pei-Jiang Wang; Sean F Maloney; Nathan Wright; Ian Johnston; Yi-Zhou Jiang; Peter F Davies Journal: J R Soc Interface Date: 2014-02-19 Impact factor: 4.118