BACKGROUND: While information on how cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) affects cardiac performance at rest is readily available, the mechanisms whereby CRT alters cardiac function during maximal exercise are unclear. AIMS: We examined the medium-term effects of CRT on cardiac and physical functional reserve of patients with severe heart failure (CHF) and prolonged QRS duration. METHODS: Seventeen consecutive patients with severe CHF (NYHA III-IV) and widened QRS underwent maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing with non-invasive central haemodynamic measurements before and 6-8 weeks after CRT pacemaker implantation. RESULTS: After CRT there were significant increases in exercise cardiac output by 19.3% (P=0.0048) from 9.5+/-3.4 l min(-1), peak mean arterial blood pressure by 14.1% (P=0.0001) from 91.3+/-13.6 mm Hg, and peak cardiac power output by 37.2% (P=0.0008) from 1.92+/-0.74 W. There were no significant changes in these variables at rest. Exercise duration (+42.3%, P=0.0002), NYHA functional class (P=0.0001) and SF-36 symptom score (P=0.0006) were also significantly improved. Powerful surrogate indicators of prognosis were also significantly improved with CRT: peak O(2) consumption (+20.9%, P=0.0007), VE/VCO(2) slope (-20.0%, P=0.005) and circulatory power (+42.0%, P=0.0012). CONCLUSION: In this cohort of patients, post-implant CRT significantly improved the flow-, pressure- and power-generating capacity of the failing hearts. This may be causally related to the improvements observed in exercise capacity, functional class and symptom scores.
BACKGROUND: While information on how cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) affects cardiac performance at rest is readily available, the mechanisms whereby CRT alters cardiac function during maximal exercise are unclear. AIMS: We examined the medium-term effects of CRT on cardiac and physical functional reserve of patients with severe heart failure (CHF) and prolonged QRS duration. METHODS: Seventeen consecutive patients with severe CHF (NYHA III-IV) and widened QRS underwent maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing with non-invasive central haemodynamic measurements before and 6-8 weeks after CRT pacemaker implantation. RESULTS: After CRT there were significant increases in exercise cardiac output by 19.3% (P=0.0048) from 9.5+/-3.4 l min(-1), peak mean arterial blood pressure by 14.1% (P=0.0001) from 91.3+/-13.6 mm Hg, and peak cardiac power output by 37.2% (P=0.0008) from 1.92+/-0.74 W. There were no significant changes in these variables at rest. Exercise duration (+42.3%, P=0.0002), NYHA functional class (P=0.0001) and SF-36 symptom score (P=0.0006) were also significantly improved. Powerful surrogate indicators of prognosis were also significantly improved with CRT: peak O(2) consumption (+20.9%, P=0.0007), VE/VCO(2) slope (-20.0%, P=0.005) and circulatory power (+42.0%, P=0.0012). CONCLUSION: In this cohort of patients, post-implant CRT significantly improved the flow-, pressure- and power-generating capacity of the failing hearts. This may be causally related to the improvements observed in exercise capacity, functional class and symptom scores.
Authors: Ruud F Spee; Victor M Niemeijer; Bart Wessels; Jasper P Jansen; Pieter F F Wijn; Pieter A F M Doevendans; Hareld M C Kemps Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord Date: 2015-06-23 Impact factor: 2.298
Authors: Djordje G Jakovljevic; Magdi H Yacoub; Stephan Schueler; Guy A MacGowan; Lazar Velicki; Petar M Seferovic; Sandeep Hothi; Bing-Hsiean Tzeng; David A Brodie; Emma Birks; Lip-Bun Tan Journal: J Am Coll Cardiol Date: 2017-04-18 Impact factor: 24.094