| Literature DB >> 21796453 |
Andreas Kyriacou1, Punam A Pabari, Darrel P Francis.
Abstract
Cardiac resynchronization therapy has become a standard therapy for patients who are refractory to optimal medical therapy and fulfill the criteria of QRS >120 ms, ejection fraction <35% and NYHA class II, III or IV. Unless there is some other heretofore unrecognized effect of pacing, the benefits of atrio-biventricular pacing on hard outcomes observed in randomized trials can only be attributed to the physiological changes it induces such as increases in cardiac output and/or reduction in myocardial oxygen consumption leading to an improvement in cardiac function efficiency. The term "Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy" for biventricular pacing presupposes that restoration of synchrony (simultaneity of timing) between left and right ventricles and/or between walls of the left ventricle is the mechanism of benefit. But could a substantial proportion of these benefits arise not from ventricular resynchronization but from favorable shortening of AV delay ("AV optimization") which cannot be termed "resynchronization" unless the meaning of the word is stretched to cover any change in timing, thus, rendering the word almost meaningless. Here, we examine the evidence on the relative balance of resynchronization and AV delay shortening as contributors to the undoubted clinical efficacy of CRT.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 21796453 PMCID: PMC3474907 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-011-9271-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.214
Fig. 1A schematic illustration combining the transmitral and aortic flow during the cardiac cycle. To simplify understanding of Doppler flows (left), they can be sketched wrapped into a circle, representing the cardiac cycle, starting with atrial activation (“P onset”). The mitral (top) and aortic (bottom) flow traces are inscribed upon inner and outer circles, which can be combined into a single diagram (right). This allows clear demonstration of the interaction between timings of activation, forward flow, mitral regurgitation and isovolumic contraction and relaxation times (IVCT and IVRT)
Fig. 2A schematic illustration of the effects of long AV interval, wide QRS width and biventricular pacing on stroke volume. Each sketch shows transmitral (inner circle) and transortic (outer circle) blood flow, with in each case atrial activation fixed in time at the top (“P”). The top sketch illustrates blood flow in a subject with normal AV delay and narrow QRS. A prolonged AV interval (left sketch) delays aortic ejection thereby permitting presystolic mitral regurgitation and delaying E wave onset resulting in fusion with the following A wave. A wide QRS (right sketch) causes prolonged IVCT and IVRT, reducing left ventricular filling time and worsening MR. When prolonged AV interval and wide QRS co-exist (bottom sketch), their effects on MR are additive and devastating. Atrio-biventricular pacing corrects both electrical abnormalities and thereby improves stroke volume
Calculation of the proportion of the benefit seen in sinus rhythm (SR) patients that is seen in atrial fibrillation (AF) patients, in the CARE-HF trial
| Medical therapy alone | Medical therapy plus CRT | Improvement in | Improvement in | Proportion of the full benefit obtained in AF (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SR | AF | SR | AF | ||||
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| Primary outcome of main trial, | |||||||
| Death or unplanned hospitalization for a cardiovascular event | 51.2 | 81 | 34.1 | 63.6 | 33.4 | 21.5 |
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| Unplanned hospitalization for a cardiovascular event | 41 | 72.4 | 25.1 | 59.1 | 36.8 | 18.4 |
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| Secondary outcome of main trial, | |||||||
| Death from any cause | 28.3 | 37.9 | 19.2 | 24.2 | 32.2 | 36.1 |
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| Death from any cause or unplanned hospitalization with worsening heart failure | 44.2 | 65.5 | 26 | 43.9 | 41.2 | 33.0 |
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| Unplanned hospitalization with worsening heart failure | 30.1 | 50 | 14.9 | 31.8 | 50.5 | 36.4 |
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| Continuous outcome at 18 months, mean | |||||||
| NYHA class | 2.9 | 2.9 | 2.3 | 2.6 | 20.7 | 10.3 |
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| Minnesola living with heart failure score | 39.3 | 41.4 | 30.9 | 38.8 | 21.4 | 6.3 |
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| Left ventricular ejection fraction, % | |||||||
| Median | 26.4 | 25.9 | 33.7 | 30.1 | 227.7 | 16.2 |
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| 25th and 75th percentiles | 22.2/32.3 | 21.6/31.0 | 27.7/41.7 | 25.3/35.3 | |||
| Pulse pressure | 46.7 | 46.6 | 52.2 | 48.8 | 11.8 | 4.7 |
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| Systolic blood pressure, mm Hg, mean ± SD | 120.1 ± 19.4 | 116.9 ± 20.0 | 126.2 ± 19.7 | 121.2 ± 15.4 | |||
| Diastolic blood pressure, mm Hg, mean ± SD | 73.4 ± 28.8 | 70.3 ± 9.4 | 74.0 ± 10.6 | 72.4 ± 10.5 | |||