| Literature DB >> 22520934 |
Gani Bajraktari1, Paolo Fontanive, Spiro Qirko, Shpend Elezi, Anca Simioniuc, Alda Huqi, Venera Berisha, Frank L Dini.
Abstract
The authors sought to assess the impact on survival of demographic, clinical, and echo-Doppler parameters in patients with chronic heart failure due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction divided according to age groups. This study included 734 patients (age 69±11 years) who were classified into tertiles of age: I (22-66 years), II (67-76 years), and III (77-94 years). Severely enlarged left atrial size was defined as ≥52 mm in men and ≥47 mm in women. Multivariable analysis identified male sex (P=.018) and severely enlarged left atrium (P=.024) as significant correlates of all-cause mortality in the very elderly cohort, while restrictive filling pattern (RFP) (P=.004) and New York Heart Association class III or IV (P=.005) among patients of the first tertile and RFP (P=.028) among patients in the second tertile were independently associated with mortality after 30±21 months of follow-up. At the interactive stepwise model in the very elderly population, a severely enlarged left atrium, added to the model after clinical parameters and ejection fraction, moved the chi-square value from 20.7 to 25.8 (P=.048). RFP emerged as the single best predictor of all-cause mortality in the younger and intermediate ranges, whereas severely enlarged left atrium was the best predictor in the very elderly.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22520934 DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-7133.2011.00280.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Congest Heart Fail ISSN: 1527-5299