| Literature DB >> 22904333 |
Luis Afonso1, Ashok Kondur, Mengistu Simegn, Ashutosh Niraj, Pawan Hari, Ramanjit Kaur, Preeti Ramappa, Jyotiranjan Pradhan, Deepti Bhandare, Kim A Williams, Sandip Zalawadiya, Aurelio Pinheiro, Theodore P Abraham.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study was designed to examine the utility of two-dimensional strain (2DS) or speckle tracking imaging to typify functional adaptations of the left ventricle in variant forms of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH).Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22904333 PMCID: PMC3425901 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-001390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Representative two-dimensional strain analysis (four-chamber view) in a patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Panels A and B depict qualitative strain and peak longitudinal systolic strain measurements respectively, note paradoxical strain in septal and lateral segments (shades in blue) in parametric images and corresponding colour-coded strain curves (Panel C), including global strain for this view (white tracing). Panel D displays curved anatomic M-mode parametric data.
Figure 2Representative polar maps (automatic function imaging) displaying peak longitudinal strain in an athlete (panel A), hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy (panel B), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) (panel C) and apical HCM (panel D).
Baseline characteristics of the study population
| Control (healthy adults) | HCM | AT-LVH* | H-LVH† | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N=12 | N=56 | N=34 | N=27 | p Value‡ | |
| Demographics | |||||
| Age (years) | |||||
| Mean±SD | 29.3±6.3 | 54.9±14.9 | 28.8±7.2 | 47.6±10.6 | a, c, d, e, f |
| Range (minimum–maximum) | 20–45 | 25–89 | 20–49 | 25–68 | |
| Gender (male) % | 11 (91.7%) | 29 (49.2%) | 27 (100%) | 20 (58.8%) | a, c, d, e, f |
| Height (m) | 1.73±0.04 | 1.7±0.11 | 1.99±0.12 | 1.74±0.12 | b, d, e |
| Weight (kg) | 76.2±4.5 | 80.9±23.9 | 103±11.7 | 82.8±25 | b, d, e |
| Body surface area (m2) | 1.9±0.11 | 1.98±0.32 | 2.4±0.22 | 1.9±0.29 | b, d, e |
| Blood pressure (mm Hg) | |||||
| Systolic | 119±5 | 133±19 | 133±19 | 149±16 | a, c ,d, f |
| Diastolic | 75±4 | 76±10 | 76±10 | 84±12 | c, f |
| Heart rate (bpm) | 71±10 | 73±13 | 64±10 | 75±9 | d |
| QRS duration (ms) | 101±4 | 105±15 | 96±8 | 97±14 | b, d, f |
| Corrected QT interval (QTc) ms | 384±31 | 460±22 | 404±18 | 445±32 | a, c, d, e |
| 2D echocardiography parameters | |||||
| LA dimension | |||||
| Diameter (cm) | 3.2±0.4 | 4.2±0.6 | 3.6±0.4 | 3.8±0.5 | a, c, e |
| Indexed for BSA (cm/m2) | 1.7±0.2 | 2.2±0.5 | 1.5±0.2 | 2±0.4 | a, c, d, e |
| LV dimensions | |||||
| End-diastolic diameter (cm) | 4.7±0.5 | 4±0.8 | 5.3±0.5 | 4.1±0.7 | a, c, d, e, f |
| End-systolic diameter (cm) | 3.1±0.5 | 2±0.6 | 3.2±0.9 | 2.1±0.7 | a, b, c, d, e |
| LV fractional shortening (%) | 34.1±10.4 | 50.3±12.5 | 39.6±15 | 48.4±11.9 | a, c, e |
| LVEF (%) | 63±2 | 65±5 | 61±4 | 64±5 | e |
| Septal wall thickness (mm) | 8.8±1.4 | 23.3±4.9 | 11.5±1.1 | 16.3±2.3 | a, b, c, d, e, f |
| LV posterior wall thickness (mm) | 8.6±1.4 | 15.6±4 | 10.5±1.2 | 15.2±2.5 | a, b, c, d, e |
| Septum-posterior wall ratio | 1±0.3 | 1.5±0.4 | 1.1±0.2 | 1.1±0.1 | a, e, f |
| Relative wall thickness (RWT) | 0.4±0.1 | 0.9±0.4 | 0.4±0.1 | 0.8±0.3 | a, c, d, e |
| Tissue Doppler imaging: | |||||
| S′ wave (cm/s) | 6.6±0.8 | 4.7±1.2 | 6.9±1.3 | 5.9±1.3 | a, e, f |
| E′ wave (cm/s) | 9.8±1.5 | 3.1±1.7 | 10.0±1.7 | 5.3±1.7 | a, c, d, e, f |
| A′ wave (cm/s) | 6.6±1.1 | 4.9±1.8 | 5.9±1.8 | 6.4±2.1 | f |
| Global thickness dispersion index (ThDI) | 1.22±0.32 | 2.35±0.84 | 1.12±0.31 | 1.52±0.48 | a, d, e, f |
Data are presented as mean±SD.
*Professional athletes with physiological left ventricular hypertrophy.
†Hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy.
‡p Values were obtained through Mann-Whitney test or χ2 square as appropriate. a=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between controls versus HCM; b=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between controls versus AT-LVH; c=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between controls versus H-LVH; d=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between AT-LVH versus H-LVH; e=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between AT-LVH versus HCM; f=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between H-LVH versus HCM.
AT-LVH, athletes with left ventricular hypertrophy; BSA, body surface area; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; H-LVH, hypertensive LVH, LA, left atrium.
Figure 3(A) Box plot diagrams of global longitudinal strain average (GLS-avg) and strain dispersion index (SDI) showing the median, IQR and 95% CI of study subgroups. (B) Scatter plot showing relationship between left ventricular longitudinal strain magnitude (GLS-avg) and SDI (strain homogeneity) in study subgroups. Each dot represents an individual subject's strain parameter.
Comparison of longitudinal strain and strain dispersion in the overall study population
| Controls | HCM | AT-LVH* | H-LVH† | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | N=12 | N=56 | N=27 | N=34 | p Value‡ |
| Segmental average longitudinal strain (%) | |||||
| Basal | −18.4±2.4 | −8.2±5 | −16.3±2.4 | −15.3±2.2 | a, c, e, f |
| Mid-LV | −19±2 | −9.2±4.8 | −17.8±1.9 | −17.1±3 | a, e, f |
| Apical | −19.2±3.3 | −12.3±9 | −21.1±3.5 | −22.1±4.9 | a, e, f |
| Global LV longitudinal strain (%) | |||||
| LAX | −17.6±2.6 | −11.2±5 | −17.1±2.9 | −17.7±3.2 | a, e, f |
| 4C | −18.4±1.6 | −11.2±4.2 | −17.3±2.5 | −17.3±3.8 | a, e, f |
| 2C | −19.9±2.7 | −11.1±4.2 | −19±2.3 | −18.5±4.2 | a, e, f |
| Global LV longitudinal strain average (GLS avg,%) | −18.7±1.8 | −11.2±4.2 | −17.8±2.2 | −17.8±3.1 | a, e, f |
| Global longitudinal strain dispersion index (SDI) | 2.9±0.8 | 4.6±1.7 | 2.6±0.5 | 3.5±1 | a, c, d, e, f |
Data are presented as mean±SD.
*Professional athletes with left ventricular hypertrophy.
†Hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy.
‡p Values were obtained through Mann-Whitney test or χ2 as appropriate. a=Statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between controls versus HCM; b=Statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between control versus AT-LVH; c=Statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between control versus H-LVH. d=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between AT-LVH versus H-LVH; e=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between AT-LVH versus HCM; f=statistically significant (p<0.05) difference between H-LVH versus HCM.
AT-LVH, athletes with left ventricular hypertrophy; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; H-LVH, hypertensive LVH; LV, left ventricle.
Receiver operator characteristics analysis for various echocardiography parameters to distinguish HCM from other left ventricular hypertrophy variants
| Between HCM and AT-LVH* | Between HCM and H-LVH† | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area (95% CI) | p Value | Area (95% CI) | p Value | |
| Septal wall thickness (mm) | 1.000 (0.998 to 1.001) | <0.001‡ | 0.869 (0.788to 0.949) | <0.001‡ |
| LV posterior wall thickness (mm) | 0.908 (0.843 to 0.972) | <0.001‡ | 0.479 (0.354 to 0.605) | 0.76 |
| Indexed LA dimension (cm/m2) | 0.921 (0.861 to 0.981) | <0.001‡ | 0.591 (0.459 to 0.722) | 0.18 |
| LV fractional shortening (%) | 0.714 (0.580 to 0.848) | 0.003‡ | 0.511 (0.381 to 0.641) | 0.87 |
| ThDI | 0.952 (0.909 to 0.995) | <0.001‡ | 0.827 (0.734 to 0.920) | <0.001‡ |
| Tissue Doppler imaging: | ||||
| S′ wave (cm/s) | 0.912 (0.987 to 0.837) | <0.001‡ | 0.709 (0.824 to 0.594) | 0.002‡ |
| E′ wave (cm/s) | 0.995 (1.005 to 0.984) | <0.001‡ | 0.818 (0.906 to 0.731) | <0.001‡ |
| A′ wave (cm/s) | 0.666 (0.796 to 0.535) | 0.02‡ | 0.719 (0.833 to 0.606) | 0.001‡ |
| GLS-avg (%) | 0.920 (0.862 to 0.978) | <0.001‡ | 0.893 (0.827 to 0.960) | <0.001‡ |
| SDI | 0.890 (0.818 to 0.961) | <0.001‡ | 0.671 (0.552 to 0.789) | 0.01‡ |
*Professional athletes with physiological left ventricular hypertrophy.
†Hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy.
‡Statistically significant (p<0.05).
AT-LVH, athletes with left ventricular hypertrophy; BSA, body surface area; GLS-avg, Global longitudinal strain average; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; LA, left atrium; LV, left ventricle; SDI, strain dispersion index; ThDI, thickness dispersion index.