Literature DB >> 27277175

Detection of prolonged regional myocardial systolic dysfunction after exercise-induced myocardial ischemia by strain echocardiography with high frame rate tissue Doppler echocardiography.

Yasuhiro Takagi1, Takeshi Hozumi2, Yasuhiko Takemoto1, Kazuaki Negishi1, Zhu Hong1, Kohji Abo3, Kazuya Fujioka3, Mitsuru Nakao3, Ryo Otsuka1, Kenichi Sugioka1, Yoshiki Kobayashi1, Hiroyuki Yamagishi1, Minoru Yoshiyama1, Junichi Yoshikawa1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Strain echocardiography has enabled quantification of regional myocardial systolic function objectively and is less influenced by tethering effects and cardiac translational artifact than Doppler tissue imaging. Although strain echocardiography has been applied for the detection of inducible ischemia during dobutamine stress, it has not been fully applied to exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) because of technical difficulties. Prolonged myocardial systolic dysfunction after exercise-induced ischemia has been shown previously. Thus, we designed this study to evaluate whether the myocardial strain analysis can detect myocardial ischemia by the assessment of prolonged regional left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in ESE.
METHODS: We performed ESE with myocardial strain imaging system in 20 consecutive patients who had exercise Tl-201 single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Myocardial strain curves were obtained at six segments in mid LV walls from the apical approach before and 5 min after ESE. We measured the duration from the R wave in the electrocardiogram to the timing of peak systolic strain corrected by the square root of the RR interval (TPSc). We finally calculated the differences of TPSc (ΔTPSc) before ESE and 5 min after ESE. The results were compared with SPECT as a reference standard.
RESULTS: A receiver operating characteristic curve demonstrated that a ΔTPSc cutoff value of 70 ms had a sensitivity of 80% and a specificity of 84% for the detection of myocardial ischemia.
CONCLUSIONS: Prolonged regional LV systolic dysfunction assessed by ESE with strain analysis was useful for the detection of myocardial ischemia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ischemic heart disease; Myocardial strain analysis; Stress echocardiography; Tissue Doppler echocardiography

Year:  2011        PMID: 27277175     DOI: 10.1007/s12574-011-0082-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Echocardiogr        ISSN: 1349-0222


  28 in total

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Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2002-01-29       Impact factor: 29.690

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3.  Myocardial strain rate is a superior method for evaluation of left ventricular subendocardial function compared with tissue Doppler imaging.

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Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2003-11-05       Impact factor: 24.094

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7.  Strain rate imaging after dynamic stress provides objective evidence of persistent regional myocardial dysfunction in ischaemic myocardium: regional stunning identified?

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Journal:  Heart       Date:  2005-02       Impact factor: 5.994

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Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1998-09-09       Impact factor: 56.272

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Authors:  Tsutomu Takagi; Atsushi Takagi; Junichi Yoshikawa
Journal:  J Cardiol       Date:  2009-09-20       Impact factor: 3.159

10.  Analysis of interinstitutional observer agreement in interpretation of dobutamine stress echocardiograms.

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Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 24.094

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  1 in total

1.  Role of left ventricle deformation analysis in stress echocardiography for significant coronary artery disease detection: A diagnostic study meta-analysis.

Authors:  Kartik Gupta; Tanya S Kakar; Ankur Gupta; Amitoj Singh; Nitin Gharpure; Sudeep Aryal; Riem Hawi; Steven G Lloyd; Julian Booker; Fadi G Hage; Sumanth D Prabhu; Navin C Nanda; Navkaranbir S Bajaj
Journal:  Echocardiography       Date:  2019-05-22       Impact factor: 1.724

  1 in total

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