Literature DB >> 27372560

Early Hemodynamic Improvement after Percutaneous Mitral Valve Repair Evaluated by Noninvasive Pressure-Volume Analysis.

Daniel Lavall1, Jan-Christian Reil2, Lucia Segura Schmitz2, Manuel Mehrer2, Stephan H Schirmer2, Michael Böhm2, Ulrich Laufs2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mitral regurgitation represents a volume load on the left ventricle leading to congestion and symptoms of heart failure. The aim of this study was to characterize early hemodynamic adaptions after percutaneous mitral valve (MV) repair.
METHODS: Forty-six consecutive patients with symptomatic high-grade MV insufficiency (mean age, 72 years; 54% men) were prospectively included in the study and examined before and after successful catheter-based clip implantation. Seventy percent of patients had secondary mitral regurgitation. Noninvasive pressure-volume loops were reconstructed from echocardiography with simultaneous blood pressure measurements.
RESULTS: MV repair reduced left ventricular end-diastolic volume index from 87 ± 41 to 80 ± 40 mL/m(2) (P < .0001). End-systolic volume index was 55 ± 37 mL/m(2) before versus 54 ± 37 mL/m(2) after repair (P = .52). Hence, total stroke volume decreased from 60 ± 23 to 49 ± 16 mL (P < .0001), as did total ejection fraction (from 41 ± 14% to 37 ± 13%, P = .002) and global longitudinal strain (from -11 ± 4.9% to -9.1 ± 4.4%, P = .0001). Forward stroke volume, forward ejection fraction, and forward cardiac output remained constant (43 ± 12 mL vs 42 ± 11 mL, 33 ± 17% vs 35 ± 18%, and 3.2 ± 0.9 L/min vs 3.4 ± 0.8 L/min, respectively). Parameters of left ventricular contractility (end-systolic elastance and peak power index) and measurements of afterload (arterial elastance, end-systolic wall stress, and total peripheral resistance) were similar before and after MV repair. Forward ejection fraction correlated more strongly with end-systolic elastance (r = 0.61, P < .0001) than did total ejection fraction (r = 0.35, P = .0007) or global longitudinal strain (r = -0.38, P = .0002). Total mechanical energy (pressure-volume area) decreased from 10,903 ± 4,410 to 9,124 ± 2,968 mm Hg × mL (P = .0007) because of reduced stroke work (5,546 ± 2,241 mm Hg × mL vs 4,414 ± 1,412 mm Hg × mL, P < .0001). At 3 months, symptom status had improved (76% of patients in New York Heart Association classes I and II), and 97% of patients had mitral regurgitation grade ≤2+.
CONCLUSIONS: Left ventricular contractility and forward cardiac output remained unchanged after percutaneous MV repair despite decreases in total ejection fraction and global longitudinal strain. The left ventricle was unloaded through reduced end-diastolic volume. Thus, MV repair is associated with an improved hemodynamic state in noninvasive pressure-volume analysis.
Copyright © 2016 American Society of Echocardiography. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Left ventricular contractility; Mitral regurgitation; Noninvasive pressure-volume analysis; Percutaneous mitral valve repair

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27372560     DOI: 10.1016/j.echo.2016.05.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Echocardiogr        ISSN: 0894-7317            Impact factor:   5.251


  5 in total

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Authors:  A Hagendorff; A Helfen; R Brandt; E Altiok; O Breithardt; D Haghi; J Knierim; D Lavall; N Merke; C Sinning; S Stöbe; C Tschöpe; F Knebel; S Ewen
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2022-06-04       Impact factor: 5.460

2.  Mitral valve pressure gradient after percutaneous mitral valve repair: every beat counts.

Authors:  Daniel Lavall; Bruno Scheller; Christian Werner; Axel Buob; Felix Mahfoud
Journal:  ESC Heart Fail       Date:  2017-11-23

Review 3.  Mitral valve interventions in heart failure.

Authors:  Daniel Lavall; Andreas Hagendorff; Stephan H Schirmer; Michael Böhm; Michael A Borger; Ulrich Laufs
Journal:  ESC Heart Fail       Date:  2018-04-19

4.  Energy Drinks Decrease Left Ventricular Efficiency in Healthy Children and Teenagers: A Randomized Trial.

Authors:  Felix Sebastian Oberhoffer; Pengzhu Li; André Jakob; Robert Dalla-Pozza; Nikolaus Alexander Haas; Guido Mandilaras
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-23       Impact factor: 3.847

Review 5.  Echocardiographic assessment of mitral regurgitation: discussion of practical and methodologic aspects of severity quantification to improve diagnostic conclusiveness.

Authors:  Andreas Hagendorff; Fabian Knebel; Andreas Helfen; Stephan Stöbe; Dariush Haghi; Tobias Ruf; Daniel Lavall; Jan Knierim; Ertunc Altiok; Roland Brandt; Nicolas Merke; Sebastian Ewen
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2021-04-11       Impact factor: 5.460

  5 in total

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