Literature DB >> 27943379

Speckle Tracking Imaging in Normal Stress Echocardiography.

Marina Leitman1, Vladimir Tyomkin1, Eli Peleg1, Izhak Zyssman1, Simcha Rosenblatt1, Edgar Sucher1, Vered Gercenshtein1, Zvi Vered1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Exercise stress echocardiography is a widely used modality for the diagnosis and follow-up of patients with coronary artery disease. During the last decade, speckle tracking imaging has been used increasingly for accurate evaluation of cardiac function. This work aimed to assess speckle-tracking imaging parameters during nonischemic exercise stress echocardiography.
METHODS: During 2011 to 2014 we studied 46 patients without history of coronary artery disease, who completed exercise stress echocardiography protocol, had normal left ventricular function, a nonischemic response, and satisfactory image quality. These exams were analyzed with speckle-tracking imaging software at rest and at peak exercise. Peak strain and time-to-peak strain were measured at rest and after exercise. Clinical follow-up included a telephone contact 1 to 3 years after stress echo exam, confirming freedom from coronary events during this time.
RESULTS: Global and regional peak strain increased following exercise. Time-to-peak global and regional strain and time-to-peak strain adjusted to the heart rate were significantly shorter in all segments after exercise. Rest-to-stress ratio of time-to-peak strain adjusted to the heart rate was 2.0 to 2.8.
CONCLUSIONS: Global and regional peak strain rise during normal exercise echocardiography. Peak global and regional strain occur before or shortly after aortic valve closure at rest and after exercise, and the delay is more apparent at the basal segments. Time-to-peak strain normally shortens significantly during exercise; after adjustment to heart rate it shortens by a ratio of 2.0 to 2.8. These data may be useful for interpretation of future exercise stress speckle-tracking echocardiography studies.
© 2016 by the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  exercise stress echocardiography; speckle tracking imaging

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27943379     DOI: 10.7863/ultra.16.04010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Ultrasound Med        ISSN: 0278-4297            Impact factor:   2.153


  4 in total

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Authors:  Marina Leitman; Yoni Balboul; Oleg Burgsdorf; Vladimir Tyomkin; Shmuel Fuchs
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Speckle tracking stress echocardiography in children: interobserver and intraobserver reproducibility and the impact of echocardiographic image quality.

Authors:  Lucia Wilke; Francisca E Abellan Schneyder; Markus Roskopf; Andreas C Jenke; Andreas Heusch; Kai O Hensel
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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