Literature DB >> 30220086

Elevated end-diastolic wall stress after acute myocardial infarction predicts adverse cardiovascular outcomes and longer hospital length of stay.

Wassim Mosleh1, Kalaimani Elango1, Tanvi Shah1, Milind Chaudhari1, Sumeet Gandhi1, Sharma Kattel1, Roshan Karki1, Charl Khalil1, Kevin Frodey1, Suraj Dahal1, Cale Okeeffe1, Zaid Aljebaje1, Makoto Nagahama1, Natdanai Punnanithinont1, Umesh C Sharma1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute myocardial infarction (MI) leads to ventricular remodeling in response to oxygen demand. Such changes include left ventricular (LV) dilatation and increased myocardial wall stress. Prior studies showed that wall stress is a vital parameter of cardiac remodeling. However, outcome data are lacking. We aim to investigate wall stress post-MI in relation to biomarkers of cardiac remodeling and cardiovascular outcomes.
METHODS: Patients presenting with ST-elevation MI (STEMI) requiring primary percutaneous intervention (PCI) were enrolled prospectively. LVEF and volume-based end-diastolic (EDWS) and end-systolic (ESWS) wall stress were measured from predischarge echocardiograms. Serum samples were collected for measurement of serum biomarkers. We identified 81 patients meeting inclusion criteria (64% men, 36% women) with a mean age of 61. The primary outcome was major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) defined as 1-year composite endpoint of cardiac mortality, recurrent MI, revascularization, or stroke. Length of hospitalization (LOH) was recorded.
RESULTS: Major adverse cardiovascular events-positive patients (n = 12) had significantly higher EDWS levels (15.87 vs 12.33, P = 0.045), and galectin-3 levels (19.07 vs 11.75, P = 0.015), and lower LVEF (40.0% vs 48.4%, P = 0.023) compared to MACE-negative patients. Patients with LOH > 72 hours (n = 33) had significantly higher EDWS, galectin-3, and peak troponin, and lower LVEF compared to patients with LOH < 72 hours. EDWS positively correlated with LOH and galectin-3. EDWS was an independent predictor of MACE by binomial regression analysis.
CONCLUSION: End-diastolic walls tress is a potential prognostic tool for risk stratifying STEMI patients, providing an assessment of the functional consequences of myocardial remodeling. It is predictive of MACE independent of LVEF, associated with longer hospitalizations, and correlates with galectin-3, a biomarker of cardiac remodeling.
© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  acute myocardial infarction; echocardiography; myocardial wall

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30220086     DOI: 10.1111/echo.14136

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Echocardiography        ISSN: 0742-2822            Impact factor:   1.724


  4 in total

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3.  Elevated myocardial wall stress after percutaneous coronary intervention in acute ST elevation myocardial infraction is associated with increased mortality.

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Authors:  Rohini Ganjoo; Rajiv N Rimal; Sameera A Talegawkar; Erica Sedlander; Ichhya Pant; Jeffrey B Bingenheimer; Shikha Chandarana; Aika Aluc; Yichen Jin; Hagere Yilma; Bikash Panda
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  4 in total

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