| Literature DB >> 30453975 |
Zibire Fulati1, Yang Liu1, Ning Sun2, Yu Kang3, Yangang Su4, Haiyan Chen5, Xianhong Shu6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In patients with left ventricular (LV) dysssynchrony, contraction that doesn't fall into ejection period (LVEj) results in a waste of energy due to inappropriate contraction timing, which was now widely treated by cardiac resynchronization therapy(CRT). Myocardial Contraction Efficiency was defined as the ratio of Efficient Contraction Time (ECTR) and amplitude of efficient contraction (ECR) during LVEj against that in the entire cardiac cycle. This study prospectively investigated whether efficiency indexes could predict CRT outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac resynchronization therapy; Contraction efficiency; Prognosis; Speckle tracking echocardiography; Strain
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30453975 PMCID: PMC6245808 DOI: 10.1186/s12947-018-0148-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Ultrasound ISSN: 1476-7120 Impact factor: 2.062
Fig. 1Measurement of amplitude and timing of the effective contraction and the total contraction. a illustrates the definition of Strain and the concept of Myocardial Contraction Efficiency which was put forward for the first time in the current study. b Longitudinal myocardial shortening within left ventricular ejection (LVEj) and throughout a beat were defined as effective contraction (EC, green line) and maximum longitudinal strain (MLS, amaranth line), respectively. Time spent for EC and MLS were defined as effective contraction time (ECT, blue line) and total contraction time (TCT, red line), respectively. c shows the pulsed-wave Doppler ultrasound in the LV outflow tract. The horizontal axis represents velocity (m/s) and the vertical axis represents time (ms). EKG was used as the reference of cardiac cycle timing (green curve). Timing of aortic valve opening and closure were measured at the beginning and the end of the envelope and LV ejection period was then determined (period between blue lines). d show the longitudinal strain curve by 2D speckle tracking for a healthy control. The Y axis displays longitudinal strain (%) and the X axis displays time according to EKG (ms). The reference line (the left red line) was placed at the beginning of the QRS complex when the longitudinal strain was defined as zero. Aortic valve closure (AVC) and opening (AVO) were defined according to (c). The majority of contraction occurs within LVEj in healthy control. AVO: aortic valve opening; AVC: aortic valve closure; LVEj: left ventricle ejection period;EC: effective contraction; MLS: maximum longitudinal strain; ECT: effective contraction time; TCT: total contraction time
Baseline Characteristics
| Variables | Total Cohort ( | p Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control Group ( | Non-responder Group ( | Responder Group ( | ||
| Age, yrs | 46 ± 1 | 62 ± 2 | 62.35 ± 1.67 | < 0.0001 |
| Female/Male | 12/18(1:1.5) | 8/24(1:3) | 13/25(1:1.9) | 0.01 |
| NYHA functional class | / | 3.03 ± 0.67 | 2.85 ± 0.46 | 0.17 |
| QRS, ms | 81 ± 2.52 | 149 ± 6.37 | 151 ± 5.26 | < 0.0001 |
| Ischemic etiology | / | 4(12%) | 4(10%) | 0.64 |
| LVEF, % | 69.45 ± 0.73 | 26.50 ± 1.91 | 26.45 ± 1.05 | < 0.0001 |
| LVEDV, ml | 62.50 ± 1.93 | 282.30 ± 21.56 | 203.00 ± 11.30*** | < 0.0001 |
| LVESV, ml | 18.80 ± 0.61 | 210.40 ± 20.14 | 150.20 ± 9.29** | < 0.0001 |
| TTO-16-SD, % | 2.85 ± 0.23 | 9.65 ± 0.85 | 14.04 ± 2.01* | < 0.0001 |
| TTP-16-SD, % | 3.73 ± 0.18 | 12.45 ± 1.12 | 16.83 ± 2.90 | < 0.0001 |
LVEF Left Ventricle Eject Fraction, LVEDV Left ventricle end diastolic volume, LVESV Left ventricle end systolic volume, TTO-16-SD 16-segement Standard deviation of time to onset strain, TTP-16-SD 16-segement Standard deviation of time to peak strain
Compared Responder Group to Non-responder Group: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001
Fig. 2Comparison of contraction timing indexes. a Comparison among control group, baseline non-responder group and responder group. (Compared to Control Group: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005; ***p < 0.0005; Compared to baseline Non-responder Group #p < 0.05; ##p < 0.005; ###p < 0.0005). b Comparison between baseline and 6-month follow-up in both patient groups. (Comparison between pre-CRT and post-CRT in Non-responder Group: ¥p < 0.05; Comparison between pre-CRT and post-CRT in Responder Group: &p < 0.05;) ECT: effective contraction time; TCT: total contraction time; ECTR: effective contraction time ratio
Compare STE parameters in Baseline and 6-month follow up
| Control Group | Non-responder Group | Responder Group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 30) | Baseline (n = 32) | 6-month ( | Baseline (n = 38) | 6-month (n = 38) | |
| ECT(%) | 29.26±0.50*,# | 22.26±0.82 | 23.31 ± 6.09 | 20.86±1.03** | 24.62±0.70 |
| TCT(%) | 37.26±0.6*,# | 36.83±1.46## | 41.93±1.54 | 43.95±3.58 | 43.21 ± 5.64 |
| ECTR(%) | 79.51±0.69*,# | 60.00±2.16 | 59.1 ± 11.88 | 50.30±1.64** | 60.94±1.57 |
| EC(%) | 17.09±0.59*,# | 5.35±0.41 | 7.82 ± 3.91 | 5.44±0.31** | 9.71±0.53 |
| MLS(%) | 18.67±0.58*,# | 8.11±0.39 | 11.33 ± 3.92 | 9.28±0.36** | 13.13±0.52 |
| ECR(%) | 91.60±0.72*,# | 62.90±2.53 | 59.1 ± 11.88 | 53.69±1.69** | 72.16±1.86 |
EC effective contraction, ECT effective contractile time, ECR the ratio of effective contraction, ECTR the ratio of effective contractile time, MLS maximum longitudinal strain, TTO time to onset strain, TTP time to peak strain, 6 month 6 month follow-up
Compare Non-responder Group versus Control Group at baseline,* P < 0.05;
Compare Responder Group versus Control Group at baseline, # P < 0.05;Compare Baseline versus 6 month follow up in Non-responder group, ## P < 0.05;
Compare Baseline versus 6 month follow up in Responder group, ** P < 0.05;
Fig. 3Comparison of contraction amplitude between baseline and 6-month follow-up. a EC, MLS and ECR decreased significantly in both patient groups. The responder group had better MLS (p < 0.05) and worse ECR (p < 0.005) than the non-responder group. (Compared to Control Group: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005; ***p < 0.0005; Compared to baseline Non-responder Group #p < 0.05; ##p < 0.005; ###p < 0.0005.) EC: effective contraction; MLS: maximum longitudinal strain; ECR: effective contraction ratio. b All the parameters of contraction amplitude improved in the responder group and unchanged in the non-responder group. (Comparison between pre-CRT and post-CRT in Responder Group: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005; ***p < 0.0005) EC: effective contraction; MLS: maximum longitudinal strain; ECR: effective contraction ratio
Fig. 4Longitudinal strain curves of a CRT responder. a and b shows the longitudinal strain curves for a responder at baseline and 6-month follow up respectively. The patient’s LVEF improved from 25 to 47%. QRS was recognized by software as the beginning of systole. Since the negative peak before AVC was automatically recorded as the peak strain, the global strain (GS) by software was − 7.9% at baseline and − 5.3% at follow-up. These findings were contrary to the LVEF improvement. However, after studying the EC within LVEj and the MLS throughout the cardiac cycle, we found that MLS was slightly improved, while EC and ECR were significantly improved
ROC analysis for CRT response
| Variable | AUC | cut-off | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictors of non-response | ||||
| ECTR | 0.682 | 59.02% | 85.0 | 58.8 |
| ECR | 0.724 | 62.68% | 85.0 | 52.9 |
| Predictor of response | ||||
| MLS | 0.694 | 8.81 | 70.0 | 76.5 |
ECTR the ratio of effective contractile time, ECR the ratio of effective contraction, MLS maximum longitudinal strain
Logistic regression for CRT response
| Variable | OR(95% CI) | Wald X2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Binary logistic regression | |||
| ECTR | 0.928(0.887~ 0.972) | 10.030 | 0.002 |
| ECR | 0.943(0.904~ 0.983) | 7.692 | 0.006 |
| MLS | 1.257(1.014~ 1.557) | 4.349 | 0.037 |
| Multinomial logistic regression ( | |||
| ECR | 0.867(0.775~ 0.969) | 6.264 | 0.012 |
| MLS | 2.219(1.364~ 3.612) | 10.299 | 0.001 |
ECTR the ratio of effective contractile time, ECR the ratio of effective contraction, MLS maximum longitudinal strain
Fig. 5Intra-observer and Inter-observer reproducibility. It shows the inter-observer reproducibility for the value of inter-observer ICC and intra-observer ICC for EC, ECT, ECR, ECTR, MLS, TTO and TTP. It suggested a good reproducibility of all STE parameters. ECT: effective contractile time; EC: effective contraction; ECR: the ratio of effective contraction; ECTR: the ratio of effective contractile time; MLS: maximum longitudinal strain; TTO: time to onset strain; TTP: time to peak strain
Intra-observer and Inter-observer reproducibility of STE parameters
| Inter-observer ICC | P value | Intra-observer ICC | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EC | 0.88 (0.82~ 0.92) | 0.94(0.90~ 0.96) | ||
| ECT | 0.91 (0.87~ 0.94) | 0.94(0.92~ 0.96) | ||
| MLS | 0.8(0.84~ 0.89) | 0.86(0.83~ 0.89) | ||
| TTO | 0.73(0.68~ 0.75) | 0.75(0.73~ 0.77) | ||
| TTP | 0.81(0.79~ 0.83) | 0.83(0.81~ 0.85) | ||
| TCT | 0.85(0.80~ 0.88) | 0.87(0.83~ 0.90) | ||
| ECR | 0.89(0.85~ 0.93) | 0.91(0.87~ 0.95) | ||
| ECRT | 0.83(0.80~ 0.90) | 0.86(0.81~ 0.92) |
EC effective contraction, ECT effective contractile time, ECR the ratio of effective contraction, ECTR the ratio of effective contractile time, MLS maximum longitudinal strain, TTO time to onset strain, TTP time to peak strain
Fig. 6Factors that influence contraction efficiency. a shows that when ECT is settled, different contraction velocities (slope) can result in different EC. b shows that when contraction velocity is settled, either late onset of contraction after AVO or early end of contraction before AVC may shorten ECT and decrease EC. ECT: effective contractile time; EC: effective contraction; AVC: aortic valve closure; AVO: aortic valve opening