| Literature DB >> 30538539 |
Nidhish Tiwari1,2, Nidhi Madan3.
Abstract
Aortic stenosis (AS) is the most common valvular heart disease in the elderly and it causes significant morbidity and mortality. Hypertension is also highly prevalent in elderly patients with AS, and AS patients with hypertension have worse outcomes. Accurate assessment of AS severity and understanding its relationship with arterial compliance has become increasingly important as the options for valve management, particularly transcatheter interventions, have grown. The parameters used for quantifying stenosis severity have traditionally mainly focused on the valve itself. However, AS is now recognized as a systemic disease involving aging ventricles and stiff arteries rather than one limited solely to the valve. Over the last decade, valvuloarterial impedance, a measure of global ventricular load, has contributed to our understanding of the pathophysiology and course of AS in heterogeneous patients, even when segregated by symptoms and severity. This review summarizes our growing understanding of the interplay between ventricle, valve, and vessel, with a particular emphasis on downstream vascular changes after transcatheter aortic valve replacement and the role of valvuloarterial impedance in predicting left ventricular changes and prognosis in patients with various transvalvular flow patterns.Entities:
Keywords: aortic stenosis; arterial compliance; global ventricular load; transcatheter aortic valve replacement; valvuloarterial impedance; ventriculoarterial coupling
Year: 2018 PMID: 30538539 PMCID: PMC6260138 DOI: 10.2147/IBPC.S177258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Integr Blood Press Control ISSN: 1178-7104
Figure 1Direct and indirect effects of age on ventricular valvular vessel interactions.
Abbreviations: ECM, extracellular matrix; LV, left ventricle.
Prevalence and prognosis and percentage of patients with severe AS
| High gradient (mean >40 mmHg) | Low gradient (mean <40 mmHg) | |
|---|---|---|
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Abbreviations: AS, aortic stenosis; SV, stroke volume.
Hemodynamic changes post TAVR
| First author, year | Time post TAVR | Techniques used for measuring hemodynamic parameters | SBP | MAP | Pulse pressure | Cardiac output/cardiac index | LVEF | Stroke volume/SVi (indexed) | ZVa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giannini, | Within 10–15 minutes | Invasive (cardiac catheterization) and Echocardiography | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑(Mild) | ↑ | ↑ (Mild) | ↓ |
| Di Bello, | Within 10–15 minutes | Invasive hemodynamics and Echocardiography | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | |
| Yotti, | 30 minutes | Invasive (high fidelity sensors and wave intensity analyses) | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ | No acute change | |
| Perlman, | 5 days | TTE | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | |||
| Vavuranakis, | 7 days | TTE | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ||||
| Lindman, | 30 days and 6 months | TTE | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | |||
| Katsanos, | 30 days and 1 year | TTE | No significant change | ↓ |
Abbreviations: LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; MAP, mean arterial pressure; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SVi, stroke volume indexed to body surface area; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography; ZVa, valvuloarterial impedance.
Hemodynamic changes post SAVR
| First author, year | Time post SAVR | Technique used for measuring hemodynamic parameters | SBP | MAP | Pulse pressure | Cardiac output/cardiac index | LVEF | Stroke volume/SVi (indexed) | ZVa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pagel, | 15 minutes after cardiopulmonary bypass | TEE | No change | No change | No change | No change | No change | No change | ↓ |
| Ito, | Before discharge and 6 months post procedure | TTE | No change | ↓ |
Abbreviations: LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; MAP, mean arterial pressure; SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SVi, stroke volume indexed to body surface area; TEE, trans-esophageal echocardiography; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography; ZVa, valvuloarterial impedance.
Studies of valvuloarterial impedance (Zva) in aortic stenosis patients
| First author, year | Total number of patients studied, N | Severity of AS in study population at baseline | Baseline LVEF, % (mean ± SD) | Mean follow-up | Technique | Main findings (ZVa values are described in mmHg/ml/m2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jang, | 453 | Severe | 58.7±12.1 | 3.5 years | TTE | Pre-SAVR ZVa (mean of 5.9) correlated with decrease in LV mass index | |
| Ito, | 23 | Severe | 61.5±11.5 | 26.5±10.7 months | TTE | Post TAVR ZVa (from 5.05 pre-procedure to 3.12 post-procedure) predicted LV mass index regression | |
| Maréchaux, | 82 | AV stenosis, defined by peak aortic velocity >2.5 m/s | 64±7 | – | TTE with 2-D speckle tracking | Higher ZVa associated with impairment in global longitudinal strain | |
| Lancellotti, | 173 | Severe | 66.5±7.3 | – | TTE with 2-D speckle tracking | High ZVa (≥5) associated with worse circumferential strain | |
| Holmes, | 82 | Severe | 66±9 | 33±17 months | TTE with 2-D speckle tracking | High LV apical rotation (torsion) associated with high ZVa (5.03) and poor survival. | |
| Cramariuc, | 1,591 | AS defined as AV thickening accompanied by a peak transaortic velocity ≥2.5 and≤4.0 m/s | 66±7 | – | TTE | High ZVa (≥4.48) was associated with decreased stress- corrected midwall shortening | |
| Ramamurthi, | 215 | Moderate and severe | – | TTE | Higher number of symptomatic patients had increased ZVa (>5) compared with asymptomatic patients | ||
| Zito, | 52 | Severe | 61±5 | 11±7.5 months | TTE | ZVa (>4.7) predicted onset of symptoms (dyspnea, angina, syncope), AVR, death | |
| Lancellotti, | 163 | Moderate to severe | 66+9 | 20±19 months | TTE | ZVa (≥4.9) predicted onset of symptoms, AVR, death | |
| Hachicha, | 544 | At least moderate, defined as peak velocity >2.5 m/s | 66±7 | 2.5±1.8 years | TTE | Higher ZVa (≥3.5) was associated with increased mortality when compared with ZVa <3.5 | |
| Rieck, | 1,418 | Mild to moderate | 66±7 | 43±14 months | TTE | High ZVa (>5) predicted increased major cardiovascular events and aortic valve events, but did not predict survival | |
| Magne, | 676 | Severe, defined as AV area ≤1 cm2, derived from cardiac catheterization using Gorlin equation | 72±10 | 4.5±2.9 years | Cardiac catheterization | High ZVa (>5) was significantly associated with increased mortality | |
| Harada, | 451 | Moderate to severe | 62.6±10.3 | – | TTE | Higher ZVa (≥4.7) was associated with increased risk of syncope | |
| Kruszelnicka et al, 2015 | 157 | Moderate to severe | 52.3±12 | – | TTE | Mean ZVa by HF class: No symptoms: 5.1 NYHA II: 5.2 NYHA III-IV: 5.7 Each decrease in SAC by 0.1 mL/m2 per mmHg was associated with an increased adjusted odds ratio of a patient being in one higher category of NYHA class | |
| Lindman, | 2,141 | Severe | 54±11 | 30 days to 1 year | TTE | Increased risk of mortality with every 1 unit increase in ZVa (baseline mean ZVa 3.99) | |
| Giannini, | 102 | Severe | 48.9±10.3 | 6 months post TAVR | TTE | Increased mortality with higher baseline ZVa (8.13 vs 6.41) | |
| Kobayashi, | 128 | Severe | 54±13 | 376 days | TTE | High baseline ZVa (>5) was associated with higher mortality | |
| Katsanos, | 116 | Severe | 54±14 | 25 months | TTE | Baseline ZVa (≥5) associated with increased all-cause mortality | |
| Katayama, | 177 | Severe | 65±6.5 | 5 years post SAVR | TTE | Baseline high ZVa (≥4.3) was not associated with overall mortality. | |
| Ngiam, | 203 | Severe | 64±12.5 | 3±2 years | TTE | High initial ZVa (>4.7) was associated with switch from normal flow to low flow category | |
| Herrmann, | 77 | Any AS (non- severe and severe) | Any LVEF | 3.3±1.7 years | TTE with 2D speckle tracking | ZVa was elevated at baseline in the LF–LG group compared with NF/LG and HG/AS groups (LF/LG, 3.2±0.8; NF/LG, 2.2±0.5; HG/AS, 2.2±0.9) | |
| Mizia-Stec, | 44 | Severe AS | >50 | – | TTE | ZVa was higher in patients with SVI <35 mL/m2 (7.60) compared with those with SVI ≥35 mL/m2 (4.06) | |
| Levy, | 184 | Severe low flow low gradient | 29±7 | 5 years | TTE, DSE | ZVa was higher in patients with contractile reserve vs without on DSE (5.8 vs 5.3), however, failed to distinguish pseudo vs true severe AS nor predict mortality after AVR | |
| Lancellotti, | 173 | Severe AS | 66.5±7.3 | – | TTE with 2D speckle tracking | Higher prevalence of elevated ZVa (≥5) in low flow group compared with normal flow | |
| Hachicha, | 512 | Severe | 65±7.5 | 25±19 months | TTE | Higher ZVa (>5.5) was associated with increased mortality | |
Abbreviations: AS, aortic stenosis; AV, aortic valve; DSE, dobutamine stress echocardiography; HG/AS, high gradient, aortic stenosis; LF–LG, low flow, low gradient; LV, left ventricle; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NF/LG, normal flow, low gradient; SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement; TTE, transthoracic echocardiography; ZVa, valvuloarterial impedance.