Literature DB >> 30834592

Remodeling classification system considering left ventricular volume in patients with aortic valve stenosis: Association with adverse cardiovascular outcomes.

Andrea Barbieri1, Ylenia Bartolacelli1, Francesca Bursi1,2, Marcella Manicardi1, Giuseppe Boriani1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To assess prevalence and clinical implications of left ventricular (LV) remodeling considering: LV volume, mass and relative wall thickness at the time of aortic valve stenosis diagnosis. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We retrospectively analyzed 343 patients (age 79.2 ± 9.5 years, 48.1% males) with functional aortic valve area (AVA) ≤ 1.5 cm2 . LV geometric patterns and clinical outcomes (combined death, cardiac hospitalization, aortic valve replacement [AVR]) were evaluated. According to the new LV remodeling classification, 4.9% had normal geometry, 7.5% concentric remodeling, 39.3% concentric hypertrophy (LVH), 22.4% mixed LVH, 12.5% dilated LVH, 3.2% eccentric LVH and 4.3% eccentric remodeling, 5.5% had not classifiable LVH. Indexed stroke volume (SVi) was higher in patients with concentric LVH (40.3 ± 11.9 mL/m2 ) and mixed LVH (41.6 ± 13.4 mL/m2 ) and lower in patients with eccentric LVH (24.9 ± 7.7 mL/m2 ), concentric (36.6 ± 12.7 mL/m2 ) and eccentric remodeling (34.9 ± 9.5 mL/m2 ), P = 0.003. During a median follow-up of 2.2 years, 260 (75.8%) had the combined end point. A significant association between the combined end point and LV dilation (P = 0.010) or LV remodeling patterns (P = 0.0001) was found. After multivariable adjustment for AVR, concentric remodeling (HR 3.12, IC 95% 1.14-8.55; P = 0.02) and dilated LVH (HR 3.48, IC 95% 1.31-9.27; P = 0.01) were strongly associated with death or cardiac hospitalizations.
CONCLUSIONS: In patients with AVA ≤ 1.5 cm2 , when the new LV remodeling classification system is applied, only a minority had normal geometry and less than half had "classic" concentric LVH or remodeling. LV volume dilatation is frequent and associated with adverse outcome. Concentric remodeling, eccentric remodeling, dilated LVH had the worst noninvasive hemodynamic profile and prognosis.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aortic stenosis; aortic valve disease; cardiovascular outcome; hypertrophy; left ventricular hypertrophy; left ventricular remodeling

Year:  2019        PMID: 30834592     DOI: 10.1111/echo.14299

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


  1 in total

Review 1.  Clinical Value of Complex Echocardiographic Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Classification Based on Concentricity, Mass, and Volume Quantification.

Authors:  Andrea Barbieri; Alessandro Albini; Anna Maisano; Gerardo De Mitri; Giovanni Camaioni; Niccolò Bonini; Francesca Mantovani; Giuseppe Boriani
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2021-04-27
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.