| Literature DB >> 33282641 |
Andrea Barbieri1, Francesco Antonini-Canterin2, Mauro Pepi3, Ines Paola Monte4, Giuseppe Trocino5, Agata Barchitta6, Quirino Ciampi7, Alberto Cresti8, Sofia Miceli9, Licia Petrella10, Frank Benedetto11, Concetta Zito12, Giovanni Benfari13, Francesca Bursi14, Alessandro Malagoli15, Ylenia Bartolacelli16, Francesca Mantovani17, Marie-Annick Clavel18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low-gradient aortic stenosis (LG-AS) is characterized by the combination of an aortic valve area compatible with severe stenosis and a low transvalvular mean gradient with low-flow state (i.e., indexed stroke volume <35 mL/m2) in the presence of reduced (classical low-flow AS) or preserved (paradoxical low-flow AS) ejection fraction. Furthermore, the occurrence of a normal-flow LG-AS is still advocated by many authors. Within this diagnostic complexity, the diagnosis of severe AS remains challenging.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic valve calcium score; aortic valve stenosis; diagnosis; dobutamine stress echocardiography; echocardiography
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282641 PMCID: PMC7706377 DOI: 10.4103/jcecho.jcecho_68_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Echogr ISSN: 2211-4122
Figure 1Usefulness of dobutamine stress echocardiography for clinical decision-making. The “?” indicates the parameters and criteria that needs to be further validated or refined. FR: flow rate (in ml/second); AVA: aortic valve area (in cm2); MG: mean transvalvular gradient (in mmHg); LG-AS: low-gradient severe aortic stenosis (AVA ≤ 1.0 cm2 and MG < 40 mmHg); LF: low-flow (stroke volume index < 35 ml/m2); NF: normal flow (stroke volume index ≥ 35 ml/m2): AVAProj: projected AVA at normal flow rate (in cm2); SAS: severe aortic stenosis; MDCT: multidetector computed tomography; MDCTThr: aortic valve calcium score thresholds measured by MDCT: men > 2000 AU and women > 1200 AU, aortic valve calcium density (i.e., calcium score divided by aortic annulus area) ≥500 AU/cm2 in men, ≥300 AU/cm2 in women)
Figure 2Projected aortic valve area calculation derived from resting and low-dose dobutamine echocardiography. Eighty-year-old woman with classical low-flow low-gradient severe aortic stenosis, ejection fraction of 29% and body surface area of 1.55 m2. Although stroke volume increased minimally with DSE, the flow rate increased 40% due to shortening of the ejection time, but MG and aortic valve area discordance persisted. In this example, the resting aortic valve area is 0.6 cm2 and the flow rate is 137 mL/s. The same measurements obtained during inotropic stress with low dose dobutamine give an aortic valve area of 0.7 cm2 and flow rate of 192 mL/s. Therefore, the flow rate has not normalized to at least 250 mL/s. The rate of increase in aortic valve area per unit change in flow rate is then derived from the two sets of data dividing the change in aortic valve area by the change in flow rate from rest to stress (slope of the line) = 0.002. Accordingly, the projected aortic valve area at the normalized flow rate equates to 0.8 cm2, indicating true severe aortic stenosis
Accuracy of aortic valve calcium score measured by multidetector computed tomography to predict severe aortic stenosis in patients with normal left ventricular outflow
| Aortic valve calcium score measured by CT ( | Men | Women | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUC | Cutoff | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | AUC | Cutoff | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | |
| Valve calcium score | 0.93 | 2067 AU | 93 | 81 | 0.92 | 1172 AU | 88 | 87 |
| Valve calcium score/aortic annulus CSA | 0.95 | 510 AU/cm2 | 92 | 85 | 0.93 | 292 AU/cm2 | 92 | 83 |
Severe AS was defined as an AVA ≤1.0 cm2 and a mean gradient ≥40 mmHg. Normal LV outflow was defined as a stroke volume index >35 mL/m2 and a mean transvalvular flow rate >210 ml/s. These data were prospectively collected in 3 centers: QHLI, Bichat Hospital, and Mayo Clinic (31–34). ROC=Receiver operating characteristic, AUC=Area under the ROC curve, CSA=Cross-sectional area, SAVR=Surgical aortic valve replacement, LV=Left ventricular, AVA=Aortic valve area, QHLI=Quebec heart and lung institute
Figure 3Measurement of aortic valve calcification by multi-detector computed tomography. Noncontrast multislice computed tomography showing axial view of the aortic valve, the axial multiplanar reformat images from left ventricular outflow tract to aortic direction (a) with any calcification highlighted in pink by the software (bone, coronary arteries, aorta, mitral annulus, (b). The region of the aortic valve is assessed in contiguous axial slices during held inspiration, at 120 kV tube voltage, pitch adjusted to heart rate (average 0.7), 64 mm × 0.6 mm collimation, and reconstruction slice thickness of 3 mm and increment of 1.5 mm. State-of-the-art dose reduction strategies including adjusting tube current to chest wall morphology, prospective electrocardiographic gating, and dose modulation should be used
Figure 4Summary scheme of the mandatory and optional exams of the Discordant Echocardiographic Grading in Low-Gradient Aortic Stenosis study