| Literature DB >> 36040552 |
Rodolfo Citro1,2, Francesca Bursi3, Michele Bellino4, Eugenio Picano5.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Stress echocardiography is recommended in valvular heart disease when there is a mismatch between resting transthoracic echocardiography findings and symptoms during activities of daily living. We describe the current methodology and the evidence supporting these applications. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Aortic stenosis; Dobutamine; Exercise; Mitral regurgitation; Stress echo; Valves
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36040552 PMCID: PMC9556404 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-022-01765-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3782 Impact factor: 3.955
Stress echo in chronic coronary syndromes vs valvular heart disease
| Key LV parameters | RWMA | EF, GLS |
| Guidelines class 1 | RWMA | LF-LG AS, sec. MR, MS |
| Guidelines class 2 | CFVR (2b) | Primary MR (2a) |
| Competence maintenance | > 100 cases/year | > 20 cases/year |
| Main symptom | Chest pain | Dyspnea |
| Protocol in SE2030 | ABCDE | ABCDE + (FGLPR as needed) |
| Exercise stress | Treadmill or bike (semi-supine or upright) | Semi-supine exercise |
| Dobutamine max dose | Up to 40 mcg + atropine | Up to 20 mcg, no atropine |
| Dobutamine stress stages | 3′ starting from 5 mcg/kg/min | 5′ to 8′ starting from 2.5 mcg/kg/min |
CCS chronic coronary syndromes, CFVR coronary flow velocity reserve, EF ejection fraction, GLS global longitudinal strain, LV left ventricle, LF-LG AS low-flow, low-gradient aortic stenosis with reduced ejection fraction, MR mitral regurgitation, MS mitral stenosis, RWMA regional wall motion abnormality, SE stress echo, sec secondary
General protocol of exercise stress echo in valvular heart disease
| Parameters | EDV, ESV, LAV | B-lines | PISA, EROA | TRV, MAG, MMG | TAPSE | GLS | HR | SBP | ||
| 1. Rest | v | v | v | v | v | v | v | v | v | v |
| 2. Low load | v | v | v | v | ||||||
| 3. Peak | v | v | v | v | v | v | v | v | ||
| 4. Early rec | v | v | v | v | ||||||
| 5. Recovery | v | v | v | |||||||
BP blood pressure, CFD color-flow Doppler imaging, 2D 2-dimensional echocardiography, ECG electrocardiogram, EDV end-diastolic volume, EF ejection fraction, ESV end-systolic volume, GLS global longitudinal strain, HR heart rate, LAV left atrial volume, LUS lung ultrasound, MAG mean aortic gradient, MMG mean mitral gradient, PISA proximal isovelocity surface area, PWD pulsed-wave Doppler, rec recovery, SBP systolic blood pressure, STE strain echocardiography, TAPSE tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion, TDI tissue Doppler imaging, TRV tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity, VTI velocity–time integral
Fig. 1The worsening MR pattern during stress. Apical 4-chamber view showing color-flow Doppler (upper panels) and continuous wave Doppler (lower panels) at rest (left panels) and at peak exercise (right panels) in a patient with a large exercise-induced increase in mitral regurgitation. ERO, effective regurgitant orifice; RVol, regurgitant volume. ERO increases from 0.3 cm2 at rest (moderate) to 0.5 cm2 at peak stress (severe). Courtesy of Dr. Angela Zagatina, Saint Petersburg, Russia, part of the Stress Echo 2030 study group
Fig. 2Low-flow, low-gradient aortic stenosis at rest (on the left), in a patient with low ejection fraction which turns into truly severe aortic stenosis during dobutamine stress echocardiography at the low dose of 10 μg/kg/min (on the right). AVA, aortic valve area; LVOT, left ventricle outflow tract; MG, mean gradient; SV, stroke volume; Svi, stroke volume indexed; VTI, velocity time integral. Courtesy of Dr. Rodolfo Citro, Salerno, Italy, part of the Stress Echo 2030 study group