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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 98, 258-265, Copyright © 1989 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
K Taniguchi, S Nakano, H Matsuda, Y Shimazaki, K Sakai, T Kawamoto, S Sakaki, J Arisawa, K Kawachi and Y Kawashima
Left ventricular cineangiography and pressure measurement were performed in
33 patients with chronic aortic regurgitation before and after aortic valve
replacement and in 25 normal control subjects. Stress and volume were
analyzed. The 33 patients were divided into three groups based on
preoperative end-systolic volume index: 15 with an index of less than 100
ml/m2 (group I), 12 with an index of 100 to 200 ml/m2 (group II), and six
with an index of more than 200 ml/m2 (group III). Afterload estimated as
end-systolic stress, which was significantly elevated in all groups before
operation, returned to normal postoperatively. Systolic pump function
improved postoperatively in all groups; group I and group II showing the
most improvement with group III still having an abnormal ejection fraction.
The ratio of end- systolic stress to end-systolic volume index, which is an
index of contractile state that is relatively independent of preload and
afterload, was abnormal in each group preoperatively. Postoperatively, the
ratio improved in each group (from 2.8 +/- 0.5 to 4.8 +/- 0.9 for group I,
from 1.4 +/- 0.3 to 3.2 +/- 0.6 for group II, and from 0.8 +/- 0.2 to 2.6
+/- 0.8 for group III, compared with 5.9 +/- 1.0 for control subjects).
Group I had normal values whereas group II and group III had subnormal
ratios, suggesting a depressed contractility. All 15 patients in group I
had values that fell within the 95% confidence limits of the linear inverse
relationship between ejection fraction and end-systolic stress for control
subjects. Nine of the 12 patients in group II and all six in group III had
values that fell below the 95% confidence limits of the normal ejection
fraction-end-systolic stress relationship. Aortic valve replacement may
reduce afterload and improve systolic pump function in many patients with
aortic regurgitation. However, there is a subgroup of patients who, despite
normal or near- normal pump performance as assessed by ejection fraction,
have depressed myocardial contractility characterized by an abnormal
relationship between end-systolic stress and either ejection fraction or
end-systolic volume.
ARTICLES
Depressed myocardial contractility and normal ejection performance after aortic valve replacement in patients with aortic regurgitation
First Department of Surgery, Osaka University Medical School, Japan.
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