Cargando…

Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)

BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronization Therapy (CRT) is an effective therapy for chronic heart failure with beneficial hemodynamic effects leading to a reduction of morbidity and mortality. The responder rates, however, are low. There are various and contentious echocardiographic parameters of myocar...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Knebel, Fabian, Schattke, Sebastian, Bondke, Hansjürgen, Richter, Christoph, Melzer, Christoph, Dreger, Henryk, Grohmann, Andrea, Baumann, Gert, Borges, Adrian C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2613384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19032733
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-7120-6-58
_version_ 1782163172907548672
author Knebel, Fabian
Schattke, Sebastian
Bondke, Hansjürgen
Richter, Christoph
Melzer, Christoph
Dreger, Henryk
Grohmann, Andrea
Baumann, Gert
Borges, Adrian C
author_facet Knebel, Fabian
Schattke, Sebastian
Bondke, Hansjürgen
Richter, Christoph
Melzer, Christoph
Dreger, Henryk
Grohmann, Andrea
Baumann, Gert
Borges, Adrian C
author_sort Knebel, Fabian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronization Therapy (CRT) is an effective therapy for chronic heart failure with beneficial hemodynamic effects leading to a reduction of morbidity and mortality. The responder rates, however, are low. There are various and contentious echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony. Patient selection by echocardiographic assessment of asynchrony is thought to improve responder rates. METHODS: In this small single-center pilot-study, seven established parameters of myocardial asynchrony were used to select patients for CRT: (1) interventricular electromechanical delay (IMD, cut-off ≥ 40 ms), (2) Septal-to-posterior wall motion delay (SPWMD, ≥ 130 ms), (3) maximal difference in time-to-peak velocities between any two of twelve LV segments (Ts-12 ≥ 104 ms), (4) standard deviation of time to peak myocardial velocities (Ts-12-SD, ≥ 34.4 ms), (5) difference between the septal and basal time-to-peak velocity (TDId, ≥ 60 ms), (6) left ventricular electromechanical delay (LVEMD, > 140 ms) and (7) delayed longitudinal contraction (DLC, > 2 segments). 16 chronic heart failure patients (NYHA III–IV, LVEF < 0.35, QRS ≥ 120 ms) at least two out of seven parameters of myocardial asynchrony received cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT-ICD). Follow-up echo examination was after 6 months. The control group was a historic group of CRT patients (n = 38) who had not been screened for echocardiographic signs of myocardial asynchrony prior to device implantation. RESULTS: Based on reverse remodeling (relative reduction of LVESV > 15%, relative increase of LVEF > 25%), the responder rate to CRT was 81.2% in patients selected for CRT according to our protocol as compared to 47.4% in the control group (p = 0.04). At baseline, there were on average 4.1 ± 1.6 positive parameters of asynchrony (follow-up: 3.7 [± 1.6] parameters positive, p = 0.52). Only the LVEMD decreased significantly after CRT (p = 0.027). The remaining parameters showed a non-significant trend towards reduction of myocardial asynchrony. CONCLUSION: The implementation of different markers of asynchrony in the selection process for CRT improves the hemodynamic response rate to CRT.
format Text
id pubmed-2613384
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-26133842009-01-03 Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) Knebel, Fabian Schattke, Sebastian Bondke, Hansjürgen Richter, Christoph Melzer, Christoph Dreger, Henryk Grohmann, Andrea Baumann, Gert Borges, Adrian C Cardiovasc Ultrasound Research BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronization Therapy (CRT) is an effective therapy for chronic heart failure with beneficial hemodynamic effects leading to a reduction of morbidity and mortality. The responder rates, however, are low. There are various and contentious echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony. Patient selection by echocardiographic assessment of asynchrony is thought to improve responder rates. METHODS: In this small single-center pilot-study, seven established parameters of myocardial asynchrony were used to select patients for CRT: (1) interventricular electromechanical delay (IMD, cut-off ≥ 40 ms), (2) Septal-to-posterior wall motion delay (SPWMD, ≥ 130 ms), (3) maximal difference in time-to-peak velocities between any two of twelve LV segments (Ts-12 ≥ 104 ms), (4) standard deviation of time to peak myocardial velocities (Ts-12-SD, ≥ 34.4 ms), (5) difference between the septal and basal time-to-peak velocity (TDId, ≥ 60 ms), (6) left ventricular electromechanical delay (LVEMD, > 140 ms) and (7) delayed longitudinal contraction (DLC, > 2 segments). 16 chronic heart failure patients (NYHA III–IV, LVEF < 0.35, QRS ≥ 120 ms) at least two out of seven parameters of myocardial asynchrony received cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT-ICD). Follow-up echo examination was after 6 months. The control group was a historic group of CRT patients (n = 38) who had not been screened for echocardiographic signs of myocardial asynchrony prior to device implantation. RESULTS: Based on reverse remodeling (relative reduction of LVESV > 15%, relative increase of LVEF > 25%), the responder rate to CRT was 81.2% in patients selected for CRT according to our protocol as compared to 47.4% in the control group (p = 0.04). At baseline, there were on average 4.1 ± 1.6 positive parameters of asynchrony (follow-up: 3.7 [± 1.6] parameters positive, p = 0.52). Only the LVEMD decreased significantly after CRT (p = 0.027). The remaining parameters showed a non-significant trend towards reduction of myocardial asynchrony. CONCLUSION: The implementation of different markers of asynchrony in the selection process for CRT improves the hemodynamic response rate to CRT. BioMed Central 2008-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC2613384/ /pubmed/19032733 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-7120-6-58 Text en Copyright © 2008 Knebel et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Knebel, Fabian
Schattke, Sebastian
Bondke, Hansjürgen
Richter, Christoph
Melzer, Christoph
Dreger, Henryk
Grohmann, Andrea
Baumann, Gert
Borges, Adrian C
Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title_full Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title_fullStr Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title_short Implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT)
title_sort implementation of seven echocardiographic parameters of myocardial asynchrony to improve the long-term response rate of cardiac resynchronization therapy (crt)
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2613384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19032733
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-7120-6-58
work_keys_str_mv AT knebelfabian implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT schattkesebastian implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT bondkehansjurgen implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT richterchristoph implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT melzerchristoph implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT dregerhenryk implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT grohmannandrea implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT baumanngert implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt
AT borgesadrianc implementationofsevenechocardiographicparametersofmyocardialasynchronytoimprovethelongtermresponserateofcardiacresynchronizationtherapycrt