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Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally()
BACKGROUND: The mechanoenergetic effects of atrioventricular delay optimization during biventricular pacing (“cardiac resynchronization therapy”, CRT) are unknown. METHODS: Eleven patients with heart failure and left bundle branch block (LBBB) underwent invasive measurements of left ventricular (LV)...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3919205/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24332598 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.10.026 |
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author | Kyriacou, Andreas Pabari, Punam A. Mayet, Jamil Peters, Nicholas S. Davies, D. Wyn Lim, P. Boon Lefroy, David Hughes, Alun D. Kanagaratnam, Prapa Francis, Darrel P. I.Whinnett, Zachary |
author_facet | Kyriacou, Andreas Pabari, Punam A. Mayet, Jamil Peters, Nicholas S. Davies, D. Wyn Lim, P. Boon Lefroy, David Hughes, Alun D. Kanagaratnam, Prapa Francis, Darrel P. I.Whinnett, Zachary |
author_sort | Kyriacou, Andreas |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: The mechanoenergetic effects of atrioventricular delay optimization during biventricular pacing (“cardiac resynchronization therapy”, CRT) are unknown. METHODS: Eleven patients with heart failure and left bundle branch block (LBBB) underwent invasive measurements of left ventricular (LV) developed pressure, aortic flow velocity-time-integral (VTI) and myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO(2)) at 4 pacing states: biventricular pacing (with VV 0 ms) at AVD 40 ms (AV-40), AVD 120 ms (AV-120, a common nominal AV delay), at their pre-identified individualised haemodynamic optimum (AV-Opt); and intrinsic conduction (LBBB). RESULTS: AV-120, relative to LBBB, increased LV developed pressure by a mean of 11(SEM 2)%, p = 0.001, and aortic VTI by 11(SEM 3)%, p = 0.002, but also increased MVO2 by 11(SEM 5)%, p = 0.04. AV-Opt further increased LV developed pressure by a mean of 2(SEM 1)%, p = 0.035 and aortic VTI by 4(SEM 1)%, p = 0.017. MVO2 trended further up by 7(SEM 5)%, p = 0.22. Mechanoenergetics at AV-40 were no different from LBBB. The 4 states lay on a straight line for Δexternal work (ΔLV developed pressure × Δaortic VTI) against ΔMVO2, with slope 1.80, significantly > 1 (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Biventricular pacing and atrioventricular delay optimization increased external cardiac work done but also myocardial oxygen consumption. Nevertheless, the increase in cardiac work was ~ 80% greater than the increase in oxygen consumption, signifying an improvement in cardiac mechanoenergetics. Finally, the incremental effect of optimization on external work was approximately one-third beyond that of nominal AV pacing, along the same favourable efficiency trajectory, suggesting that AV delay dominates the biventricular pacing effect — which may therefore not be mainly “resynchronization”. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3919205 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-39192052014-02-10 Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() Kyriacou, Andreas Pabari, Punam A. Mayet, Jamil Peters, Nicholas S. Davies, D. Wyn Lim, P. Boon Lefroy, David Hughes, Alun D. Kanagaratnam, Prapa Francis, Darrel P. I.Whinnett, Zachary Int J Cardiol Article BACKGROUND: The mechanoenergetic effects of atrioventricular delay optimization during biventricular pacing (“cardiac resynchronization therapy”, CRT) are unknown. METHODS: Eleven patients with heart failure and left bundle branch block (LBBB) underwent invasive measurements of left ventricular (LV) developed pressure, aortic flow velocity-time-integral (VTI) and myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO(2)) at 4 pacing states: biventricular pacing (with VV 0 ms) at AVD 40 ms (AV-40), AVD 120 ms (AV-120, a common nominal AV delay), at their pre-identified individualised haemodynamic optimum (AV-Opt); and intrinsic conduction (LBBB). RESULTS: AV-120, relative to LBBB, increased LV developed pressure by a mean of 11(SEM 2)%, p = 0.001, and aortic VTI by 11(SEM 3)%, p = 0.002, but also increased MVO2 by 11(SEM 5)%, p = 0.04. AV-Opt further increased LV developed pressure by a mean of 2(SEM 1)%, p = 0.035 and aortic VTI by 4(SEM 1)%, p = 0.017. MVO2 trended further up by 7(SEM 5)%, p = 0.22. Mechanoenergetics at AV-40 were no different from LBBB. The 4 states lay on a straight line for Δexternal work (ΔLV developed pressure × Δaortic VTI) against ΔMVO2, with slope 1.80, significantly > 1 (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Biventricular pacing and atrioventricular delay optimization increased external cardiac work done but also myocardial oxygen consumption. Nevertheless, the increase in cardiac work was ~ 80% greater than the increase in oxygen consumption, signifying an improvement in cardiac mechanoenergetics. Finally, the incremental effect of optimization on external work was approximately one-third beyond that of nominal AV pacing, along the same favourable efficiency trajectory, suggesting that AV delay dominates the biventricular pacing effect — which may therefore not be mainly “resynchronization”. Elsevier 2014-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3919205/ /pubmed/24332598 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.10.026 Text en © 2013 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY NC ND license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Kyriacou, Andreas Pabari, Punam A. Mayet, Jamil Peters, Nicholas S. Davies, D. Wyn Lim, P. Boon Lefroy, David Hughes, Alun D. Kanagaratnam, Prapa Francis, Darrel P. I.Whinnett, Zachary Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title | Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title_full | Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title_fullStr | Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title_full_unstemmed | Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title_short | Cardiac resynchronization therapy and AV optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
title_sort | cardiac resynchronization therapy and av optimization increase myocardial oxygen consumption, but increase cardiac function more than proportionally() |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3919205/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24332598 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.10.026 |
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