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Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()

BACKGROUND: It has been reported that contractility, as assessed using dobutamine infusion, is independently associated with reverse remodeling after CRT. Controversy, however, exists about the capacity of this approach to predict a long-term clinical response. This study's purpose was to asses...

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Autores principales: DeVecchi, Federica, Facchini, Emanuela, Degiovanni, Anna, Sartori, Chiara, Cavallino, Chiara, Santagostino, Matteo, Di Ruocco, Virginia, Magnani, Andrea, Occhetta, Eraldo, Marino, Paolo Nicola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5441335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28616528
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcha.2016.03.012
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author DeVecchi, Federica
Facchini, Emanuela
Degiovanni, Anna
Sartori, Chiara
Cavallino, Chiara
Santagostino, Matteo
Di Ruocco, Virginia
Magnani, Andrea
Occhetta, Eraldo
Marino, Paolo Nicola
author_facet DeVecchi, Federica
Facchini, Emanuela
Degiovanni, Anna
Sartori, Chiara
Cavallino, Chiara
Santagostino, Matteo
Di Ruocco, Virginia
Magnani, Andrea
Occhetta, Eraldo
Marino, Paolo Nicola
author_sort DeVecchi, Federica
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: It has been reported that contractility, as assessed using dobutamine infusion, is independently associated with reverse remodeling after CRT. Controversy, however, exists about the capacity of this approach to predict a long-term clinical response. This study's purpose was to assess whether long-term CRT clinical effects can be predicted according to acute inotropic response induced by biventricular stimulation (CRT on), as compared with AAI–VVI right stimulation pacing mode (CRT off), quantified at the time of implantation. METHODS: In 98 patients (ejection fraction 29 ± 10%), acute changes in left ventricular (LV) elastance (Ees), arterial elastance (Ea), and Ees/Ea, as assessed from slope changes of the force–frequency relation obtained when the heart rate increased, and also assessed while measuring triplane LV volumes and continuous noninvasive blood pressure, were related to death or rehospitalization during a 3-year follow-up. Other covariances tested were age, gender, disease etiology, QRS duration, amount of mitral regurgitation, LV diastolic volume, ejection fraction, and the degree of asynchrony and longitudinal strain at baseline. RESULTS: There was a marked increment in the Ees slope with CRT (interaction P = 0.004), no Ea change, and modest Ees/Ea increase (interaction P < 0.05). In Cox analysis, however, neither slope changes nor baseline values of Ees, Ea, and Ees/Ea were associated with long-term follow-up. Only ventricular diastolic volume (direct relation P = 0.002) and QRS duration (inverse relation P = 0.009) predicted death/rehospitalization. CONCLUSIONS: Acute contractile recovery in CRT patients is not associated with 3 years prognosis. Instead, death or rehospitalization can be predicted from QRS duration and LV diastolic volume at baseline.
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spelling pubmed-54413352017-06-14 Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization() DeVecchi, Federica Facchini, Emanuela Degiovanni, Anna Sartori, Chiara Cavallino, Chiara Santagostino, Matteo Di Ruocco, Virginia Magnani, Andrea Occhetta, Eraldo Marino, Paolo Nicola Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc Article BACKGROUND: It has been reported that contractility, as assessed using dobutamine infusion, is independently associated with reverse remodeling after CRT. Controversy, however, exists about the capacity of this approach to predict a long-term clinical response. This study's purpose was to assess whether long-term CRT clinical effects can be predicted according to acute inotropic response induced by biventricular stimulation (CRT on), as compared with AAI–VVI right stimulation pacing mode (CRT off), quantified at the time of implantation. METHODS: In 98 patients (ejection fraction 29 ± 10%), acute changes in left ventricular (LV) elastance (Ees), arterial elastance (Ea), and Ees/Ea, as assessed from slope changes of the force–frequency relation obtained when the heart rate increased, and also assessed while measuring triplane LV volumes and continuous noninvasive blood pressure, were related to death or rehospitalization during a 3-year follow-up. Other covariances tested were age, gender, disease etiology, QRS duration, amount of mitral regurgitation, LV diastolic volume, ejection fraction, and the degree of asynchrony and longitudinal strain at baseline. RESULTS: There was a marked increment in the Ees slope with CRT (interaction P = 0.004), no Ea change, and modest Ees/Ea increase (interaction P < 0.05). In Cox analysis, however, neither slope changes nor baseline values of Ees, Ea, and Ees/Ea were associated with long-term follow-up. Only ventricular diastolic volume (direct relation P = 0.002) and QRS duration (inverse relation P = 0.009) predicted death/rehospitalization. CONCLUSIONS: Acute contractile recovery in CRT patients is not associated with 3 years prognosis. Instead, death or rehospitalization can be predicted from QRS duration and LV diastolic volume at baseline. Elsevier 2016-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5441335/ /pubmed/28616528 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcha.2016.03.012 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
DeVecchi, Federica
Facchini, Emanuela
Degiovanni, Anna
Sartori, Chiara
Cavallino, Chiara
Santagostino, Matteo
Di Ruocco, Virginia
Magnani, Andrea
Occhetta, Eraldo
Marino, Paolo Nicola
Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title_full Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title_fullStr Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title_full_unstemmed Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title_short Acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
title_sort acute contractile recovery extent during biventricular pacing is not associated with follow-up in patients undergoing resynchronization()
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5441335/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28616528
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcha.2016.03.012
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