Basal asynchrony and resynchronization with biventricular pacing predict long-term improvement of LV function in heart failure patients

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_54F6F531D53C
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Titre
Basal asynchrony and resynchronization with biventricular pacing predict long-term improvement of LV function in heart failure patients
Périodique
Pacing Clin Electrophysiol
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Toussaint  J. F., Lavergne T., Kerrou K., Froissart M., Ollitrault J., Darondel  J. M., Alonso C., Diebold B., Le Heuzey  J. Y., Guize L., Paillard M.
ISSN-L
0147-8389 (Print) 0147-8389 (Linking)
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
2003
Volume
26
Numéro
9
Pages
1815-23
Notes
Toussaint, Jean-Francois
Lavergne, Thomas
Kerrou, Khaldoun
Froissart, Marc
Ollitrault, Jacky
Darondel, Jean-Marc
Alonso, Christine
Diebold, Benoit
Le Heuzey, Jean-Yves
Guize, Louis
Paillard, Michel
eng
2003/08/22 05:00
Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 2003 Sep;26(9):1815-23.
Résumé
Biventricular pacing (BiV) is emerging for patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and asynchrony. We measured basal asynchrony and early resynchronization by radionuclide angioscintigraphy (RNA) in order to predict long-term evolution of ventricular function after BiV. Thirty-four patients (NYHA Class III-IV,65.4 +/- 11 years) with large QRS(179 +/- 18 ms)were implanted with BiV and studied by RNA before (D0), at day 8 (D8), and during follow-up(20 +/- 7 months). We calculated left and right ejection fractions, the interventricular dyssynchrony (TRVLV), and the apicobasal dyssynchrony (Tab). LVEF improved from 20.2 +/- 8.1%(D0) to27.1%+/- 12.6%(follow-up,P < 0.003 vs D0) and RVEF from 28.6%+/- 13%(D0) to 34.3 +/- 11.5%(follow-up,P < 0.03 vs D0). Inter- (DeltaTRVLV) and intraventricular resynchronization was immediate and remained stable: TRVLV decreased from 68.3 +/- 38 ms(D0) to 13.4 +/- 48.5 ms(D8) and1.8 +/- 39.2 ms(follow-up,P < 0.0001 vs D0); and Tab from 45.8 +/- 64.1 msto-18 +/- 68(D8) and-28.3 +/- 53.6 ms(follow-up,P < 0.0001 vs D0). Early inter- and intraventricular resynchronization (DeltaTab) at D8 were related to late LVEF and RVEF improvement. Together, an LVEF > 15% and a significant interventricular dyssynchrony (TRVLV > 60 ms) at D0 have a sensitivity of 79% and a positive predictive value of 83% to predict an improvement of LVEF superior to 5% at follow-up. In DCM patients, BiV resynchronizes ventricles early and in the long-term, while RVEF and LVEF improve progressively. Patients with large electromechanical dyssynchrony benefit most from BiV.
Mots-clé
Aged, Cardiac Pacing, Artificial/*methods, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated/physiopathology/radionuclide imaging/*therapy, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Gated Blood-Pool Imaging, Heart/radionuclide imaging, Heart Conduction System/physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, *Pacemaker, Artificial, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Stroke Volume/physiology, Time Factors, Ventricular Function, Left/*physiology
Création de la notice
03/03/2016 17:49
Dernière modification de la notice
21/08/2019 6:35
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