Basal asynchrony and resynchronization with biventricular pacing predict long-term improvement of LV function in heart failure patients
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_54F6F531D53C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Basal asynchrony and resynchronization with biventricular pacing predict long-term improvement of LV function in heart failure patients
Journal
Pacing Clin Electrophysiol
ISSN-L
0147-8389 (Print) 0147-8389 (Linking)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2003
Volume
26
Number
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.
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.
Abstract
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.
Keywords
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
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03/03/2016 16:49
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