Circulation, Vol 60, 1278-1283, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association
D Tzivoni, G Diamond, M Pichler, K Stankus, R Vas and J Forrester
The ability of left ventricular angiography to detect regional ischemic
dysfunction was assessed in 10 closed-chest dogs during the course of acute
balloon occlusion of the anterior descending coronary artery. During the
2-minute period of occlusion, serial cineangiography revealed a sequence of
wall motion abnormalities over the anteroapical region almost identical to
that observed using directly implanted gauges. This sequence consisted of
progressive reduction in regional systolic shortening with eventual
replacement by systolic expansion. These changes preceded both
electrocardiographic ST-segment and hemodynamic alterations, and were
readily observed by gross subjective inspection of the cineangiograms, but
with an intraobserver variability of 22%. Frame-by-frame motional analysis
of the ventricular perimeter relative to its centroid of mass allowed more
precise characterization of regional dysfunction. These data are consistent
with previous studies demonstrating that regional wall motion abnormalities
are both sensitive and specific markers of acute ischemia, and support the
use of computerized left ventricular angiography for the quantitative
assessment of clinical ischemic dysfunction.
ARTICLES
Analysis of regional ischemic left ventricular dysfunction by quantitative cineangiography
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