Circulation, Vol 64, 448-455, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
R Grose, C Maskin, H Spindola-Franco and T Yipintsoi
To determine whether left ventricular cavitary obliteration (a finding
previously described only in hypertrophic states) can be induced in normal
subjects, 16 patients without coronary artery disease or clinical evidence
of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy were studied during cardiac
catheterization. Resting left ventricular and aortic pressures and left
ventriculography were repeated during the strain phase of Valsalva maneuver
after administration of amyl nitrite. Cavitary obliteration during normal
sinus rhythm was defined as disappearance of the sinus portion of the left
ventricle during systole, and graded as absent, partial or total. Patients
were placed into two groups on the basis of qualitative analysis of the
resting left ventriculogram: the 10 patients in group A had normal left
ventriculograms and the six patients in group B had hyperkinetic left
ventricles. During the left ventriculogram done with amyl nitrite and
Valsalva, left ventricular volumes in both decreased dramatically, from 69
ml/m2 to 43 ml/m2 (p less than 0.001) and ejection fraction increased from
70% to 82% in group A (p less than 0.01). None of the patients in group A
had evidence of cavitary obliteration at rest, but eight developed total
and two developed partial cavitary obliteration with the second
ventriculogram. Three patients in group B had partial or complete cavitary
emptying at rest and all developed total cavitary obliteration with
provocation. Pressure gradients between left ventricle and aorta were
produced in two group A patients and three group B patients. Thus, cavitary
obliteration can be produced in normal left ventricles by manipulation of
loading conditions.
ARTICLES
Production of left ventricular cavitary obliteration in normal man
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