Circulation, Vol 64, 1201-1211, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
PA Ludbrook, JD Byrne and AJ Tiefenbrunn
To determine if asynchronous segmental relaxation is associated with
altered left ventricular (LV) diastolic function, we examined systolic and
diastolic wall motion and function indexes in 16 patients without and 16
with asynchronous relaxation (groups 1 and 2, respectively). The segment
with asynchronous relaxation was observed most frequently in the free
anterior LV wall and was not consistently related geographically to
coronary stenosis, nor to systolic asynergy in the same region, but was
frequently accompanied by simultaneous segmental inward motion elsewhere in
the ventricle. LV chamber volume stiffness during diastolic filling and at
end-diastole was statistically similar in each group. Conversely, both T
(58.3 +/- 2.3 msec vs 41.0 +/- 3.6 msec) and the isovolumic relaxation
period (140.9 +/- 7.5 msec vs 116 +/- 6 msec) were significantly more
prolonged, peak negative dP/dt was lower (1314 +/- 57 mm Hg/sec vs 1604 +/-
114 mm Hg/sec), and the y-axis intercept of the diastolic pressure-volume
curve was higher in group 2 patients (7.96 +/- 0.98 mm Hg vs 4.88 +/- 0.93
mm Hg) (p less than 0.05 for each), indicating impaired relaxation and
altered diastolic tone. With improved systolic function and relaxation
properties after nitroglycerin, both the asynchronous outward relaxation
and the inferior segment of simultaneous inward motion were ameliorated.
Conversely, with increased ventricular preload and afterload induced by
isometric exercise, both the asynchronous segmental outward motion
anteriorly and the inward motion inferiorly with exaggerated. Asynchronous
segmental relaxation may represent a compensatory mechanism in areas of
normal contraction that offsets abnormal inward motion elsewhere, tending
to maintain isovolumic status of the ventricle.
ARTICLES
Association of asynchronous protodiastolic segmental wall motion with impaired left ventricular relaxation
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