Circulation, Vol 65, 980-987, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
JD Carroll, WH Gaasch, S Naimi and HJ Levine
Serial electrocardiographic and echocardiographic left ventricular (LV)
studies were performed in 21 patients before and after aortic valve
replacement (AVR) for chronic aortic regurgitation. Changes in voltage (SV1
+ RV5-6) after AVR were assessed and evaluated relative to changes in LV
mass. Muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) derived from echocardiographic
dimension and wall thickness data was used as an index of LV muscle mass
(LV hypertrophy greater than 10 cm2/m2). In 15 patients, voltage was
reduced after AVR: Seven had normal voltage (48 +/- 17 mm to 25 +/- 6 mm, p
less than 0.005) and eight still had increased voltage (61 +/- 17 mm to 40
+/- 4 mm, p less than 0.01). Patients with normal voltage had complete
regression of hypertrophy by echocardiography (CSA decreased from 13 +/- 3
cm2/m2 to 9 +/- 1 cm2/m2, p less than 0.025), while those who had
persistently increased voltage had incomplete regression (15 +/- 2 cm2/m2,
p less than 0.001). Reduction in voltage generally occurred in the first 6
months after AVR. Three patients with unchanged voltage had evidence of
paraprosthetic regurgitation and minimal change in CSA. Three other
patients with voltage had evidence of paraprosthetic regurgitation and
minimal change in CSA. Three other patients with persistent LV enlargement
without paraprosthetic regurgitation had a severe intraventricular
conduction delay. Data from 59 electrocardiographic- echocardiographic
studies before and after AVR revealed a strong correlation (r = 0.81)
between voltage and muscle CSA. After surgical correction of chronic aortic
regurgitation, regression of LV hypertrophy can be assessed by serial
electrocardiographic studies. These ECG data identify patients with
complete, incomplete or no regression of LV hypertrophy.
ARTICLES
Regression of myocardial hypertrophy: electrocardiographic- echocardiographic correlations after aortic valve replacement in patients with chronic aortic regurgitation
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