Circulation, Vol 66, 226-235, Copyright © 1982 by American Heart Association
S Laniado, EL Yellin, C Yoran, J Strom, M Hori, S Gabbay, R Terdiman and RW Frater
We studied the dynamic changes in mitral flow patterns and in mitral valve
motion before and after producing acute, reversible aortic insufficiency
(AI) in nine open-chest dogs. Phasic mitral flow, the mitral valve
echocardiogram, and intracardiac phonocardiogram and other hemodynamic
variables were measured. During moderate AI (mean regurgitant fraction 52
+/- 5%) (+/- SD), the antegrade filling volume decreased from 31 +/- 7 to
24 +/- 6 ml (p less than 0.01), but the peak protodiastolic mitral flow
rate increased from 139 +/- 37 to 157 +/- 42 ml/sec (p less than 0.01),
reflecting the shift of a larger fraction of total mitral filling volume to
early diastole. In six dogs, atrial pacing was used to examine the
hemodynamic effects of tachycardia. Increasing the heart rate from 90 to
120 beats/min increased cardiac output from 2.64 +/- 0.56 to 3.3 +/-
0.831/min (p less than 0.05) and decreased left atrial pressure from 24 +/-
8 to 17 +/- 7 mm Hg (p less than 0.05). Increasing heart rate to 150
beats/min compromised mitral filling, reduced cardiac output and increased
left atrial pressure. Moderate tachycardia improves cardiac performance in
AI by reducing regurgitant volume, without significantly reducing
transmitral filling volume. The mitral valve echocardiogram showed only a
small decrease in cusp opening amplitude during AI. A low-pitched left
ventricular inflow tract murmur was recorded in protodiastole and
corresponded in time to the rapidly increasing mitral flow. We conclude
that the major determinant of the turbulence responsible for the creation
of the austin flint murmur is the antegrade mitral flow stream and its
mixing with the retrograde aortic flow.
ARTICLES
Physiologic mechanisms in aortic insufficiency. I. The effect of changing heart rate on flow dynamics. II. Determinants of Austin Flint murmur
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