Circulation, Vol 69, 696-702, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
H Pouleur, MF Rousseau, C van Eyll and AA Charlier
To assess local myocardial relaxation abnormalities in patients with
coronary artery disease, local myocardial left ventricular wall stress was
computed in nine normal subjects and in 22 patients with coronary artery
disease. In normal left ventricles, the rate of decrease in isovolumic
local stress was not significantly different from the rate of decrease in
isovolumic pressure, and the residual wall stress at the end of isovolumic
relaxation was uniformly low. In patients with coronary artery disease, the
residual wall stress was increased both in infarcted areas and in
non-infarcted areas perfused by stenosed arteries (43 +/- 31 and 30 +/- 19
kdyne/cm2, respectively, vs 9 +/- 5 kdyne/cm2 in normal areas; p less than
.001). The rate of decrease in local stress in infarcted areas paralleled
the rate of decrease in pressure (48 vs 49 msec; NS), but in ischemic areas
the rate of decrease in stress was significantly slower than the rate of
decrease in pressure (69 +/- 35 vs 48 +/- 15 msec; p less than .05). It is
concluded that in patients with coronary artery disease, indexes based only
on the analysis of decreases in isovolumic pressure underestimate the
severity of local impairments in relaxation rate and cannot be used to
predict the level of residual diastolic wall stress.
ARTICLES
Assessment of regional left ventricular relaxation in patients with coronary artery disease: importance of geometric factors and changes in wall thickness
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