(Circulation. 1995;92:37-44.)
© 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Divisions of Cardiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Louvain Medical School, Brussels, Belgium.
Correspondence to Jean-Louis J. Vanoverschelde, MD, Division of Cardiology, Cliniques Universitaires St Luc, Avenue Hippocrate, 10-2881, B-1200, Brussels, Belgium. Email Vanoverschelde@card.ucl.ac.be.
Background Both thallium imaging and low-dose dobutamine echocardiography have been proposed to predict the reversibility of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in patients with coronary disease. The present study was designed to evaluate whether the use of these techniques during the preoperative assessment of coronary patients with depressed LV function can improve our ability to identify those likely to have improved LV function after surgery.
Methods and Results Forty consecutive patients (age, 60±10
years) with coronary disease and an ejection fraction
35%
underwent dobutamine echocardiography
(10 µg/kg per minute) and exercise-redistribution-reinjection
thallium single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) before
coronary revascularization by bypass
surgery (n=33) or angioplasty (n=7). Recovery of LV function was
evaluated by echocardiography 5.3±2.4 months after
revascularization. According to the changes in
end-systolic volume and ejection fraction after
revascularization, the patients were categorized
into groups with (n=19) and without (n=21) postoperative
functional
improvement, defined as a >5% increase in ejection fraction and >10
mL decrease in end-systolic volume. Before
revascularization, patients with improved
postoperative function had smaller end-diastolic volume
and less wall motion abnormalities than those with persistent
dysfunction. They also showed greater improvement of wall motion score
with dobutamine (6.1±2.4 versus 1.8±4.2 grades,
P<.001) and smaller thallium defect score after exercise
(38±12 versus 47±14 grades, P=.04). Discriminant
analysis selected the improvement in wall motion score with
dobutamine and baseline end-diastolic
volume as independent predictors of postoperative recovery.
Consideration of both parameters allowed prediction of
functional outcome in 84% of the patients with and 81% of those
without postoperative improvement.
Conclusions Among the parameters commonly available before surgery in coronary patients with depressed LV function, the maintenance of significant inotropic reserve, the severity of LV remodeling, and the magnitude of the perfusion defect after exercise can predict the reversal of LV dysfunction after revascularization.
Key Words: coronary disease echocardiography myocardial infarction revascularization
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