Can echocardiographic strain imaging characterize the early and late functional consequences of sarcomere mutations in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy?
Diastolic dysfunction is an early consequence of sarcomere mutations in HCM, while systolic dysfunction results from subsequent remodeling, highlighting the potential of strain imaging for early diagnosis.
Sarcomere mutations have disparate initial effects on diastolic and systolic functions. Preclinical HCM is characterized by impaired relaxation but preserved systolic strain. In contrast, both diastolic and longitudinal systolic abnormalities are present in overt disease despite normal ejection fraction. We propose that diastolic dysfunction is an early consequence of sarcomere mutations, whereas systolic dysfunction results from mutations combined with subsequent pathological remodeling. Identifying mechanistic pathways triggered by these mutations may begin to reshape the clinical paradigm for treatment, based on early diagnosis and disease prevention.
Ho et al. (Sat,) studied this question.