Left ventricular long-axis changes in early diastole strongly correlated with systolic function (adjusted r2=0.70 for amplitude), indicating that isolated diastolic dysfunction is uncommon.
Observational (n=311)
Variable systolic and diastolic function (n=311)
Tissue Doppler and M-mode echocardiography
Correlation between systolic and diastolic long-axis changes (mitral annular amplitude and peak velocity) — r2=0.70
Effect estimate: r2=0.70
Impaired long-axis motion is a sensitive marker of systolic myocardial dysfunction, but no data are available that relate long-axis changes in systole with those in diastole, particularly in subjects with diastolic dysfunction and a 'normal' left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction. A total of 311 subjects (including 105 normal healthy volunteers) aged 20-89 years with variable degrees of systolic function (LV ejection fraction range 0.15-0.84) and diastolic function were studied using tissue Doppler echocardiography and M-mode echocardiography to determine mean mitral annular amplitude and peak velocity in systole and early and late diastole. The LV systolic mitral annular amplitude (S(LAX), where LAX is long-axis amplitude) and peak velocity (S(m)) correlated well with the respective early diastolic components (E(LAX) and E(m)) and late diastolic (atrial) components (A(LAX) and A(m)). A non-linear equation fitted better than a linear relationship (non-linear model: S(LAX) against E(LAX), r(2)=0.67; S(m) against E(m), r(2)=0.60; S(LAX) against A(LAX) and S(m) against A(m), r(2)=0.42). After adjusting for age, sex and heart rate, linear relationships of early diastolic (E(LAX), r(2)=0.70; E(m), r(2)=0.60) and late diastolic (A(LAX), r(2)=0.61; A(m), r(2)=0.64) long-axis amplitudes and velocities with the respective values for S(LAX) and S(m) were found, even in those subjects with apparently 'isolated' diastolic dysfunction. Long-axis changes in systole or diastole did not correlate with Doppler mitral velocities. We conclude that ventricular long-axis changes in early diastole are closely related to systolic function, even in subjects with diastolic dysfunction. 'Pure' or isolated diastolic dysfunction is uncommon.
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Gabriel Wai‐Kwok Yip
Cardiac Imaging
Yan Zhang
Shihezi University
Peggy Tan
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Clinical Science
Karolinska Institutet
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Prince of Wales Hospital
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Yip et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Variable systolic and diastolic function (n=311). Tissue Doppler and M-mode echocardiography was evaluated on Correlation between systolic and diastolic long-axis changes (mitral annular amplitude and peak velocity) (r2=0.70). Left ventricular long-axis changes in early diastole strongly correlated with systolic function (adjusted r2=0.70 for amplitude), indicating that isolated diastolic dysfunction is uncommon.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a07ebce686e45fdbcfe096e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1042/cs1020515
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