Does noninvasive estimation using Doppler ultrasound accurately predict right ventricular systolic pressure compared to catheterization in patients with tricuspid regurgitation?
62 patients with clinical signs of elevated right-sided pressures, of which 54 (87%) had jets of tricuspid regurgitation clearly recorded by continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound.
Noninvasive estimation of right ventricular systolic pressure using continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound (tricuspid gradient method calculating systolic pressure gradient via modified Bernoulli equation and adding clinically estimated mean right atrial pressure).
Invasive measurement via catheterization.
Correlation of noninvasive right ventricular systolic pressure predictions with catheterization values.surrogate
The tricuspid gradient method using continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound provides an accurate noninvasive estimation of right ventricular systolic pressure.
We evaluated the accuracy of a noninvasive method for estimating right ventricular systolic pressures in patients with tricuspid regurgitation detected by Doppler ultrasound. Of 62 patients with clinical signs of elevated right-sided pressures, 54 (87%) had jets of tricuspid regurgitation clearly recorded by continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound. By use of the maximum velocity (V) of the regurgitant jet, the systolic pressure gradient (delta P) between right ventricle and right atrium was calculated by the modified Bernoulli equation (delta P = 4V2). Adding the transtricuspid gradient to the mean right atrial pressure (estimated clinically from the jugular veins) gave predictions of right ventricular systolic pressure that correlated well with catheterization values (r = .93, SEE = 8 mm Hg). The tricuspid gradient method provides an accurate and widely applicable method for noninvasive estimation of elevated right ventricular systolic pressures.
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Paul G. Yock
Interventional Cardiology
Richard L. Popp
Cardiac Imaging
Circulation
Stanford University
Stanford Medicine
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Yock et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d88fe0e9c100a435ae2d86 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.70.4.657
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