Paradoxical increase in global longitudinal strain by handgrip exercise despite left ventricular diastolic dysfunction

Author:

Motoi Ko1,Iwano Hiroyuki23,Ishizaka Suguru1,Nakamura Kosuke1,Tamaki Yoji1,Aoyagi Hiroyuki1,Nakabachi Masahiro4,Yokoyama Shinobu4,Nishino Hisao4,Murayama Michito5,Kaga Sanae5,Anzai Toshihisa1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Faculty of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

2. Division of Cardiology Teine Keijinkai Hospital Sapporo Japan

3. Diagnostic Center for Sonography Hokkaido University Hospital Sapporo Japan

4. Division of Clinical Laboratory and Transfusion Medicine Hokkaido University Hospital Sapporo Japan

5. Faculty of Health Sciences Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlthough global longitudinal strain (GLS) is recognized as a sensitive marker of intrinsic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, its afterload dependency has also been pointed. We hypothesized that decrease in GLS during handgrip exercise could be more sensitive marker of intrinsic myocardial dysfunction.MethodsHandgrip exercise‐stress echocardiography was performed in 90 cardiovascular disease patients with preserved LV ejection fraction. LV diastolic function was graded according to the guidelines. Diastolic wall stress (DWS) and ratio of left atrial (LA) volume index to late‐diastolic mitral annular velocity (LAVI/a′) were measured at rest as LV stiffness. As well, LA strains were measured to assess LA function. GLS was expressed as absolute value and significant changes in GLS by handgrip exercise was defined as changes over prespecified mean absolute test‐retest variability (2.65%).ResultsWhile mean value of GLS did not change by the exercise, substantial patients showed significant changes in GLS: decreased (group I, n = 28), unchanged (group II, n = 34), and increased (group III, n = 28). Unexpectedly, patients in group I did not show any clinical and echocardiographic characteristics, while those in group III were characterized by elevated natriuretic peptide levels, blunted heart rate response to handgrip exercise, and advanced LV diastolic dysfunction. Multivariable analyses revealed that DWS, left atrial booster strain, and grade II or more diastolic dysfunction determined the increase in GLS even after adjustment for elevated natriuretic peptides and the changes in heart rate by the exercise.ConclusionIn contrast to our hypothesis, paradoxical increase in GLS by handgrip exercise could be associated with advanced LV diastolic dysfunction in cardiovascular patients with preserved LV ejection fraction. Our findings suggest that HG exercise for heart failure patients does not enhance the afterload straightforward, resulting in variable changes of GLS according to the individual conditions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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