Contractility, ventriculoarterial coupling, and stroke work after acute myocardial infarction using CMR‐derived pressure‐volume loop data

Author:

Nordlund David1ORCID,Lav Theodor1,Jablonowski Robert1,Khoshnood Ardavan2,Ekelund Ulf3,Atar Dan45,Erlinge David6,Engblom Henrik1,Arheden Håkan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Clinical Physiology Lund University and Skane University Hospital Lund Sweden

2. Department of Clinical Sciences Malmö, Emergency Medicine, Lund University Skane University Hospital Malmö Sweden

3. Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Emergency Medicine Lund University and Skane University Hospital Lund Sweden

4. Dept. of Cardiology Oslo University Hospital Ulleval Oslo Norway

5. Institute of Clinical Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

6. Cardiology, Department of Clinical Sciences Lund Lund University and Skane University Hospital Lund Sweden

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNoninvasive left ventricular (LV) pressure‐volume (PV) loops derived by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) have recently been shown to enable characterization of cardiac hemodynamics. Thus, such PV loops could potentially provide additional diagnostic information such as contractility, arterial elastance (Ea) and stroke work (SW) currently not available in clinical routine. This study sought to investigate to what extent PV‐loop variables derived with a novel noninvasive method can provide incremental physiological information over cardiac dimensions and blood pressure in patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI).MethodsA total of 100 patients with acute MI and 75 controls were included in the study. All patients underwent CMR 2−6 days after MI including assessment of myocardium at risk (MaR) and infarct size (IS). Noninvasive PV loops were generated from CMR derived LV volumes and brachial blood pressure measurements. The following variables were quantified: Maximal elastance (Emax) reflecting contractility, Ea, ventriculoarterial coupling (Ea/Emax), SW, potential energy, external power, energy per ejected volume, and efficiency.ResultsAll PV‐loop variables were significantly different in MI patients compared to healthy volunteers, including contractility (Emax: 1.34 ± 0.48 versus 1.50 ± 0.41 mmHg/mL, p = .024), ventriculoarterial coupling (Ea/Emax: 1.27 ± 0.61 versus 0.73 ± 0.17, p < .001) and SW (0.96 ± 0.32 versus 1.38 ± 0.32 J, p < .001). These variables correlated to both MaR and IS (Emax: r2 = 0.25 and r2 = 0.29; Ea/Emax: r2 = 0.36 and r2 = 0.41; SW: r2 = 0.21 and r2 = 0.25).ConclusionsNoninvasive PV‐loops provide physiological information beyond conventional diagnostic variables, such as ejection fraction, early after MI, including measures of contractility, ventriculoarterial coupling, and SW.

Funder

Lund University Medical Faculty Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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