A Pilot Study Evaluating LV Diastolic Function with M-Mode Measurement of Mitral Valve Movement in the Parasternal Long Axis View

Author:

Park Chan-Ho1,Yoon Hee1ORCID,Jo Ik-Joon1,Woo Sookyoung2,Heo Sejin1,Chang Hansol1ORCID,Lee Guntak1,Park Jong-Eun1,Kim Taerim1ORCID,Lee Se-Uk1,Hwang Sung-Yeon1ORCID,Cha Won-Chul1,Shin Tae-Gun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul 06355, Republic of Korea

2. Biomedical Statistics Center, Research Institute for Future Medicine, Samsung Medical Center; Seoul 06351, Republic of Korea

Abstract

This pilot study aimed to develop a new, reliable, and easy-to-use method for the evaluation of diastolic function through the M-mode measurement of mitral valve (MV) movement in the parasternal long axis (PSLA), similar to E-point septal separation (EPSS) used for systolic function estimation. Thirty healthy volunteers from a tertiary emergency department (ED) underwent M-mode measurements of the MV anterior leaflet in the PSLA view. EPSS, A-point septal separation (APSS), A-point opening length (APOL), and E-point opening length (EPOL) were measured in the PSLA view, along with the E and A velocities and e’ velocity in the apical four-chamber view. Correlation analyses were performed to assess the relationship between M-mode and Doppler measurements, and the measurement time was evaluated. No significant correlations were found between M-mode and Doppler measurements in the study. However, M-mode measurements exhibited high reproducibility and faster acquisition, and the EPOL value consistently exceeded the APOL value, resembling the E and A pattern. These findings suggest that visually assessing the M-mode pattern on the MV anterior leaflet in the PSLA view may be a practical approach to estimating diastolic function in the ED. Further investigations with a larger and more diverse patient population are needed to validate these findings.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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