Mechanisms of Coronary Microcirculatory Dysfunction in Patients With Aortic Stenosis and Angiographically Normal Coronary Arteries

Author:

Rajappan Kim1,Rimoldi Ornella E.1,Dutka David P.1,Ariff Ben1,Pennell Dudley J.1,Sheridan Desmond J.1,Camici Paolo G.1

Affiliation:

1. From Medical Research Council Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith Hospital (K.R., O.E.R., D.P.D., P.G.C.); Department of Clinical Pharmacology (B.A.) and Academic Cardiology Unit (K.R., D.J.S.), St Mary’s Hospital; Cardiovascular MR Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital (K.R., D.J.P.), Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, UK.

Abstract

Background Development of left ventricular hypertrophy in aortic stenosis (AS) is accompanied by coronary microcirculatory dysfunction, demonstrated by an impaired coronary vasodilator reserve (CVR). However, evidence for regional abnormalities in myocardial blood flow (MBF) and the potential mechanisms is limited. The aims of this study were to quantitatively demonstrate differences in subendocardial and subepicardial microcirculation and to investigate the relative contribution of myocyte hypertrophy, hemodynamic load, severity of AS, and coronary perfusion to impairment in microcirculatory function. Methods and Results Twenty patients with isolated moderate to severe AS were studied using echocardiography to assess severity of AS, cardiovascular magnetic resonance to measure left ventricular mass (LVM), and PET to quantify resting and hyperemic (dipyridamole 0.56 mg/kg) MBF and CVR in both the subendocardium and subepicardium. In the patients with most severe AS (n=15), the subendocardial to subepicardial MBF ratio decreased from 1.14±0.17 at rest to 0.92±0.17 during hyperemia ( P <0.005), and subendocardial CVR (1.43±0.33) was lower than subepicardial CVR (1.78±0.35; P =0.01). Resting total LV blood flow was linearly related to LVM, whereas CVR was not. Increase of total LV blood flow during hyperemia (mean value, 89.6±59.6%; range, 17% to 233%) was linearly related to aortic valve area. The decrease in CVR was related to severity of AS, increase in hemodynamic load, and reduction in diastolic perfusion time, particularly in the subendocardium. Conclusions CVR was more severely impaired in the subendocardium in patients with LVH attributable to severe AS. Severity of impairment was related to aortic valve area, hemodynamic load imposed, and diastolic perfusion rather than to LVM.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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