Affiliation:
1. From the Cardiology Service, Department of Medicine, Wilford Hall USAF Medical Center, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Abstract
Systolic time intervals were recorded in 25 consecutive patients before and after aortic valve surgery. Ten patients with dominant aortic stenosis (AS) and 10 with dominant aortic insufficiency (AI) received a Starr-Edwards prosthesis; five underwent repair procedures for AS or subaortic lesions. Before operation, the mean rate-corrected left ventricular ejection time (LVET
c
) was prolonged; postoperatively LVET
c
decreased significantly. Conversely, preoperative mean rate-corrected preejection period (PEP
c
) was short and increased postoperatively. Serial measurement of LVET
c
in a patient who had two aortic valve replacements suggested its value in quantitating prosthetic malfunction.
In AS, preoperative LVET
c
correlated closely with cardiac index; normal ejection times were associated with the most severely depressed flows. Preoperative variations in PEP
c
in AS related inversely to the first derivative of the left ventricular pressure curve (maximal LV dp/dt). In AI, PEP
c
correlated with the quotient:
[see Equation in PDF File]
where Adbp — LVed = transaortic end-diastolic pressure difference (aortic diastolic pressure minus LV end-diastolic pressure), and dp/dt = maximal LV dp/dt. This study identifies the flow and pressure parameters which correlate with abnormalities of PEP
c
and LVET
c
with severe AS and AI. The sensitivity of this technique to the hemodynamic changes of corrective surgery makes it a potentially useful noninvasive means to measure prosthetic valve function.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
34 articles.
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