Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine Weill Cornell Medical College New York NY
2. Department of Biomedical Engineering Cornell University Ithaca NY
3. Department of Medicine and Radiology Weill Cornell Medical College New York NY
4. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York NY
5. Veterans Affairs Medical Center University of California San Francisco CA
6. Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA
Abstract
Background
Mitral regurgitation (
MR
) has the potential to impede exercise capacity; it is uncertain whether this is because of regurgitation itself or the underlying cause of valvular insufficiency.
Methods and Results
The population comprised 3267 patients who underwent exercise treadmill myocardial perfusion imaging and transthoracic echocardiography within 6±8 days.
MR
was present in 28%, including 176 patients (5%) with moderate or greater
MR
. Left ventricular systolic function significantly decreased and chamber size increased in relation to
MR
, paralleling increments in stress and rest myocardial perfusion deficits (all
P
<0.001). Exercise tolerance (metabolic equivalents of task) decreased stepwise in relation to graded
MR
severity (
P
<0.05). Workload was significantly lower with mild versus no
MR
(mean±SD, 9.8±3.0 versus 10.1±3.0;
P
=0.02); magnitude of workload reduction significantly increased among patients with advanced versus those with mild
MR
(mean±SD, 8.6±3.0 versus 9.8±3.0;
P
<0.001).
MR
‐associated exercise impairment was accompanied by lower heart rate and blood pressure augmentation and greater dyspnea (all
P
<0.05). Both functional and nonfunctional
MR
subgroups demonstrated significantly decreased effort tolerance in relation to
MR
severity (
P
≤0.01); impairment was greater with functional
MR
(
P
=0.04) corresponding to more advanced left ventricular dysfunction and dilation (both
P
<0.001). Functional
MR
predicted reduced metabolic equivalent of task–based effort (B=−0.39 [95% CI, −0.62 to −0.17];
P
=0.001) independent of
MR
severity. Among the overall cohort, advanced (moderate or greater)
MR
was associated with reduced effort tolerance (B=−1.36 [95% CI, −1.80 to −0.93];
P
<0.001) and remained significant (
P
=0.01) after controlling for age, clinical indexes, stress perfusion defects, and left ventricular dysfunction.
Conclusions
MR
impairs exercise tolerance independent of left ventricular ischemia, dysfunction, and clinical indexes. Magnitude of exercise impairment parallels severity of
MR
.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
6 articles.
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