Affiliation:
1. From Noninvasive Cardiac Imaging Laboratories, Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, Ill.
Abstract
Background
—Diastolic wall motion asynchrony is a major determinant of impaired left ventricular (LV) filling in patients with concentric hypertrophy and coronary artery disease. We evaluated the ability of Color Kinesis, a new echocardiographic technique that color-encodes endocardial motion, to quantitatively assess global and regional LV filling properties.
Methods and Results
—Color Kinesis images and mitral and pulmonary vein flow Doppler data were acquired in 29 patients with LV hypertrophy and 29 age-matched control subjects. In addition, Color Kinesis data were correlated to coronary angiographic findings in 15 patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Segmental analysis of Color Kinesis images was used to obtain time histograms of regional diastolic fractional area change, wherein early and late peaks (peaks 1 and 2) reflected rapid LV filling and atrial contraction, respectively. Regional mean LV filling time and filling curves were used to objectively identify diastolic endocardial motion asynchrony in patients with LV hypertrophy and coronary artery disease. None of the mitral and pulmonary vein Doppler indices differentiated patients with normalized mitral Doppler profile (n=13) from control subjects, whereas reduced peak1/peak2 ratio and prolonged mean filling time indicated augmented contribution of atrial contraction toward LV filling (
P
<.05). In 22 of 25 patients with LV hypertrophy and preserved systolic function and in all patients with coronary artery disease, delayed diastolic endocardial motion was observed in at least one segment.
Conclusions
—Analysis of Color Kinesis images provides objective assessment of global and regional LV filling properties and allows identification of both diastolic dysfunction in patients with normalized Doppler indices and wall motion asynchrony.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
56 articles.
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