Affiliation:
1. the First Department of Internal Medicine, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan.
Abstract
Background
Direct clinical manipulation to improve an impairment of left ventricular (LV) relaxation has not been reported. We investigated whether the LV relaxation rate in humans could be modulated by phase-controlled mechanical vibration applied to the patient's anterior chest wall and whether there are some quantitative differences in the responses of normal (N), hypertrophied (H), and failing (F) ventricle.
Methods and Results
In 46 patients (N, 10; H, 18 [hypertrophic cardiomyopathy]; F, 18 [heart failure]), the vibrator was attached to the precordium and a 50-Hz, 2-mm sinusoidal mechanical vibration was applied, with the timing restricted from the onset of isovolumic relaxation to end-diastole during cardiac catheterization. Heart rate and peak LV pressure showed no difference with vibration. However, in all patients, precordial vibration caused an acceleration of the LV pressure fall. The magnitude of the induced reduction of the time constant of LV pressure decay (ΔT) was larger (
P
<.01) in H and F than in N (4.6±2.3, 4.0±1.6, and 0.6±1.5 ms for H, F, and N, respectively). ΔT correlated strongly with the magnitude of impaired relaxation and the magnitude of transmitted vibration to the ventricle.
Conclusions
Phase-controlled, small-amplitude vibration on the chest wall can directly modulate LV relaxation rate, especially in those with hypertrophy or failing ventricle.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
15 articles.
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