Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Patients with aortic stenosis have a period of compensated left ventricular hypertrophy but may eventually develop congestive heart failure. Previous experimental studies showed either normal myocardial contractility in mild short-term pressure overload or myocardial dysfunction with severe pressure overload. Transition from compensated left ventricular hypertrophy to myocardial dysfunction has not been experimentally demonstrated in an adult large animal. Controversial issues in pressure-overload hypertrophy include whether the left ventricular dysfunction is due to insufficient hypertrophy (afterload mismatch) or to intrinsic myocardial dysfunction and whether diastolic dysfunction precedes systolic dysfunction.
METHODS AND RESULTS
We induced left ventricular hypertrophy (41% increase in left ventricular to body weight ratio) by gradually tightening a hydraulic constrictor around the ascending aorta in 9 chronically instrumented conscious sheep. Afterload (end-systolic stress) elevation remained constant (approximately 33% greater than baseline) by adjustment of the aortic constrictor over 6 weeks, gradually increasing left ventricular pressure (from 117 +/- 6 to 163 +/- 5 mm Hg) as hypertrophy developed. Four sets (baseline, 2 weeks, 4 weeks, and 6 weeks) of serial hemodynamic studies were performed in each animal with beta-blockade, first with and then without aortic constriction to mechanically match loading conditions. Stepwise methoxamine infusion was performed to obtain load-independent assessment of myocardial contractility. Midwall shortening (P < .05) and shortening rate (P < .05) at mechanically matched loading conditions showed that myocardial dysfunction developed between the fourth and the sixth week. Shortening-preload-afterload (P < .05) and shortening rate-preload-afterload (P < .05) relations, load-independent contractility indices based on the systolic myocardial stiffness concept, also revealed depressed myocardial contractility at the sixth week. Time constant of left ventricular isovolumic relaxation and diastolic myocardial stiffness constant did not change over the 6 weeks.
CONCLUSIONS
Transition from normal myocardial contractility to myocardial dysfunction was demonstrated. This transition occurred even when the elevation of afterload remained constant as hypertrophy incompletely adapted to increasing left ventricular pressure. Systolic dysfunction preceded diastolic dysfunction in this model.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
62 articles.
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