Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Studies on Assessment of Left Atrial Distensibility to Predict Late Prognosis in Consecutive Patients Received Echocardiographic Examination
Left ventricular filling pressure (LVFP) has prognostic significance in patients with heart failure. Traditionally, it should be assessed by invasive method, as cardiac catheterization and Swan-Gung catheter. In advance of new techniques and modality, echocardiography provides some useful parameters for assessing LVFP, such myocardial tissue Doppler imaging. Many articles had documented that peak velocity of early-diastolic trans-mitral inflow velocity divided by early-diastolic velocity over mitral annulus correlated closely to LVFP. However, myocardial tissue Doppler only provides the information of regional myocardium, so patients with regional wall motion abnormality, as coronary artery disease, can't be assessed by this method without handicap. In addition, conduction disturbance, like bundle branch block, also influences the result of myocardial tissue Doppler. For resolving those problems, the investigators had designed a new global parameter to assess LVFP. In the investigators prior study, left atrial distensibility correlated logarithmically to LVFP in patients with severe mitral regurgitation and also in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Left atrial distensibility provided a new viewpoint to assess left ventricular diastolic function and to predict prognosis. This time, to extend left atrial distensibility to general population received echocardiographic examination for predicting prognosis is attempted.
Introduction High left ventricular filling pressure (LVFP) have been associated with volume
overload in patients with heart failure and have also been correlated to some extent with
more severe symptoms and lower survival rates. In a study of more than 1000 patients
hospitalized with acute decompensated heart failure, those with persistently elevated LVFP
more than 18 mmHg had increased 1-year mortality compared with those with LVFP less than 16
mmHg. Investigators have also demonstrated that acute reduction of LVFP with vasodilator
therapy can improve cardiac function and reduce mortality risk, suggesting that LVFP is an
appropriate marker of cardiac risk and functional improvement. However, LVFP measurement
involves invasive catheterization, limiting its clinical use especially in the outpatient
setting. In advance of new techniques and modality, echocardiography provides some useful
parameters to assess LVFP, such myocardial tissue Doppler imaging. Many articles had
documented that peak velocity of early-diastolic trans-mitral inflow velocity divided by
early-diastolic velocity over mitral annulus was closed correlated with LVFP. However,
myocardial tissue Doppler only provides the information of regional myocardium, so patients
with regional wall motion abnormality, such as coronary artery disease, can't be assessed by
this method without handicap. In addition, conduction disturbance, like bundle branch block,
also influences the result of myocardial tissue Doppler. For resolving those problems, we
will design a new global parameter to assess LVFP. In prior study, we disclosed the
logarithmic relationship between LVFP and left atrial distensibility in acute myocardial
infarction patient received primary coronary intervention. This time, to extend our
conclusion to general population received echocardiographic examination is attempted.
Additionally, we infer that left atrial distensibility which indicates LVFP would influence
long-term prognosis, including the event rate of cardiovascular event, stroke and death.
Purpose Left atrial size, particularly left atrial volume, has been recognized as a marker
of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. Contrary to flow and tissue Doppler parameters,
left atrial volume is independent of acute volume load and therefore may provide a more
accurate assessment of acute and chronic left ventricular dysfunction. In addition, the
measurement of left atrial volume is lack of some handicaps of tissue Doppler, including
regional myocardial dysfunction in coronary artery disease and bundle branch block. In
recent studies, end-systolic left atrial volume (maximal left atrial volume) was useful to
predict the risk of atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery. The short-term and long-term
prognosis of acute myocardial infarction was also associated with left atrial volume. In
patients with mitral regurgitation, it could be used to reliably estimate the regurgitant
volume. Despite end-systolic left atrial volume provides prognostic significance in many
disease entities, left atrium is filling and empty in dynamic cyclic motion, so we speculate
that left atrial distensibility, defined as the percentage change of left atrial volume
between end-systolic and end-diastolic phase, has more prognostic power to represent LVFP
and to predict the prognosis. Based on the phenomenon of that higher LVFP, which will
conduct to and stretch left atrium in diastolic phase, induces left atrial distension and
makes the reduction of distensibility between end-systolic and end-diastolic phases, we had
proved the logarithmic relationship between left atrial distensibility and LVFP.
Materials and Methods
Subjects:
2000 consecutive patients received echocardiographic examinations will be enrolled. The
exclusion criteria are including (1) patients with prosthetic mitral valves or mitral
stenosis, (2) rhythm other than sinus rhythm, (3) age more than 18 years-old, (4) inadequate
image quality, (5) lack of informed consent.
Traditional echocardiographic measurement and myocardial tissue Doppler:
All studies are performed by experienced sonographers and reviewed by staff cardiologists
with advanced training in echocardiography. Left ventricular function is assessed by
Simpson's method. Mitral regurgitation is graded with color flow imaging. Mitral inflow is
assessed with pulsed wave Doppler echocardiography form the apical 4-chamber view. The
Doppler bean is aligned parallel to the direction of flow, and a 1- to 2-mm sample volume is
placed between the tips of mitral leaflets during diastole. From the mitral inflow profile,
the E- and A-wave velocity, E-deceleration time, and E/A velocity ration are measured.
Pulmonary venous flow is recorded with pulsed-wave Doppler with a sample volume placed 1 cm
into the right upper pulmonary vein. The flow velocities are recorded, and the ratio of
systolic to diastolic forward flow (S/D ratio) is calculated. Doppler tissue imaging of
mitral annulus over septal, lateral and inferior borders is also obtained from apical views.
Diastolic filling is categorized as normal (grade 0), impaired relaxation (grade 1),
pseudonormalization (grade 2), and restrictive (grade 3) by a combination of transmitral and
pulmonary flow patterns as validated previously.
Left atrial volume measurement:
Left atrial volume is assessed by the biplane area-length method from apical 4- and
2-chamber views. The volumes are measured at end-systolic (just before mitral valve opening
or the largest dimension), pre-atrial contraction (just before P wave), and end-diastolic
(the smallest dimension or the onset of QRS complex), using the highest frame rate. The left
atrial outlines at those three phases retrace off-line for three consecutive beats, then
average. The recesses of the pulmonary veins and the left atrial appendage are excluded. The
length of left atrium is that of the perpendicular line measured from the middle of the
plane of the mitral annulus to the superior aspect of the left atrium. The left atrial
volume is calculated as: 0.85 x 4-chamber area x 2-chamber area ÷ the shorter of the two
lengths. The volume is indexed for body surface area. Left atrial distensibility is defined
as: (end-systole left atrial volume - end-diastole left atrial volume) ÷ end-systole left
atrial volume. Left atrial ejection fraction is calculated as: (pre-atrial contraction
volume - end-diastole left atrial volume) ÷ pre-atrial contraction volume.
Follow-up:
Clinical outcomes are determined 1-year after indexed examination. Follow-up included
assessment for the occurrence of sudden death, heart failure with hospitalization, atrial
fibrillation, stroke, and death (both cardiac and non-cardiac) per 3 months by telephone
interview.
Interobserver variability:
In all cases, atrial volume is measured by two observers independently. Interobserver
variability is calculated as the difference between the values obtained by the tow observers
divided by the mean.
Statistical analysis:
SPSS software is used for statistical analysis. All continuous variables are presented as
mean ± standard deviation. Comparison of clinical and echocardiographic characteristics is
performed by chi-square analysis for categorical variables and by Student t test for
echocardiography and other continuous variables. A p value < 0.05 is considered significant.
Patients will be subdivided to four quartiles according to left atrial distensibility.
Unadjusted survival curves are produced using the Kaplan-Meier method. The log-rank test is
used to compare survival curves. Adjusted survival curves are constructed using variables
entered into the Cox model set to their mean values in the total population. The hazard
ratio of low left atrial distensibility will be assessed by comparing quartile to quartile.
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