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1.
Doppler ultrasound measures of left ventricular (LV) active relaxation and diastolic suction are slowed with healthy aging. It is unclear to what extent these changes are related to alterations in intrinsic LV properties and/or cardiovascular loading conditions. Seventy carefully screened individuals (38 female, 32 male) aged 21-77 were recruited into four age groups (young: <35; early middle age: 35-49; late middle age: 50-64 and seniors: ≥65 yr). Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), stroke volume, LV end-diastolic volume, and Doppler measures of LV diastolic filling were collected at multiple loading conditions, including supine baseline, lower body negative pressure to reduce LV filling, and saline infusion to increase LV filling. LV mass, supine PCWP, and heart rate were not affected significantly by aging. Measures of LV relaxation, including isovolumic relaxation time and the time constant of isovolumic pressure decay increased progressively, whereas peak early mitral annular longitudinal velocity decreased with advancing age (P < 0.001). The propagation velocity of early mitral inflow, a noninvasive measure of LV suction, decreased with aging with the greatest reduction in seniors (P < 0.001). Age-related differences in LV relaxation and diastolic suction were not attenuated significantly when PCWP was increased in older subjects or reduced in the younger subjects. There is an early slowing of LV relaxation and diastolic suction beginning in early middle age, with the greatest reduction observed in seniors. Because age-related differences in LV dynamic diastolic filling parameters were not diminished significantly with significant changes in LV loading conditions, a decline in ventricular relaxation is likely responsible for the alterations in LV diastolic filling with senescence.  相似文献   

2.
Glaucoma is associated with an increased incidence of cardiovascular disease and risk factors. The aim of the study was to assess the left ventricular (LV) function in patients with pseudoexfoliation (PEX) glaucoma using doppler-echocardiographic examinations. Two-dimensional and pulsed Doppler echocardiography of transmitral flow was performed in 21 patients with (PEX) glaucoma and 24 controls. LV systolic contraction and ejection were assessed using the LV ejection fraction (EF) and fractional shortening (FS). LV diastolic filling assessed parameters were: early, fast diastolic filling (E wave), late diastolic filling (A wave), ratio E/A, velocity time integral E wave (VTIE) and A wave (VTIA), their ratio (VTIE /VTIA), pressure at the end of filling (LVEDP) and a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP). A significant difference was found concerning LV filling flow parameters in E, E/A, VTIA and ratio VTIA/ VTIE. No significant difference was found in EF, FS, A, VTIE, LVEDP and PCWP tested parameters. Our study indicates the possibility of slightly impaired diastolic function of LV in patients with PEX glaucoma assessed by Doppler-echocardiographic examinations.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies have shown that small intraventricular pressure gradients (IVPG) are important for efficient filling of the left ventricle (LV) and as a sensitive marker for ischemia. Unfortunately, there has previously been no way of measuring these noninvasively, severely limiting their research and clinical utility. Color Doppler M-mode (CMM) echocardiography provides a spatiotemporal velocity distribution along the inflow tract throughout diastole, which we hypothesized would allow direct estimation of IVPG by using the Euler equation. Digital CMM images, obtained simultaneously with intracardiac pressure waveforms in six dogs, were processed by numerical differentiation for the Euler equation, then integrated to estimate IVPG and the total (left atrial to left ventricular apex) pressure drop. CMM-derived estimates agreed well with invasive measurements (IVPG: y = 0.87x + 0.22, r = 0.96, P < 0.001, standard error of the estimate = 0.35 mmHg). Quantitative processing of CMM data allows accurate estimation of IVPG and tracking of changes induced by beta-adrenergic stimulation. This novel approach provides unique information on LV filling dynamics in an entirely noninvasive way that has previously not been available for assessment of diastolic filling and function.  相似文献   

4.
The spectral Doppler mitral flow pattern, alone or combined with tissue Doppler mitral annulus velocity, can be used to predict left ventricular (LV) filling pressure in humans, whereas invasive hemodynamic measurements are still required in the rat. This study was undertaken to assess whether LV end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) can be estimated using Doppler echocardiography in the rat after myocardial infarction (MI). Thirty-seven rats (23 rats with MI after left coronary artery ligation and 14 sham-operated rats) were evaluated 3 mo after surgery with echo-Doppler and invasive hemodynamic measurements. Pulse wave spectral Doppler at the mitral valve tip was used to measure the E wave, the E wave deceleration time (DT), and the A wave; spectral Doppler tissue imaging was used to measure the early diastolic lateral mitral annulus velocity (E(a)). We found weak correlations between LVEDP and the peak velocity of the early mitral inflow (E), E/peak velocity of the late mitral inflow, and DT, and strong correlations with E(a) and especially with E/E(a) [R(2) = 0.89, LVEDP (in mmHg) = 0.987E/E(a) - 4.229]. Longitudinal followup of a subgroup of rats with MI revealed a marked rise of E/E(a) between days 7 and 21 in rats with heart failure only. We conclude that Doppler echocardiography can be used for serial assessment of LV diastolic function in rats with MI.  相似文献   

5.
Two apparently different types of mechanisms have emerged to explain diastolic suction (DS), that property of the left ventricle (LV) that tends to cause it to refill itself during early diastole independent of any force from the left atrium (LA). By means of the first mechanism, DS depends on decreased elastance [e.g., the relaxation time constant (tau)] and, by the second, end-systolic volume (V(LVES)). We used wave-intensity analysis (WIA) to measure the total energy transported by the backward expansion wave (I(W-)) during LV relaxation in an attempt to reconcile these mechanisms. In six anesthetized, open-chest dogs, we measured aortic, LV (P(LV)), LA (P(LA)), and pericardial pressures and LV volume by orthogonal ultrasonic crystals. Mitral velocity was measured by Doppler echocardiography, and aortic velocity was measured by an ultrasonic flow probe. Heart rate was controlled by pacing, V(LVES) by volume loading, and tau by isoproterenol or esmolol administration. I(W-) was found to be inversely related to tau and V(LVES). Our measure of DS, the energy remaining after mitral valve opening, I(W-DS), was also found to be inversely related to tau and V(LVES) and was approximately 10% of the total "aspirating" energy generated by LV relaxation (i.e., I(W-)). The size of the Doppler (early filling) E wave depended on I(W-DS) in addition to I(W+), the energy associated with LA decompression. We conclude that the energy of the backward-going wave generated by the LV during relaxation depends on both the rate at which elastance decreases (i.e., tau) and V(LVES). WIA provides a new approach for assessing DS and reconciles those two previously proposed mechanisms. The E wave depends on DS in addition to LA decompression.  相似文献   

6.
Shortened early transmitral deceleration times (E(DT)) have been qualitatively associated with increased filling pressure and reduced survival in patients with cardiac disease and increased left ventricular operating stiffness (K(LV)). An equation relating K(LV) quantitatively to E(DT) has previously been described in a canine model but not in humans. During several varying hemodynamic conditions, we studied 18 patients undergoing open-heart surgery. Transesophageal echocardiographic two-dimensional volumes and Doppler flows were combined with high-fidelity left atrial (LA) and left ventricular (LV) pressures to determine K(LV). From digitized Doppler recordings, E(DT) was measured and compared against changes in LV and LA diastolic volumes and pressures. E(DT) (180 +/- 39 ms) was inversely associated with LV end-diastolic pressures (r = -0.56, P = 0.004) and net atrioventricular stiffness (r = -0.55, P = 0.006) but had its strongest association with K(LV) (r = -0.81, P < 0.001). K(LV) was predicted assuming a nonrestrictive orifice (K(nonrest)) from E(DT) as K(nonrest) = (0.07/E(DT))(2) with K(LV) = 1.01 K(nonrest) - 0.02; r = 0.86, P < 0.001, DeltaK (K(nonrest) - K(LV)) = 0.02 +/- 0.06 mm Hg/ml. In adults with cardiac disease, E(DT) provides an accurate estimate of LV operating stiffness and supports its application as a practical noninvasive index in the evaluation of diastolic function.  相似文献   

7.
A chamber stiffness (K(LV))-transmitral flow (E-wave) deceleration time relation has been invasively validated in dogs with the use of average stiffness [(DeltaP/DeltaV)(avg)]. K(LV) is equivalent to k(E), the (E-wave) stiffness of the parameterized diastolic filling model. Prediction and validation of 1) (DeltaP/DeltaV)(avg) in terms of k(E), 2) early rapid-filling stiffness [(DeltaP/DeltaV)(E)] in terms of k(E), and 3) passive (postdiastasis) chamber stiffness [(DeltaP/DeltaV)(PD)] from A waves in terms of the stiffness parameter for the Doppler A wave (k(A)) have not been achieved. Simultaneous micromanometric left ventricular (LV) pressure (LVP) and transmitral flow from 131 subjects were analyzed. (DeltaP)(avg) and (DeltaV)(avg) utilized the minimum LVP-LV end-diastolic pressure interval. (DeltaP/DeltaV)(E) utilized DeltaP and DeltaV from minimum LVP to E-wave termination. (DeltaP/DeltaV)(PD) utilized atrial systolic DeltaP and DeltaV. E- and A-wave analysis generated k(E) and k(A). For all subjects, noninvasive-invasive relations yielded the following equations: k(E) = 1,401. (DeltaP/DeltaV)(avg) + 59.2 (r = 0.84) and k(E) = 229.0. (DeltaP/DeltaV)(E) + 112 (r = 0.80). For subjects with diastasis (n = 113), k(A) = 1,640. (DeltaP/DeltaV)(PD) - 8.40 (r = 0.89). As predicted, k(A) showed excellent correlation with (DeltaP/DeltaV)(PD); k(E) correlated highly with (DeltaP/DeltaV)(avg). In vivo validation of average, early, and passive chamber stiffness facilitates quantitative, noninvasive diastolic function assessment from transmitral flow.  相似文献   

8.
Although Doppler tissue imaging frequently indicates the presence of mitral annular oscillations (MAO) following the E' wave (E' wave, etc.), only recently was it shown that annular "ringing" follows the rules of damped harmonic oscillatory motion. Oscillatory model-based analysis of E' and E' waves provides longitudinal left ventricular (LV) stiffness (k'), relaxation/viscoelasticity (c'), and stored elastic strain (x(o)') parameters. We tested the hypothesis that presence (MAO(+)) vs. absence (MAO(-)) of diastolic MAO is an index of superior LV relaxation by analyzing simultaneous echocardiographic-hemodynamic data from 35 MAO(+) and 20 MAO(-) normal ejection fraction (EF) subjects undergoing cardiac catheterization. Echocardiographic annular motion and transmitral flow data were analyzed with a previously validated kinematic model of filling. Invasive and noninvasive diastolic function (DF) indexes differentiated between MAO(+) and MAO(-) groups. Specifically, the MAO(+) group had a shorter time constant of isovolumic relaxation [tau; 51 (SD 13) vs. 67 (SD 27) ms; P<0.01] and isovolumic relaxation time [63 (SD 16) vs. 82 (SD 17) ms; P<0.001] and greater ratio of peak E-wave to peak A-wave velocity [1.19 (SD 0.31) vs. 0.97 (SD 0.31); P<0.05]. The MAO(+) group had greater peak lateral mitral annulus velocity [E'; 17.5 (SD 3.1) vs. 13.5 (SD 3.8) cm/s; P<0.001] and LVEF [71.2 (SD 7.5)% vs. 65.4 (SD 9.1)%; P<0.05] and lower heart rate [65 (SD 9) vs. 74 (SD 9) beats/min, P<0.001]. Additional conventional and kinematic modeling-derived indexes were highly concordant with these findings. We conclude that absence of early diastolic MAO is an easily discernible marker for relaxation-related diastolic dysfunction. Quantitation of MAO via stiffness and relaxation/viscoelasticity parameters facilitates quantitative assessment of regional (i.e., longitudinal) DF and may improve diagnosis of diastolic dysfunction.  相似文献   

9.
We sought to examine the hemodynamic determinants and clinical application of the peak acceleration rate of early (Ea) diastolic velocity of the mitral annulus by tissue Doppler. Simultaneous left atrial and left ventricular (LV) catheterization and Doppler echocardiography were performed in 10 dogs. Preload was altered using volume infusion and caval occlusion, whereas myocardial lusitropic state was altered with dobutamine and esmolol. The clinical application was examined in 190 consecutive patients (55 control, 41 impaired relaxation, 46 pseudonormal, and 48 restrictive LV filling). In addition, in 60 consecutive patients, we examined the relation between it and mean wedge pressure with simultaneous Doppler echocardiography and right heart catheterization. In canine studies, a significant positive relation was present between peak acceleration rate of Ea and transmitral pressure gradient only in the stages with normal or enhanced LV relaxation, but with no relation in the stages where the time constant of LV relaxation (tau) was > or =50 ms. Its hemodynamic determinants were tau, LV minimal pressure, and transmitral pressure gradient. In clinical studies, peak acceleration rate of Ea was significantly lower in patients with impaired LV relaxation irrespective of filling pressures (P < 0.001) and with similar accuracy to peak Ea velocity (area under the curve for septal and lateral peak acceleration rates: both 0.78) in identifying these patients. No significant relation was observed between peak acceleration rate and mean wedge pressure. Peak acceleration rate of Ea appears to be a useful index of LV relaxation but not of filling pressures and can be applied to identify patients with impaired LV relaxation irrespective of their filling pressures.  相似文献   

10.
With the growth of genetic engineering, mice have become common as models of human diseases, which in turn has stimulated the development of techniques to monitor and image the murine cardiovascular system. Invasive methods are often more quantitative, but noninvasive methods are preferred when measurements must be repeated serially on living animals during development or in response to pharmacological or surgical interventions. Because of the small size and high heart rates in mice, high spatial and temporal resolutions are required to preserve signal fidelity. Monitoring of body temperature and the electrocardiogram is essential when animals must be anesthetized for a measurement or other procedure. Several other groups have developed cardiovascular imaging modalities suitable for murine applications, and ultrasound is the most widely used. Our group has developed and applied high-resolution Doppler probes and signal processing for measuring blood velocity in the heart and peripheral vessels of anesthetized mice noninvasively. We can measure cardiac filling and ejection velocities as indices of systolic and diastolic ventricular function and for timing of cardiac events; velocity pulse arrival times for determining pulse-wave velocity and arterial stiffness; peripheral velocity waveforms as indices of arterial resistance, compliance, and wave reflections; stenotic velocities for estimation of pressure drop and detection of vorticity; and tail artery velocity for determining systolic and diastolic blood pressure using a pressure cuff. These noninvasive methods are convenient and easy to apply and have been used to detect and evaluate numerous cardiovascular phenotypes in mutant mice.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The left atrium (LA) acts as a booster pump during late diastole, generating the Doppler transmitral A wave and contributing incrementally to left ventricular (LV) filling. However, after volume loading and in certain disease states, LA contraction fills the LV less effectively, and retrograde flow (i.e., the Doppler Ar wave) into the pulmonary veins increases. The purpose of this study was to provide an energetic analysis of LA contraction to clarify the mechanisms responsible for changes in forward and backward flow. Wave intensity analysis was performed at the mitral valve and a pulmonary vein orifice. As operative LV stiffness increased with progressive volume loading, the reflection coefficient (i.e., energy of reflected wave/energy of incident wave) also increased. This reflected wave decelerated the forward movement of blood through the mitral valve and was transmitted through the LA, accelerating retrograde blood flow in the pulmonary veins. Although total LA work increased with volume loading, the forward hydraulic work decreased and backward hydraulic work increased. Thus wave reflection due to increased LV stiffness accounts for the decrease in the A wave and the increase in the Ar wave measured by Doppler.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the determinants of ventricular early diastolic lengthening and mechanics of suction using a mathematical model of the left ventricle (LV). The model was based on a force balance between the force represented by LV pressure (LVP) and active and passive myocardial forces. The predicted lengthening velocity (e') from the model agreed well with measurements from 10 dogs during 5 different interventions (R = 0.69, P < 0.001). The model showed that e' was increased when relaxation rate and systolic shortening increased, when passive stiffness was decreased, and when the rate of fall of LVP during early filling was decreased relative to the rate of fall of active stress. We first defined suction as the work the myocardium performed to pull blood into the ventricle. This occurred when contractile active forces decayed below and became weaker than restoring forces, producing a negative LVP. An alternative definition of suction is filling during falling pressure, commonly believed to be caused by release of restoring forces. However, the model showed that this phenomenon also occurred when there had been no systolic compression below unstressed length and therefore in the absence of restoring forces. In conclusion, relaxation rate, LVP, systolic shortening, and passive stiffness were all independent determinants of e'. The model generated a suction effect seen as lengthening occurring during falling pressure. However, this was not equivalent with the myocardium performing pulling work on the blood, which was performed only when restoring forces were higher than remaining active fiber force, corresponding to a negative transmural pressure.  相似文献   

14.
We extend our recently published windkessel-wave interpretation of vascular function to the wave intensity analysis (WIA) of left ventricular (LV) filling dynamics by separating the pressure changes due to the windkessel from those due to traveling waves. With the use of LV compliance, the change in pressure due solely to LV volume changes (windkessel pressure) can be isolated. Inasmuch as the pressure measured in the cardiovascular system is the sum of its windkessel and wave components (excess pressure), it can be substituted into WIA, yielding the isolated wave effects on LV filling. Our study of six open-chest dogs demonstrated that once the windkessel effects are removed from WIA, the energy of diastolic suction is 2.6 times greater than we previously calculated. Volume-related changes in pressure (i.e., the windkessel or reservoir effect) must be considered first when wave motion is analyzed.  相似文献   

15.
Tbx5(del/+) mice provide a model of human Holt-Oram syndrome. In this study, the cardiac functional phenotypes of this mouse model were investigated with 30-MHz ultrasound by comparing 12 Tbx5(del/+) mice with 12 wild-type littermates at 1, 2, 4, and 8 wk of age. Cardiac dimensions were measured with two-dimensional and M-mode imaging. The flow patterns in the left and right ventricular inflow channels were evaluated with Doppler flow sampling. Compared with wild-type littermates, Tbx5(del/+) mice showed significant changes in the mitral flow pattern, including decreased peak velocity of the left ventricular (LV) early filling wave (E wave), increased peak velocity of the late filling wave (A wave), and decreased or even reversed peak E-to-A ratio. The prolongation of LV isovolumic relaxation time was detected in Tbx5(del/+) neonates as early as 1 wk of age. In Tbx5(del/+) mice, LV wall thickness appeared normal but LV chamber dimension was significantly reduced. LV systolic function did not differ from that in wild-type littermates. In contrast, the Doppler flow spectrum in the enlarged tricuspid orifice of Tbx5(del/+) mice demonstrated increased peak velocities of both E and A waves and increased total time-velocity integral but unchanged peak E/A. In another 13 mice (7 Tbx5(del/+), 6 wild-type) at 2 wk of age, significant correlation was found between Tbx5 gene expression level in ventricular myocardium and LV filling parameters. In conclusion, the LV diastolic function of Tbx5(del/+) mice is significantly deteriorated, whereas the systolic function remains normal.  相似文献   

16.
Increased dietary salt intake induces cardiac fibrosis in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), yet little information details its effects on left ventricular (LV) function. Additionally, young normotensive rats are more sensitive to the trophic effect of dietary sodium than older rats. Thus cardiac responses to salt loading were evaluated at two ages in the SHR; LV collagen content was also examined. SHR (8 or 20 wk of age) were given an 8% salt diet; their age-matched controls received standard chow. Echocardiographic indexes, arterial pressure, and LV hydroxyproline concentration were measured at 16 and 52 wk in the younger and older SHR groups, respectively. In most SHR, salt excess increased arterial pressure, LV mass, and hydroxyproline concentration and impaired LV relaxation manifested by prolonged isovolumic relaxation time, decreased early and atrial filling velocity ratio (V(E)/V(A)), and slower propagation velocity of E wave (V(P)). LV systolic function remained normal. However, one-quarter of the young salt-loaded SHR developed cardiac failure with systolic and diastolic dysfunction associated with greater LV mass and ventricular fibrosis. They also had lower arterial pressure, decreased fractional shortening, and a restrictive pattern of mitral flow. Moreover, the shorter deceleration time of the E wave and increased V(E)/V(P), an index of LV filling pressure, indicated increased LV stiffness in these rats. These findings demonstrated that sodium sensitivity in SHR is manifested not only by further pressure elevation but also by significant LV functional impairment that most likely is related to enhanced ventricular fibrosis. Moreover, the SHR are more susceptible to cardiac damage when high dietary salt is introduced earlier in life.  相似文献   

17.
This study was performed to validate echocardiographic and Doppler techniques for the assessment of left ventricular (LV) diastolic function in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and normotensive Wistar rats. In 11 Wistar rats and 20 SHR, we compared 51 sets of invasive and Doppler LV diastolic indexes. Noninvasive indexes of LV relaxation were related to the minimal rate of pressure decline (-dP/dt(min)), particularly isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT), the Tei index, the early velocity of the mitral annulus (E(m)) using Doppler tissue imaging, and early mitral flow propagation velocity using M-mode color (r = 0.28-0.56 and P < 0.05-0.0001). When the role of systolic load was considered, the correlation between Doppler indexes of LV diastolic function and relaxation rate [(-dP/dt(min))/LV systolic pressure] improved (r = 0.48-0.86 and P = 0.004-0.0001, respectively). Similarly, Doppler indexes of LV diastolic function and the time constant of isovolumic LV relaxation (tau) correlated well (r = 0.50-0.84 and P = 0.0002-0.0001, respectively). In addition, eight SHR and eight Wistar rats were compared; their LV end-diastolic diameters were similar, whereas the SHR LV mass was greater. Furthermore, IVRT and Tei index were significantly higher and E(m) was lower in SHR. Moreover, tau was higher in SHR, demonstrating impaired LV relaxation. In conclusion, LV relaxation can be assessed reliably using echocardiographic and Doppler techniques, and, using these indexes, impaired relaxation was demonstrated in SHR.  相似文献   

18.
Changes in diastolic indexes during normal aging, including reduced early filling velocity (E), lengthened E deceleration time (DT), augmented late filling (A), and prolonged isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT), have been attributed to slower left ventricular (LV) pressure (LVP) decay. Indeed, this constellation of findings is often referred to as the "abnormal relaxation" pattern. However, LV filling is determined by the atrioventricular pressure gradient, which depends on both LVP decline and left atrial (LA) pressure (LAP). To assess the relative influence of LVP decline and LAP, we studied 122 normal subjects aged 21-92 yr by Doppler echocardiography and MRI. LVP decline was assessed by color M-mode (V(p)) and the LV untwisting rate. Early diastolic LAP was evaluated using pulmonary vein flow systolic fraction, pulmonary vein flow diastolic DT, color M-mode (E/V(p)), and tissue Doppler (E/E(m)). Linear regression showed the expected reduction of E, increase in A, and prolongation of IVRT and DT with advancing age. There was no relation of age to parameters reflecting the rate of LVP decline. However, older age was associated with reduced E/V(p) (P = 0.008) and increased pulmonary vein systolic fraction (P < 0.001), pulmonary vein DT (P = 0.0026), and E/E(m) (P < 0.0001), all suggesting reduced early LAP. Therefore, reduced early filling in older adults may be more closely related to a reduced early diastolic LAP than to slower LVP decline. This effect also explains the prolonged IVRT. We postulate that changes in LA active or passive properties may contribute to development of the abnormal relaxation pattern during the aging process.  相似文献   

19.
In early diastole, pressure is lower in the apex than in the base of the left ventricle (LV). This early intraventricular pressure difference (IVPD) facilitates LV filling. We assessed how LV diastolic IVPD and intraventricular pressure gradient (IVPG), defined as IVPD divided by length, scale to the heart size and other physiological variables. We studied 10 mice, 10 rats, 5 rabbits, 12 dogs, and 21 humans by echocardiography. Color Doppler M-mode data were postprocessed to reconstruct IVPD and IVPG. Normalized LV filling time was calculated by dividing filling time by RR interval. The relationship between IVPD, IVPG, normalized LV filling time, and LV end-diastolic volume (or mass) as fit to the general scaling equation Y = kM beta, where M is LV heart size parameter, Y is a dependent variable, k is a constant, and beta is the power of the scaling exponent. LV mass varied from 0.049 to 194 g, whereas end-diastolic volume varied from 0.011 to 149 ml. The beta values relating normalized LV filling time with LV mass and end-diastolic volume were 0.091 (SD 0.011) and 0.083 (SD 0.009), respectively (P < 0.0001 vs. 0 for both). The beta values relating IVPD with LV mass and end-diastolic volume were similarly significant at 0.271 (SD 0.039) and 0.243 (SD 0.0361), respectively (P < 0.0001 vs. 0 for both). Finally, beta values relating IVPG with LV mass and end-diastolic volume were -0.118 (SD 0.013) and -0.104 (SD 0.011), respectively (P < 0.0001 vs. 0 for both). As a result, there was an inverse relationship between IVPG and normalized LV filling time (r = -0.65, P < 0.001). We conclude that IVPD decrease, while IVPG increase with decreasing animal size. High IVPG in small mammals may be an adaptive mechanism to short filling times.  相似文献   

20.
Diastolic dysfunction in volume-overload hypertrophy by aortocaval fistula is characterized by increased passive stiffness of the left ventricle (LV). We hypothesized that changes in passive properties are associated with abnormal myolaminar sheet mechanics during diastolic filling. We determined three-dimensional finite deformation of myofiber and myolaminar sheets in the LV free wall of six dogs with cineradiography of implanted markers during development of volume-overload hypertrophy by aortocaval fistula. After 9 +/- 2 wk of volume overload, all dogs developed edema of extremities, pulmonary congestion, elevated LV end-diastolic pressure (5 +/- 2 vs. 21 +/- 4 mmHg, P < 0.05), and increased LV volume. There was no significant change in systolic function [dP/dt(max): 2,476 +/- 203 vs. 2,330 +/- 216 mmHg/s, P = not significant (NS)]. Diastolic relaxation was significantly reduced (dP/dt(min): -2,466 +/- 190 vs. -2,076 +/- 166 mmHg/s, P < 0.05; time constant of LV pressure decline: 32 +/- 2 vs. 43 +/- 1 ms, P < 0.05), whereas duration of diastolic filling was unchanged (304 +/- 33 vs. 244 +/- 42 ms, P = NS). Fiber stretch and sheet shear occur predominantly in the first third of diastolic filling, and chronic volume overload induced remodeling in lengthening of the fiber and reorientation of the laminar sheet architecture. Sheet shear was significantly increased and delayed at the subendocardial layer (P < 0.05), whereas magnitude of fiber stretch was not altered in volume overload (P = NS). These findings indicate that enhanced filling in volume-overload hypertrophy is achieved by enhanced sheet shear early in diastole. These results provide the first evidence that changes in motion of radially oriented laminar sheets may play an important functional role in pathology of diastolic dysfunction in this model.  相似文献   

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