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1.
Temperature changes influence cardiac diastolic function. The monoexponential time constant (tauE), which is a conventional lusitropic index of the rate of left ventricular (LV) pressure fall, increases with cooling and decreases with warming. We have proposed that a half-logistic time constant (tauL) is a better lusitropic index than tauE at normothermia. In the present study, we investigated whether tauL can remain a superior measure as temperature varies. The isovolumic relaxation LV pressure curves from the minimum of the first time derivative of LV pressure (dP/dtmin) to the LV end-diastolic pressure were analyzed at 30, 33, 36, 38, and 40 degrees C in excised, cross-circulated canine hearts. tauL and tauE were evaluated by curve-fitting using the least squares method and applying the half-logistic equation, P(t) = PA/[1 + exp(t/tauL)] + PB, and the monoexponential equation, P(t) = P0exp(-t/tauE) + Pinfinity. Both tauL and tauE increased significantly with decreasing temperature and decreased with increasing temperature. The half-logistic correlation coefficient (r) values were significantly higher than the monoexponential r values at the 5 above-mentioned temperatures. This implies that the superiority of the goodness of the half-logistic fit is not temperature dependent. The half-logistic model characterizes the amplitude and time course of LV pressure fall more reliably than the monoexponential model. Hence, we concluded that tauL is a more useful lusitropic index regardless of temperature.  相似文献   

2.
The Tei index is clinically useful to quantify left ventricular (LV) function, but it requires sequential Doppler recordings from two different views. A related myocardial performance index (MPI) using tissue Doppler (TD) can be rapidly calculated from a single beat; however, its ability to quantify contractility and the effects of acute changes in loading have not been determined. Our aim was to test the hypothesis that TD MPI can quantify contractile state but is affected by acute alterations in loading, using LV pressure-volume relations in an animal model. Eight dogs were studied by using mitral annular TD, high-fidelity pressure, and conductance catheters. TD MPI was calculated as (a' - b')/b', where a' was the duration of mitral annular velocity during diastole and b' was the duration of the systolic wave. End-systolic elastance (Ees), the time constant of isovolumic relaxation (tau), and peak positive and negative first derivative of pressure (dP/dtmax and dP/dtmin, respectively) were used as measures of LV function. Data were obtained at baseline, at dobutamine and esmolol infusion to alter contractile state, and at inferior vena cava and aortic occlusion to alter preload and afterload. TD MPI decreased from 0.83 (SD 0.19) to 0.62 (SD 0.20) with dobutamine and increased to 1.19 (SD 0.26) with esmolol. TD MPI significantly correlated with dP/dtmax (r = -0.76), Ees (r = -0.68), dP/dtmin (r = 0.82), and tau (r = 0.78); however, it was affected by acute decreases in preload [from 0.83 (SD 0.19) to 1.09 (SD 0.36)] and acute increases in afterload [to 1.23 (SD 0.17)]. All the above increases and decreases and r values were significant (P < 0.05 vs. baseline). In conclusion, TD MPI can rapidly quantify alterations in LV contractile state but is affected by acute alterations in preload and afterload.  相似文献   

3.
Because systole and diastole are coupled and systolic ventricular-vascular coupling has been characterized, we hypothesize that diastolic ventricular-vascular coupling (DVVC) exists and can be characterized in terms of relaxation and stiffness. To characterize and elucidate DVVC mechanisms, we introduce time derivative of pressure (dP/dt) vs. time-varying pressure [P(t)] (pressure phase plane, PPP)-derived analogs of ventricular and vascular "stiffness" and relaxation parameters. Although volume change (dV) = 0 during isovolumic periods, and time-varying left ventricular (LV) stiffness, typically expressed as change in pressure per unit change in volume (dP/dV), is undefined, our formulation allows determination of a PPP-derived stiffness analog during isovolumic contraction and relaxation. Similarly, an aortic stiffness analog is also derivable from the PPP. LV relaxation was characterized via tau, the time constant of isovolumic relaxation, and vascular (aortic pressure decay) relaxation was characterized in terms of its equivalent (windkessel) exponential decay time constant kappa. The results show that PPP-derived systolic and diastolic ventricular and vascular stiffness are strongly coupled [K(Ao)(+)=1.71(K(LV)(+)) +154, r=0.86; K(Ao)(-)=0.677(K(LV)(-))-5.53, r=0.86]. In support of the DVVC hypothesis, a strong linear correlation between relaxation (rate of pressure decay) indexes kappa and tau (kappa = 9.89tau - 90.3, r = 0.81) was also observed. The correlations observed underscore the role of long-term, steady-state DVVC as a diastolic function determinant. Awareness of the PPP-derived DVVC parameters provides insight into mechanisms and facilitates quantification of arterial stiffening and associated increase in diastolic chamber stiffness. The PPP method provides a tool for quantitative assessment and determination of the functional coupling of the vasculature to diastolic function.  相似文献   

4.
Transmitral Doppler echocardiography is the preferred method of noninvasive diastolic function assessment. Correlations between catheterization-based measures of isovolumic relaxation (IVR) and transmitral, early rapid filling (Doppler E-wave)-derived parameters have been observed, but no model-based, causal explanation has been offered. IVR has also been characterized in terms of its duration as IVR time (IVRT) and by tau, the time-constant of IVR, by approximating the terminal left ventricular IVR pressure contour as Pt= Pinfinity + P(o)e(-t/tau), where Pt is the continuity of pressure, Pinfinity and Po are constants, t is time, and tau is the time constant of IVR. To characterize the relation between IVR and early rapid filling more fully, simultaneous (micromanometric) left ventricular pressure and transmitral Doppler E-wave data from 25 subjects undergoing elective cardiac catheterization and having normal physiology were analyzed. The time constant tau was determined from the dP/dt vs. P (phase) plane and, simultaneous Doppler E-waves provided global indexes of chamber viscosity/relaxation (c), chamber stiffness (k), and load (xo). We hypothesize that temporal continuity of pressure decay at mitral valve opening and physiological constraints permit the algebraic derivation of linear relations relating 1/tau to both peak atrioventricular pressure gradient (kxo) and E-wave-derived viscosity/relaxation (c) but does not support a similar, causal (linear) relation between deceleration time and tau or IVRT. Both predicted linear relations were observed: kxo to 1/tau (r = 0.71) and viscosity/relaxation to 1/tau (r = 0.71). Similarly, as anticipated, only a weak linear correlation between deceleration time and IVRT or tau was observed (r = 0.41). The observed in vivo relationship provides insight into the isovolumic mechanism of relaxation and the changing-volume mechanism of early rapid filling via a link of the respective relaxation properties.  相似文献   

5.
The rapid decline in pressure during isovolumic relaxation (IVR) is traditionally fit algebraically via two empiric indexes: tau, the time constant of IVR, or tau(L), a logistic time constant. Although these indexes are used for in vivo diastolic function characterization of the same physiological process, their characterization of IVR in the pressure phase plane is strikingly different, and no smooth and continuous transformation between them exists. To avoid the parametric discontinuity between tau and tau(L) and more fully characterize isovolumic relaxation in mechanistic terms, we modeled ventricular IVR kinematically, employing a traditional, lumped relaxation (resistive) and a novel elastic parameter. The model predicts IVR pressure as a function of time as the solution of d(2)P/dt(2) + (1/micro)dP/dt + E(k)P = 0, where micro (ms) is a relaxation rate (resistance) similar to tau or tau(L) and E(k) (1/s(2)) is an elastic (stiffness) parameter (per unit mass). Validation involved analysis of 310 beats (10 consecutive beats for 31 subjects). This model fit the IVR data as well as or better than tau or tau(L) in all cases (average root mean squared error for dP/dt vs. t: 29 mmHg/s for model and 35 and 65 mmHg/s for tau and tau(L), respectively). The solution naturally encompasses tau and tau(L) as parametric limits, and good correlation between tau and 1/microE(k) (tau = 1.15/microE(k) - 11.85; r(2) = 0.96) indicates that isovolumic pressure decline is determined jointly by elastic (E(k)) and resistive (1/mu) parameters. We conclude that pressure decline during IVR is incompletely characterized by resistance (i.e., tau and tau(L)) alone but is determined jointly by elastic (E(k)) and resistive (1/micro) mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Diastolic function is a major determinant of ventricular performance, especially when loading conditions are altered. We evaluated biventricular diastolic function in lambs and studied possible load dependence of diastolic parameters [minimum first derivative of pressure vs. time (dP/dt(min)) and time constant of isovolumic relaxation (tau)] in normal (n = 5) and chronic right ventricular (RV) pressure-overloaded (n = 5) hearts by using an adjustable band on the pulmonary artery (PAB). Pressure-volume relations were measured during preload reduction to obtain the end-diastolic pressure-volume relationship (EDPVR). In normal lambs, absolute dP/dt(min) and tau were lower in the RV than in the left ventricle whereas the chamber stiffness constant (b) was roughly the same. After PAB, RV tau and dP/dt(min) were significantly higher compared with control. The RV EDPVR indicated impaired diastolic function. During acute pressure reduction, both dP/dt(min) and tau showed a relationship with end-systolic pressure. These relationships could explain the increased dP/dt(min) but not the increased tau-value after banding. Therefore, the increased tau after banding reflects intrinsic myocardial changes. We conclude that after chronic RV pressure overload, RV early relaxation is prolonged and diastolic stiffness is increased, both indicative of impaired diastolic function.  相似文献   

8.
Random stimulation of the perfused heart allows relationships between the rate of contractions (dP/dtmax), the size of contraction (Pmax) and the rate of relaxation (dP/dtmin) of contractions of varying intensity to be studied. The present study concerns these relationships during perfusion with ouabain, a low sodium medium and noradrenaline. Isolated rabbit hearts were perfused with Tyrode solution (O2 95%, CO2 5%, 36.4 degrees C), the isovolumic contractions of the left ventricle were recorded and the right ventricle was stimulated at random for 30 s (pulse width 10 ms, voltage double the threshold value). Perfusion was then switched over to perfusion with ouabain solution (10(-6) mol.l-1), with noradrenaline solution (10(-6) mol.l-1) or with low sodium solution (with 31% of the normal Na concentration). When spontaneous contraction size had attained a stable level, random stimulation was repeated. During random stimulation, dP/dtmin was directly proportional to Pmax (dP/dtmin = k1.P max) and to dP/dtmax (dP/dtmin = k2.dP/dtmax). Ouabain and low sodium did not change k1 or k2 and noradrenaline did not change k2. The increase in k1 during noradrenaline perfusion corresponds to shorter duration of contraction. It was found that dP/dtmax, which corresponds to the sarcoplasmic calcium concentration at the outset of activation, was the main factor determining the relaxation rate during ouabain, noradrenaline and low sodium perfusion.  相似文献   

9.
The rat infarct model is widely used in heart failure research, but few echocardiographic indexes of left ventricular (LV) function are validated in this model. Accordingly, the objective of this study was to validate a 13-segment LV wall motion score index (WMSI) and the myocardial performance index (MPI) in infarcted rats. Twenty-nine male Wistar rats underwent left coronary artery ligation or sham operation and were evaluated with two-dimensional and Doppler flow echocardiography 8 wk later. After echocardiography, invasive indexes were obtained using a high-fidelity catheter. WMSI and MPI were correlated with the invasive and noninvasive measurements of LV function. WMSI and MPI significantly correlated directly with end-diastolic pressure (r=0.72 and 0.42 for WMSI and MPI, respectively) and the time constant of isovolumic relaxation (r=0.68 and 0.48) and inversely with peak rate of rise of LV pressure (+dP/dt; r=-0.68 and -0.50), peak rate of decline in LV pressure (r=-0.57 and -0.44), LV developed pressure (r=-0.58 and -0.42), area fractional shortening (r=-0.85 and -0.53), and cardiac index (r=-0.74 and -0.74). Stepwise linear regression analyses revealed that LV end-diastolic pressure, +dP/dt, area fractional shortening, and cardiac index were independent determinants of WMSI (r=0.994) and that cardiac index and +dP/dt were independent determinants of MPI (r=0.781). We conclude that the 13-segment WMSI and MPI are reproducible and correlate strongly with established echocardiographic and invasive indexes of systolic and diastolic function. These findings support the use of WMSI and MPI as indexes of global LV function in the rat infarction model of heart failure.  相似文献   

10.
Even though there are a few studies dealing with the cardiac effects of amylin, the mechanisms of amylin-induced positive inotropy are not known well. Therefore, we investigated the possible signaling pathways underlying the amylin-induced positive inotropy and compared the cardiac effects of rat amylin (rAmylin) and human amylin (hAmylin).Isolated rat hearts were perfused under constant flow condition and rAmylin or hAmylin was infused to the hearts. Coronary perfusion pressure, heart rate, left ventricular developed pressure and the maximum rate of increase of left ventricular pressure (+dP/dtmax) and the maximum rate of pressure decrease of left ventricle (-dP/dtmin) were measured.rAmylin at concentrations of 1, 10 or 100 nM markedly decreased coronary perfusion pressure, but increased heart rate, left ventricular developed pressure, +dP/dtmax and -dP/dtmin. The infusion of H-89 (50 μM), a protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitor did not change the rAmylin (100 nM)-induced positive inotropic effect. Both diltiazem (1 μM), an L-type Ca2+ channel blocker and ryanodine (10 nM), a sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release channel opener completely suppressed the rAmylin-induced positive inotropic effect, but staurosporine (100 nM), a potent protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor suppressed it partially. hAmylin (1, 10 and 100 nM) had no significant effect on coronary perfusion pressure, heart rate and developed pressure, +dP/dtmax and -dP/dtmin.We concluded that rAmylin might have been produced vasodilatory, positive chronotropic and positive inotropic effects on rat hearts. Ca2+ entry via L-type Ca2+ channels, activation of PKC and Ca2+ release from SR through ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ channels may be involved in this positive inotropic effect. hAmylin may not produce any significant effect on perfusion pressure, heart rate and contractility in isolated, perfused rat hearts.  相似文献   

11.
Although there are several excellent indexes of myocardial contractility, they require accurate measurement of pressure via left ventricular (LV) catheterization. Here we validate a novel noninvasive contractility index that is dependent only on lumen and wall volume of the LV chamber in patients with normal and compromised LV ejection fraction (LVEF). By analysis of the myocardial chamber as a thick-walled sphere, LV contractility index can be expressed as maximum rate of change of pressure-normalized stress (d sigma*/dt(max), where sigma* = sigma/P and sigma and P are circumferential stress and pressure, respectively). To validate this parameter, d sigma*/dt(max) was determined from contrast cine-ventriculography-assessed LV cavity and myocardial volumes and compared with LVEF, dP/dt(max), maximum active elastance (E(a,max)), and single-beat end-systolic elastance [E(es(SB))] in 30 patients undergoing clinically indicated LV catheterization. Patients with different tertiles of LVEF exhibit statistically significant differences in d sigma*/dt(max). There was a significant correlation between d sigma*/dt(max) and dP/dt(max) (d sigma*/dt(max) = 0.0075 dP/dt(max) - 4.70, r=0.88, P<0.01), E(a,max) (d sigma*/dt(max) = 1.20E(a,max) + 1.40, r=0.89, P<0.01), and E(es(SB)) [d sigma*/dt(max)=1.60 E(es(SB)) + 1.20, r=0.88, P<0.01]. In 30 additional individuals, we determined sensitivity of the parameter to changes in preload (intravenous saline infusion, n = 10 subjects), afterload (sublingual glyceryl trinitrate, n = 10 subjects), and increased contractility (intravenous dobutamine, n=10 patients). We confirmed that the index is not dependent on load but is sensitive to changes in contractility. In conclusion, d sigma*/dt(max) is equivalent to dP/dt(max), E(a,max), and E(es(SB)) as an index of myocardial contractility and appears to be load independent. In contrast to other measures of contractility, d sigma*/dt(max) can be assessed with noninvasive cardiac imaging and, thereby, should have more routine clinical applicability.  相似文献   

12.
Today, cardiac contractility in mice is exclusively measured under anesthesia or in sedated animals because the catheters available are too rigid to be used in awake mice. We therefore developed a new catheter (Pebax 03) to measure cardiac contractility in conscious mice. In this study, we evaluated the accuracy and utility of this new catheter for assessment of cardiac contractility in anesthetized and conscious mice. With the use of a balloon-pop test, the Pebax catheter with an inner diameter of 0.3 mm was found to exhibit a high natural frequency, a low damping coefficient, and a flat frequency of up to 50.5 +/- 0.6 Hz. Under anesthesia (0.5% or 1.0% halothane), no difference was found in heart rate (HR), left ventricular (LV) systolic pressure (LVSP), the maximum rates of LV pressure rise and fall (LV dP/dt(max) and LV dP/dt(min), respectively), ejection time (ET), and isovolumic relaxation time constant (tau) when measured with either the 1.4-Fr Millar or Pebax 03 catheter. However, when HR, LVSP, LV dP/dt(max), and LV dP/dt(min) were recorded with the Pebax catheter in awake mice, values were significantly higher, and ET and tau were lower, than under anesthesia, suggesting a major impact of anesthesia on these parameters. The Pebax catheter was also used in a normotensive one-renin gene mouse model of cardiac hypertrophy induced by DOCA and salt. In this model, DOCA-salt induced a severe decrease in cardiac contractility in the absence of changes in blood pressure. These data demonstrate that cardiac contractility can be measured very accurately in conscious mice. This new device can be of great help in the investigation of cardiac function in normal and genetically engineered mice.  相似文献   

13.
Most noninvasive measures of diastolic function are made during left ventricular (LV) filling and are therefore subject to "pseudonormalization," because variation in left atrial (LA) pressure may confound the estimation of relaxation rate. Counterclockwise twist of the LV develops during ejection, but untwisting occurs rapidly during isovolumic relaxation, before mitral opening. We hypothesized that the rate of untwisting might reflect the process of relaxation independent of LA pressure. Recoil rate (RR), the velocity of LV untwisting, was measured by tagged magnetic resonance imaging and regressed against the relaxation time constant (tau), recorded by catheterization, in 10 dogs at baseline and after dobutamine, saline, esmolol, and methoxamine treatment. RR correlated closely (average r = -0.86) with tau and was unaffected by elevated LA pressure. Multiple regression showed that tau, but not LA or aortic pressure, was an independent predictor of RR (P < 0.0001, P = 0.99, and P = 0.18, respectively). The rate of recoil of torsion, determined wholly noninvasively, provides an isovolumic phase, preload-independent assessment of LV relaxation. Use of this novel parameter should allow the detailed study of diastolic function in states known to affect filling rates, such as aging, hypertension, and congestive heart failure.  相似文献   

14.
Left ventricular (LV) diastolic function during atrial fibrillation (AF) remains poorly understood due to the complex interaction of factors and beat-to-beat variability. The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the physiological determinants of beat-to-beat changes in LV diastolic function during AF. The RR intervals preceding a given cardiac beat were measured from the right ventricular electrogram in 12 healthy open-chest mongrel dogs during AF. Doppler echocardiography and LV pressure and volume beat-to-beat analyses were performed. The LV filling time (FT) and early diastolic mitral inflow velocity-time integral (E(vti)) were measured using the pulsed Doppler method. The LV end-diastolic volume (EDV), peak systolic LV pressure (LVP), minimum value of the first derivative of LV pressure curve (dP/dt(min)), and the time constant of LV pressure decay (tau) were evaluated with the use of a conductance catheter for 100 consecutive cardiac cycles. Beat-to-beat analysis revealed a cascade of important causal relations. LV-FT showed a significant positive linear relationship with E(vti) (r = 0.87). Importantly, there was a significant positive linear relationship between the RR interval and LV-EDV in the same cardiac beat (r = 0.53). Consequently, there was a positive linear relationship between LV-EDV and subsequent peak systolic LVP (r = 0.82). Furthermore, there were significant positive linear and negative curvilinear relationships between peak systolic LVP and dP/dt(min) (r = 0.95) and tau (r = -0.85), respectively, in the same cardiac beat. In addition, there was a significant negative curvilinear relationship between dP/dt(min) and tau (r = -0.86). We have concluded that the determinants of LV diastolic function in individual beats during AF depend strongly on the peak systolic LVP. This suggests that the major benefit of slower ventricular rate appears related to lengthening of LV filling interval, promoting subsequent higher peak systolic LVP and greater LV relaxation.  相似文献   

15.
Left ventricular (LV) twist is thought to play an important role in cardiac function. However, how twist affects systolic or diastolic function is not understood in detail. We acquired apical and basal short-axis images of dogs undergoing open-chest procedures (n = 15) using a GE Vivid 7 at baseline and during the use of an apical suction device (Starfish) to limit apical rotation. We measured LV pressure and stroke volume using a micromanometer-tipped catheter and an ultrasonic flow probe, respectively. Peak radial strain, peak rotation, peak twist, peak systolic twisting rate (TR), peak untwisting rate during isovolumic relaxation period (UR(IVR)), and peak early diastolic untwisting rate after mitral valve opening (UR(E)) were determined using speckle tracking echocardiography. Immobilizing the apex with gentle suction significantly decreased apical rotation (-50 ± 27%) and slightly increased basal rotation, resulting in a significant decrease in twist. The time constant of LV relaxation (τ) was prolonged, and LV end-diastolic pressure increased. TR and UR(IVR) decreased. LV systolic pressure, peak positive and negative first derivative of LV pressure (±dP/dt), stroke volume, radial strain, and UR(E) were not changed. The correlation between τ and UR(IVR) (r = 0.63, P = 0.0006) was stronger than that between peak +dP/dt and TR (r = 0.46, P = 0.01). Diastolic function was impaired with reduced apical rotation and UR(IVR) when the apex of the heart was immobilized using an apical suction device.  相似文献   

16.
Myocardial depression in sepsis is frequently encountered clinically and contributes to morbidity and mortality. Increased plasma levels of endothelin-1 (ET-1) have been described in septic shock, and previous reports have shown beneficial effects on cardiovascular performance and survival in septic models using ET receptor antagonists. The aim of the current study was to investigate specific cardiac effects of ET receptor antagonism in endotoxicosis. Sixteen domestic pigs were anesthetized and subjected to endotoxin for 5 h. Eight of these pigs were given tezosentan (dual ET receptor antagonist) after 3 h. Cardiac effects were evaluated using the left ventricular (LV) pressure-volume relationship. Endotoxin was not associated with any effects on parameters of LV contractile function [end-systolic elastance (Ees), preload recruitable stroke work (PRSW), power(max)/end-diastolic volume (PWR(max)/EDV) and dP/dt(max)/end-diastolic volume (dP/dt(max)/EDV)] but with impairments in isovolumic relaxation (time constant for pressure decay, tau) and mechanical efficiency. Tezosentan administration decreased Ees, PWR(max)/EDV, and dP/dt(max)/EDV, while improving tau and LV stiffness. Thus, dual ET receptor antagonism was associated with a decline in contractile function but, in contrast, improved diastolic function. Positive hemodynamic effects from ET receptor antagonism in acute endotoxemia may be due to changes in cardiac load and enhanced diastolic function rather than improved contractile function.  相似文献   

17.
Pattern of right ventricular pressure (RVP) fall and its afterload dependence were examined by analyzing ventricular pressure curves and corresponding pressure dP/dt phase planes obtained in both ventricles in the rat heart in situ. Time and value of dP/dt(min), and the time constant tau were measured at baseline and during variable RV afterload elevations, induced by beat-to-beat pulmonary trunk constrictions. RVP and left ventricular pressure (LVP) decays were divided into initial accelerative and subsequent decelerative phases separated by corresponding dP/dt(min). At baseline, LVP fall was decelerative during 4/5 of its course, whereas only 1/3 of RVP decay occurred in a decelerative fashion. During RV afterload elevations, the absolute value of RV-dP/dt(min) and RV-tau increased, whilst time to RV dP/dt(min) decreased. Concomitantly, the proportion of RVP decay following a decelerative course increased, so that in highly RV afterloaded heartbeats RVP fall became more similar to LVP fall. In conclusion, RVP and LVP decline have distinct patterns, their major portion being decelerative in the LV and accelerative in the RV. In the RV, dP/dt(min), tau and the proportional contribution of accelerative and decelerative phases for ventricular pressure fall are afterload-dependent. Consequently, tau evaluates a relatively much shorter segment of RVP than LVP fall.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The left ventricular isovolumic pressure decay, obtained by cardiac catheterization, is widely characterized by the time constant tau of the exponential regression p(t)=Pomega+(P0-Pomega)exp(-t/tau). However, several authors prefer to prefix Pomega=0 instead of coestimating the pressure asymptote empirically; others present tau values estimated by both methods that often lead to discordant results and interpretation of lusitropic changes. The present study aims to clarify the relations between the tau estimates from both methods and to decide for the more reliable estimate. The effect of presetting a zero asymptote on the tau estimate was investigated mathematically and empirically, based on left ventricular pressure decay data from isolated ejecting rat and guinea pig hearts at different preload and during spontaneous decrease of cardiac function. Estimating tau with preset Pomega=0 always yields smaller values than the regression with empirically estimated asymptote if the latter is negative and vice versa. The sequences of tau estimates from both methods can therefore proceed in reverse direction if tau and Pomega change in opposite directions between the measurements. This is exemplified by data obtained during an increasing preload in spontaneously depressed isolated hearts. The estimation of the time constant of isovolumic pressure fall with a preset zero asymptote is heavily biased and cannot be used for comparing the lusitropic state of the heart in hemodynamic conditions with considerably altered pressure asymptotes.  相似文献   

20.
Left ventricular (LV) untwisting starts early during the isovolumic relaxation phase and proceeds throughout the early filling phase, releasing elastic energy stored by the preceding systolic deformation. Data relating untwisting, relaxation, and intraventricular pressure gradients (IVPG), which represent another manifestation of elastic recoil, are sparse. To understand the interaction between LV mechanics and inflow during early diastole, Doppler tissue images (DTI), catheter-derived pressures (apical and basal LV, left atrial, and aortic), and LV volume data were obtained at baseline, during varying pacing modes, and during dobutamine and esmolol infusion in seven closed-chest anesthetized dogs. LV torsion and torsional rate profiles were analyzed from DTI data sets (apical and basal short-axis images) with high temporal resolution (6.5 +/- 0.7 ms). Repeated-measures regression models showed moderately strong correlation of peak LV twisting with peak LV untwisting rate (r = 0.74), as well as correlations of peak LV untwisting rate with the time constant of LV pressure decay (tau, r = -0.66) and IVPG (r = 0.76, P < 0.0001 for all). In a multivariate analysis, peak LV untwisting rate was an independent predictor of tau and IVPG (P < 0.0001, for both). The start of LV untwisting coincided with the beginning of relaxation and preceded suction-aided filling resulting from elastic recoil. Untwisting rate may be a useful marker of diastolic function or even serve as a therapeutic target for improving diastolic function.  相似文献   

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