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Myocardial work and left ventricular contractile reserve during stress echocardiography: An angiographic validation

Natalie Edwards, G. Scalia, A. Putrino, Vinesh Appadurai, Surendran Sabapathy, Bonita Anderson, Robert Chamberlain, Bijoy K. Khandheria, Jonathan Chan

2021Echocardiography12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Objective: This study sought to determine the contractile reserve (CR) response to exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) quantified by the novel parameter, non‐invasive myocardial work (MW), in subjects with angiographically proven coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods: CR was measured by the relative change in ejection fraction (EF), global longitudinal strain (GLS) and MW indices from rest to peak exercise in 304 patients referred for clinically indicated ESE. Positive ESE patients proceeded to coronary angiography and further risk stratified based on either percutaneous or surgical intervention. Results: CR GLS and global work index (CR GWI ) significantly decreased with exercise induced ischemia and angiographically proven significant CAD (CR GLS −1.6±3.5%; CR GWI −8.6±511 mm Hg% decrement, p < 0.001) compared to non‐ischemic patients (CR GLS 1.4±2.2%; CR GWI 398±404 mm Hg% improvement). Global constructive work (CR GCW ) was significantly higher (p < 0.0001) in non‐ischemic (818±457 mm Hg%) and blunted in ischemic patients (208±550 mm Hg%). CR GCW (AUC .81; 95%CI:.75–.86) demonstrated the most association for inducible ischemia followed by CR GLS (AUC .75; 95%CI:.69–.80), CR GWI (AUC .73, 95%CI:.67–.79) and CR EF (AUC .71; 95%CI:.65–.77, p < 0.001). Subgroup analysis showed patients requiring surgical revascularization demonstrated a significantly lower CR GWE (−11.5±7.6%, p < 0.05) as a result of reduced CR GCW (281±573 mm Hg%, p < 0.05) and increased global wasted work (CR GWW , 289±151 mm Hg%, p = 0.09). Conclusion: Multivessel disease requiring surgical revascularization have the greatest reduction in CR. MW may potentially improve detection of ischemia and further risk stratification during ESE to maximize the benefits of revascularization.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCardiologyInternal medicineCoronary artery diseaseEjection fractionRevascularizationFractional flow reserveCoronary angiographyStress EchocardiographyPercutaneous coronary interventionIschemiaAngiographyMyocardial infarctionHeart failureCardiac Imaging and DiagnosticsCardiovascular Function and Risk FactorsCoronary Interventions and Diagnostics