Artery Research

Volume 25, Issue Supplement 1, December 2019, Pages S171 - S171

P130 Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Improves Early Ventricular Contraction and Reduces Time to Onset of Relaxation

Authors
Haotian Gu1, *, Simon Claridge2, Aldo Rinaldi2, Phil Chowienczyk1
1King’s College London, London, UK
2St Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK
*Corresponding author. Email: haotian.gu@kcl.ac.uk
Corresponding Author
Haotian Gu
Available Online 17 February 2020.
DOI
10.2991/artres.k.191224.156How to use a DOI?
Abstract

Background: Haemodynamic effects of Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy (CRT) may be mediated by an improvement in early systolic function, as well as by improvements in overall systolic function. We examined whether CRT improves early ventricular contraction as measured by first-phase ejection fraction (EF1) and time to onset of ventricular relaxation (TOR).

Methods: EF1 was defined as the fraction of LV volume ejected from the start of systole to the time of the first systolic peak (T1) on the carotid pressure waveform. Time-varying ejection phase myocardial wall stress (MWS) was calculated from echocardiographic imaging of left ventricular volumes and left ventricular pressure was obtained by carotid tonometry during systole calibrated from peripheral mean and diastolic blood pressure. TOR was defined as time to peak MWS over ejection time.

Results: 25 patients (aged 72.8 ± 8.5 years) with heart failure and severely reduced EF (30.2 ± 7.0%) were studied before and immediately after CRT implantation. There was no difference in mean arterial pressure, central systolic pressure and augmentation pressure after CRT implantation. There was significant improvement in overall ejection fraction (pre: 30.2 ± 6.7% vs post: 35.9 ± 8.1%, p = 0.002) and EF1 (pre: 10.9 ± 3.4% vs post: 13.7 ± 4.7%, p = 0.010). TOR reduced significantly (pre: 48.0 ± 14.3% vs post: 40.0 ± 10.7%, p = 0.0012). The change in EF1 was negatively associated with change in TOR (β = −0.586, p = 0.003). This relationship persisted after adjustment for age, gender, baseline MAP and baseline EF1 (β = −0.452, p = 0.007).

Conclusion: In patients with heart failure, an improvement of early ejection is associated with reduction in TOR immediately after CRT implantation.

Copyright
© 2019 Association for Research into Arterial Structure and Physiology. Publishing services by Atlantis Press International B.V.
Open Access
This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).

Journal
Artery Research
Volume-Issue
25 - Supplement 1
Pages
S171 - S171
Publication Date
2020/02/17
ISSN (Online)
1876-4401
ISSN (Print)
1872-9312
DOI
10.2991/artres.k.191224.156How to use a DOI?
Copyright
© 2019 Association for Research into Arterial Structure and Physiology. Publishing services by Atlantis Press International B.V.
Open Access
This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).

Cite this article

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Haotian Gu
AU  - Simon Claridge
AU  - Aldo Rinaldi
AU  - Phil Chowienczyk
PY  - 2020
DA  - 2020/02/17
TI  - P130 Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Improves Early Ventricular Contraction and Reduces Time to Onset of Relaxation
JO  - Artery Research
SP  - S171
EP  - S171
VL  - 25
IS  - Supplement 1
SN  - 1876-4401
UR  - https://doi.org/10.2991/artres.k.191224.156
DO  - 10.2991/artres.k.191224.156
ID  - Gu2020
ER  -