Evaluation of the Left Ventricle in Patients with Mitral Stenosis
Author(s) -
Harvey Feigenbaum,
Richard W. Campbell,
Charles M. Wunsch,
E. F. Steinmetz
Publication year - 1966
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/01.cir.34.3.462
Subject(s) - medicine , preload , cardiology , ventricle , mitral valve stenosis , mitral valve , diastole , supine position , stenosis , cardiac catheterization , hemodynamics , heart catheterization , blood pressure
In an attempt to objectively evaluate the status of the left ventricle in 32 patients with mitral stenosis, a modified form of supine leg exercise was done during simultaneous left and right heart catheterization. Besides measuring the usual hemodynamic parameters, a ratio of mitral valve flow (MVF) or diastolic left ventricular volume change (&Dgr;v/&Dgr;t) and the slope of the rise of left ventricular diastolic pressure (&Dgr;p/&Dgr;t) was calculated at rest and during exercise (&Dgr;v/&Dgr;p). The results of these measurements were compared with those obtained on nine patients with either innocent functional heart murmurs or hemodynamically insignificant stenotic valvular lesions.None of the nine control patients had left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (LVEDP) greater than 12 mm Hg either at rest or with exercise. Exercise also did not appreciably alter the &Dgr;v/&Dgr;p ratio. Among the patients with mitral stenosis eight patients had distinctly elevated (greater than 14 mm Hg) LVEDP with exercise and 19 patients, including the eight with abnormal LVEDP, decreased the &Dgr;v/&Dgr;p ratio with exercise.The difficulties and limitations associated with this type of study are discussed. However, there is a distinct possibility that these results are indicative of an abnormal left ventricle in some patients with mitral stenosis. It is further suggested that this abnormality may be related in some way to decreased left ventricular compliance. In addition, a close statistical correlation between &Dgr;v/&Dgr;p and cardiac output implicates this left ventricular abnormality as a possible etiological factor in the reduced cardiac output seen in many patients with mitral stenosis.
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