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Progression of Systolic Abnormalities in Patients With “Isolated” Diastolic Heart Failure and Diastolic Dysfunction
Author(s) -
CheukMan Yu,
Hong Lin,
Hua Yang,
ShunLing Kong,
Qing Zhang,
Steven Wai-Luen Lee
Publication year - 2002
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/hc1002.105185
Subject(s) - medicine , diastole , cardiology , heart failure , ejection fraction , diastolic heart failure , systole , basal (medicine) , blood pressure , insulin
Background —The definition of diastolic heart failure (DHF) relies on the use of sensitive tools to exclude the presence of systolic dysfunction. The use of ejection fraction (EF) of 50% as the cutoff point may not be adequate to address such a task. We believe that systolic dysfunction is common in DHF.Methods and Results —Echocardiography with tissue Doppler imaging was performed in 339 subjects, of whom 92 had systolic heart failure (SHF) (EF<50%), 73 had DHF (EF≥50% with diastolic abnormalities on Doppler echocardiography), and 68 had isolated diastolic dysfunction (DD); 106 were normal control subjects. Regional myocardial velocity curves were constructed off-line with the use of a 6-basal, 6-midsegmental model. The peak regional myocardial sustained systolic (SM ) and early diastolic (EM ) velocities were significantly lower in patients with SHF, DHF, and DD than in control subjects in almost all the myocardial segments. Likewise, the mean SM (SHF<DHF<DD<control subjects; 3.3±1.0<4.6±1.3<5.4±1.0<6.3±1.0 cm/s; allP ≤0.001) and mean EM (SHF=DHF<DD<control subjects; 3.6±1.2 =3.9±1.3<5.3±1.6<7.2±1.7 cm/s; allP <0.001) from the six basal segments were decreased in all the disease groups. A mean SM of 4.4cm/s (−2 SD of control subjects) predicted the presence of systolic dysfunction in 92% of patients with SHF, 52% with DHF, and 14% with DD.Conclusions —Through the use of tissue Doppler imaging, systolic abnormalities were evident in patients previously labeled as DHF and to a much lesser extent, isolated DD. This indicates the common coexistence of systolic and diastolic dysfunction in a spectrum of different severity in the pathophysiological process of heart failure.

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