
Tissue Doppler systolic annular velocity and myocardial performance index as predictors of right ventricular affection and culprit lesion location in acute inferior myocardial infarction
Author(s) -
Walaa Adel,
Viola William,
Mary Josef,
Nagwa Al-Mahallawy
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the egyptian heart journal /the egyptian heart journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.212
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 2090-911X
pISSN - 1110-2608
DOI - 10.1016/j.ehj.2014.01.002
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , right coronary artery , myocardial infarction , lesion , culprit , surgery , coronary angiography
AimThis study aims at using peak lateral tricuspid annular systolic velocity (ST) and right ventricular myocardial performance index (RV-MPI) as predictors of RV infarction (RVI) and subsequently localizing the culprit lesion in the proximal right coronary (RCA) rather than other locations [the distal RCA or dominant left circumflex (LCX) artery].Patients30 patients suffering from acute inferior infarction, were subjected to early conventional and pulsed wave tissue Doppler echocardiographic examinations, measuring (ST) and calculating RV-MPI. Half of the patients had the culprit lesion proximal to the RV branch of the RCA and the other half had non-proximal RCA occlusion.ResultsST values were significantly reduced in patients with RVI. Cutoff value of ST was found to be 11.9cm/s with a sensitivity 80.0%, specificity 93.3%, positive predictive value 92.3% and negative predictive value 82.4% in the identification of proximal RCA lesion as the culprit lesion.The calculated RV-MPI was significantly different; its mean value was 0.666±0.118 in the proximal RCA vs. 0.524±0.133 in the non-proximal RCA patients. RV-MPI cutoff value proved to be 0.50 with sensitivity 80%, specificity 66.7%, negative predictive value 76.9% and positive predictive value 70.6%.ConclusionRVI caused by a proximal RCA lesion could be predicted using TDI to assess ST and RV-MPI from the tricuspid annulus. Patients with ST<11.9cm/s and RV-MPI⩾0.5 indicated most probably occlusion of the proximal RCA