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Effects of Dobutamine Infusion on Mitral Regurgitation
Author(s) -
SONODA MAKOTO,
TAKENAKA KATSU,
SAKAMOTO TSUGUYA,
WATANABE FUMIYOSHI,
NAKAJIMA YOSHIE,
DONG YANG WEI,
OMATA MASAO
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
echocardiography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.404
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1540-8175
pISSN - 0742-2822
DOI - 10.1111/j.1540-8175.1998.tb00573.x
Subject(s) - cardiology , medicine , mitral regurgitation , dobutamine , stroke volume , mitral valve , hemodynamics , blood pressure , heart rate
Both intensity of mitral regurgitant murmur and color‐coded Doppler regurgitant signal area have been reported to correlate with the degree of regurgitation. To evaluate the relationship between the intensity of regurgitant murmur and severity of mitral regurgitation, phonocardiography, echocardiography, and Doppler ultrasound were performed in 18 patients with mitral regurgitation before and during dobutamine infusion. Mitral regurgitation was due to mitral valve prolapse with ruptured chordae tendineae in 8 patients, rheumatic change in 5 patients, and dilated cardiomyopathy in 5 patients. With intravenous dobutamine infusion, heart rate (77–103 beats/min), systolic blood pressure (119–144 mmHg), peak mitral regurgitant jet velocity (4.5–5.4 m/sec), intensity of mitral regurgitant murmur (to 201% of that before infusion in early systole) increased, while left ventricular end‐diastolic volume (124–102 mm), left ventricular end‐systolic volume (57–42 mm), mitral anular diameter (33–28mm), and color Doppler mitral regurgitant signal area (704–416 mm 2 ) decreased (P < 0.05). Total (forward + backward) left ventricular stroke volume (66–61 mL/beat) showed no change. Dobutamine decreased mitral regurgitant flow/beat, regardless of etiology of mitral regurgitation, which was probably due to the decrease of left ventricular size and mitral annular diameter. Although total (forward + backward) left ventricular stroke volume was unchanged, dobutamine effectively increased forward left ventricular stroke volume by decreasing backward regurgitation. Mitral regurgitant murmur became louder despite the decrease of mitral regurgation, indicating the uselessness of auscultation in the grading of the severity of mitral regurgitation.

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