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Evaluation of Diastolic Dysfunction by Echocardiography

Evaluation of Diastolic Dysfunction by Echocardiography. Brandon Kuebler, MD Pediatric Cardiology Fellow Wednesday, February 09, 2011. Assessment of Diastolic Ventricular Function. Defining diastole Methods to assess diastole Patterns of diastolic disease Age-related changes.

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Evaluation of Diastolic Dysfunction by Echocardiography

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  1. Evaluation of Diastolic Dysfunction by Echocardiography Brandon Kuebler, MD Pediatric Cardiology Fellow Wednesday, February 09, 2011

  2. Assessment of Diastolic Ventricular Function • Defining diastole • Methods to assess diastole • Patterns of diastolic disease • Age-related changes

  3. When does diastole occur? • Is it around tea time? • No • Required for every heart beat Systole Diastole

  4. Phases of Diastole • Isovolumetric relaxation • Rapid filling • E-wave • 2/3 LV filling • Diastasis • Atrial contraction • A-wave • 1/3 LV filling

  5. Factors Affecting Diastole • Ventricular function • AV valve function • Rate of relaxation • Ventricular compliance • Atrial systolic function • Preload • Heart rate and rhythm

  6. Pulmonary Venous Inflow • Apical 4-chamber view • Identify RUPV or LUPV inflow parallel to beam • Pulsed-wave sampling • 1-2 cm distal to orifice • Alternatives views: • Parasternal • Suprasternal • Subcostals Place Apical 4 w PW in Distal PV

  7. Pulsed-wave Pulmonary Vein Inflow • Identify peak S and D velocities • Measure atrial reversal (AR) duration • AR presence is variable. It is indicative of abnormal elevated LA pressure in a neonate, but may be normal in a child with more compliant pulmonary veins. The duration of flow reversal is more helpful in relation to atrial systole

  8. Note: S-wave may be biphasic owing to differences of atrial relaxation and mitral valve annular displacement • Should take the highest of the peaks

  9. Mitral Inflow • Apical 4-chamber view • Align Doppler beam to be parallel to mitral inflow • Pulsed-wave sampling at tips of MV leaflets • Decreased velocity if sampled within LA

  10. Pulsed-wave Mitral Valve Inflow • Peak E and A velocities, ratio E/A • Mitral A-wave duration (to compare with PV AR duration) • Mitral deceleration time(from peak of E-wave to base) • Mitral Doppler VTI (and valve area)

  11. Mitral Valve Doppler Evaluation • In a 5 chamber view • Continuous-wave across tips of MV through LVOT • Obtain mitral inflow & LV outflow • Measure Isovolumetric Relaxation Time (IVRT)

  12. Tissue Doppler • Measures displacement of myocardium while avoiding blood flow detection throughout the cardiac cycle • For our purposes: • Mitral valve annular junction • Septal annular junction • Tricuspid annular junction • Mitral and tricuspid data is relatively volume load independent, including respiratory cycle

  13. TDI Methodology • Using Doppler pulsed cursor, 3-5 mm • Set Nyquist limits to 15-30 cm/s • Using lowest wall filter • Set dynamic range to 30-35db • Sweep speed of 100-150 mm/s

  14. TDI Pulsed-wave • Ea ( or E´), Aa ( or A´), Sa ( or S´) waves • IVRT and Isovolumetric Contraction Time (IVCT) • Important to maintain a parallel line of annular motion with the imaging beam

  15. Color M-mode Flow Propagation • Estimate of ventricular filling to correlate with LV relaxation, even at increased LA pressures • Not affected by preload • Varies with changes of lusitropic conditions • Correlates in ischemic heart disease

  16. Color M-mode Flow Propagation • In apical 4 chamber view • Align M-mode cursor through LV apex and orifice of MV • Apply Color Doppler • Switch to M-mode acquisition • Decrease Nyquist limit until color inflow shows line of aliasing

  17. Color M-mode Flow Propagation • Demonstrated by Garcia et al., JACC 1999, that in both dogs with occluded IVC and in adults undergoing CABG, under partial CPB, measures were not affected • Although, MV E waves and associated measures were impacted by each scenario • In dogs, under various doses of dobutamine and esmolol, there were expected changes of Vp correlating to measured changes of LVEDp

  18. Border et al, JASE 2003 20 pts age 6.6yrs ± 6yrs Indicated L heart cath w/o MV stenosis/arrhythmia Found E/ Vp > 2.0, LVEDp >15mmHg Sensitivity 100% Specificity 77% PPV: 70% NPV: 100% Calculations using Vp

  19. Calculations using Vp(FPV) • Gonzalez-Vilchez, JACC 1999 • Adults in ICU w Swan’s • 20 test, 34 study patients • Estimated PCWP = 4.5(103/[2•IVRT]+FPV)-9 • Simplified to: • 103/[2•IVRT]+FPV • Value ≥5.5, correlates to PCWP > 15mmHg (r=0.89)

  20. Calculations using Vp

  21. Use of TDI and Color M-mode in Infants • Study by Larrazet et al, Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, 2005 • Studied infants 3-8 months of age, immediately post-operatively for VSD/AVCD repair w LA line in place • For LA pressure > 10mmHg • E/Ea > 15 – Sensitivity 94%, Specificity 72% • E/Vp >2.0 – Sensitivity 83%, Specificity 89%

  22. LA Volume • In adults, atrial dilation has correlated as a risk for first CV event (a-fib, stroke, CHF) • Defined as: women ≥ 30cm2/m2, men ≥ 33cm2/m2 • Not routinely measured in children, but recent norms established 8/3π[(A1)(A2)/(L)] obtained from Apical 2 & 4 chamber views

  23. LA Volume in Children • Data collected by 3D Echo and separated by BSA • 0.5-0.75m2 : 19.6 mL/m2 • 0.75-1.0m2 : 21.7 mL/m2 • 1.0-1.25m2 : 22.0 mL/m2 • 1.25-1.5m2 : 24.5 mL/m2 • >1.5m2 : 27.4 mL/m2 • No normative values for RA established in kids

  24. Tricuspid and Right Heart Evaluation • Usual measures performed on MV, are influenced by variable preload through the respiratory cycle. • With inspiration amongst children • Peak E may increase by 26% • Peak A may increase by 20%

  25. Tricuspid and Right Heart Evaluation • SVC inflow invariably does not have AR amongst healthy children • AR-wave usually seen with: • Right atrial hypertension • Tricuspid stenosis • Reversal with ventricular systole • Significant tricuspid regurgitation • Loss of AV-synchrony • Restrictive physiology • Decreased flow of systemic veins or TV inflow with Exhalation seen with Tamponade • MV E-wave decreases by >25% during onset of INhalation

  26. Tricuspid and Right Heart Evaluation • In a restrictive, non-compliant RV, which acts essentially as a conduit for the PA • Forward flow may be seen in PA with atrial systole • Only in settings with low PVR or absence of distal stenoses • May be seen in those with history of Tetralogy or Pulmonary valve abnormalities

  27. Classification of Diastolic Dysfunction

  28. Classification of Diastolic Dysfunction

  29. Abnormal LV Relaxation • The ability of the LV myocardial filaments to actively uncouple after systole, is delayed • Ventricular compliance is unaffected • IVRT is prolonged, as time needed to decrease LV pressure < LA pressure is extended

  30. Abnormal LV Relaxation • LA-LV pressure difference in early diastole narrowed – max E-wave velocity decreased • LV relaxation is slower, so E-wave is prolonged • A-wave increased as a compensatory to complete LV filling Insert fig 8.14 Insert fig 8.15

  31. Abnormal LV Relaxation • Infamous “L-wave” seen in MV inflow pattern • Described by Keren in 1986 • Presence of LA-LV pressure gradient in diastasis • Occurs with MARKEDLY delayed LV relaxation

  32. Abnormal LV Relaxation … and LA Hypertension • Also called “Pseudonormalization” • Result of worsened ventricular compliance with transmitted increase of atrial pressure • Ultimately, relative pressure difference between LA-LV is similar to normal, just at higher pressure • Pulmonary vein inflow pattern helpful to distinguish this from normal

  33. Abnormal LV Relaxation … and LA Hypertension • TDI has been shown to be relatively independent of preload • Abali et al, JASE 2005, studied 100+ adult males after 500mL blood donation, found no differences in TDI measures or Color M-mode, Vp • Eidem et al, JASE 2005, found that children with chronic LV preload (VSD’s) and preserved systolic and diastolic function, did not have changes in TDI • Those with chronic afterload (AS) demonstrated decreases of TDI measures

  34. Abnormal LV Relaxation … and LA Hypertension • Nagueh et al, JACC 1997 • 125 adults, 60 cathed for PCWP, separated Normal from Impaired Relaxation from Pseudnormalized (EF low in this group) • Found E/Ea >10 correlated to PCWP of >12mmHg • Sensitivity 91%, Specificity 81%

  35. Nagueh et al, JACC 1997 Could predict mean PCWP= 1.24(E/Ea ) +1.9

  36. TDI in Pseudonormalization Nagueh et al, JACC 1997, 30; 1527-33

  37. Color M-mode in Pseudonormalization • Helpful to differentiate normal MV inflow patterns from ‘pseudonormalization’ • Decreased rate of flow propagation (Vp) correlate with delayed relaxation, even with elevated LA pressure • Measures are preload independent • Measure of MV peak E velocity to rate of flow propagation, E/ Vp > 2.0 predicts LVEDp >15mmHg (sensitivity 100%, specificity 77%)

  38. Restrictive Physiology/Decreased Ventricular Compliance • Ventricle is significantly stiff, non-compliant, that with small increases of volume, pressures increase disproportionately • On MV inflow, the E-wave is accelerated with short deceleration time due to rapid rise of ventricular pressure and the end of inflow • A-wave is remarkably small, if not absent all together, as atrial systole minimally generates a pressure gradient across the AV valve • Instead prolonged reflux in PV observed

  39. Restrictive Physiology/Decreased Ventricular Compliance • IVRT shortened due to atrial hypertension with early opening of MV and ventricular filling

  40. Measures through childhood • Infants • Very limited early diastolic flow • Significant contribution from atrial systole • Limited tolerance to changes in preload • Improved compliance around 2 months • Childhood • Limited variability of measures (Inflow/TDI) through childhood and adolescence • Noted changes with increasing IVRT likely associated with age-related decreased HR

  41. Tables of normative values for children are available

  42. Tables of normative values for children are available

  43. Let’s apply our data 52.4 cm/s 57.0 cm/s

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