Abstract
Introduction: Reports of left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) rarely include descriptions of the right ventricle (RV). Hypothesis: This study aimed to describe the characteristics of the RV in LVNC patients with reduced LV function (LVNC-R) compared with patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and subjects with LVNC with normal left ventricular ejection fraction (LV-EF) (LVNC-N). Methods: Forty-four LVNC-R patients, 44 LVNC-N participants, and 31 DCM patients were included in this retrospective study (LV-EF: LVNC-R: 33.4±10.2%; LVNC-N: 65.0±5.9%; DCM: 34.6±7.9%). Each group was further divided into two subgroups by the amount of RV trabeculation. Results: There was no difference in the RV-EF between the groups, and the RV trabecular mass correlated positively with the RV volume and negatively with the RV-EF in all the groups. All the measured parameters were comparable between the groups with decreased LV function. Subgroups with RV hypertrabeculation showed significantly higher RV volumes and lower RV-EF in the decreased-LV-function groups than patients with normal RV trabeculation. LV trabeculation correlated with RV volumes in both noncompacted groups, while the correlation with RV trabeculation was observed only in the LVNC-N group (r=0.469, p=0.001). Both decreased-LV-function groups had worse RV strain values than the LVNC-N group; however, RV strain values correlated with RV trabeculation predominantly in the LVNC-R group. Conclusions: Correlations between LV trabeculation and RV parameters and the presence and characteristics of RV hypertrabeculation raise the possibility of RV involvement in noncompaction; moreover, RV strain values might be helpful in the detection of early subclinical changes of the RV.
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