Abstract

Purpose: Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) improves left ventricular (LV) function acutely, with further improvements and reverse remodelling during chronic CRT. The current study investigated the relation between acute improvement of LV systolic function, acute mechanical recoordination, and long-term reverse remodelling after CRT. Methods: In 35 patients, LV speckle tracking longitudinal strain, LV volumes & ejection fraction (LVEF) were assessed by echocardiography before, acutely within three days, and 6 months after CRT. A subgroup of 25 patients underwent invasive assessment of the maximal rate of LV pressure rise (dP/dtmax,) during CRT-implantation. The acute change in dP/dtmax, LVEF, systolic discoordination (internal stretch fraction [ISF] and LV systolic rebound stretch [SRSlv]) and systolic dyssynchrony (standard deviation of peak strain times [2DS-SD18]) was studied, and their association with long-term reverse remodelling were determined. Results: CRT induced acute and ongoing recoordination (ISF from 45 ± 18 to 27 ± 11 and 23 ± 12%, p < 0.001; SRS from 2.27 ± 1.33 to 0.74 ± 0.50 and 0.71 ± 0.43%, p < 0.001) and improved LV function (dP/dtmax 668 ± 185 vs. 817 ± 198 mmHg/s, p < 0.001; stroke volume 46 ± 15 vs. 54 ± 20 and 52 ± 16 ml; LVEF 19 ± 7 vs. 23 ± 8 and 27 ± 10%, p < 0.001). Acute recoordination related to reverse remodelling (r = 0.601 and r = 0.765 for ISF & SRSlv, respectively, p < 0.001). Acute functional improvements of LV systolic function however, neither related to reverse remodelling nor to the extent of acute recoordination. Conclusion: Long-term reverse remodelling after CRT is likely determined by (acute) recoordination rather than by acute hemodynamic improvements. Discoordination may therefore be a more important CRT-substrate that can be assessed and, acutely restored.

Highlights

  • Previous studies have demonstrated that the clinical benefits of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) are accompanied by improvements of left ventricular (LV) functionPhilippe C

  • This comparative study set out on the hypothesis that long-term improvement of LV function and reverse remodelling after CRT is determined by acute recoordination of LV contraction, rather than by a functional response characterised by acute hemodynamic improvements

  • The subgroup with LV dP/dtmax-guided optimization comprised 25 patients enabling the direct comparison of acute LV dP/dtmax augmentation and acute recoordination with long-term response

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Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have demonstrated that the clinical benefits of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) are accompanied by improvements of left ventricular (LV) functionPhilippe C. Previous studies have demonstrated that the clinical benefits of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) are accompanied by improvements of left ventricular (LV) function. The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging (2021) 37:1903–1911 little been studied [12, 13]. A considerable part of the remodelling processes involved in CRT appears to be linked to local mechanics [14,15,16]. This comparative study set out on the hypothesis that long-term improvement of LV function (i.e. ejection fraction) and reverse remodelling after CRT is determined by acute recoordination of LV contraction, rather than by a functional response characterised by acute hemodynamic improvements

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