Abstract

Quantification of the tricuspid annulus (TA) is an important factor in determining the requirement for tricuspid annuloplasty in cardiac surgery. Three-dimensional echocardiography (3DE) has shown that the TA is biplanar with an antero-posterior longaxis and septo-lateral shortaxis, and that the commonly used 2D TEE (two-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography) four-chamber view (4ChV) underestimates the true TA longaxis. The authors hypothesized that the use of multiple 2D TEE TA views could attain greater TA long-axis measurements and smaller TA short-axis measurements than the 4ChV, and that the 4ChV has a significant but inconsistent bias relative to the maximal TA diameter measured by these views. Prospective observational study. Adult tertiary teaching hospital. 45 adult patients. Multiplanar 2D TEE assessment of the tricuspid annulus. Multiplanar assessment reliably produced larger TA long-axis measurements (93% of patients, 95% confidence interval: 81-98%) of (mean [95% confidence interval]) 40 mm (28-50 mm) compared with the 4ChV (34mm [25-44 mm], p < 0.0001) and smaller TA short-axis measurements (29 mm [20-38 mm], p < 0.0001) compared with the 4ChV. TA diameter by 4ChV assessment yielded an average bias of -5.6 mm, with 95% limits of agreement -15 to +3.9 mm compared with the largest TA long-axis measurement by multiplanar assessment. Multiplanar 2D TEE assessment of the TA long- and short-axis consistently achieves larger and smaller measurements, respectively, than the 4ChV. The 4ChV also is not a reliable index of the TA longaxis. If the time, proficiency, or equipment required for 3DE TA assessment are unavailable, the use of multiple standard and non-standard 2D TEE TA views may offer an alternative for TA assessment.

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