Abstract

To evaluate tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) of the left ventricular (LV) free wall (FW) and ventricular septum (VS) as an indicator of LV systolic function in dogs. 7 healthy Beagles. Doses of dobutamine (5 and 10 microg/kg/min) and esmolol (50 and 100 microg/kg/min) were infused into the LV of each dog. With each dose, heart rate; myocardial performance index (MPI); transmitral inflow and ejection time (determined via pulsed-wave Doppler [PWD] echocardiography); and FW and VS velocities of the mitral valve annulus (determined via TDI during systole [S'], early diastole [E'], and late diastole [A']) were assessed. With each dose, dobutamine significantly increased heart rate and the first derivatives of LV pressure (+dP/dt and -dP/dt), whereas esmolol significantly decreased the +dP/dt and -dP/dt values, compared with baseline. Esmolol (100 microg/kg/min) significantly decreased the VS-TDI-derived S' velocity and FW-TDI-derived E' velocity; dobutamine significantly increased transmitral inflow and TDI velocities. Regression coefficient between VS-TDI-derived S' velocity and +dP/dt was higher than that between FW-TDI-derived S' velocity and +dP/dt. Compared with baseline, the PWD- and VS-TDI-derived MPI were significantly decreased by dobutamine and significantly increased by esmolol at each dose. Values of FW-TDI-derived MPI were higher than values derived via the other techniques. Correlation between +dP/dt and VS-TDI-derived MPI was greater than that between +dP/dt and FW-TDI- or PWD-derived MPI. In healthy dogs, the VS-TDI-derived S' velocity and MPI appear to be reliable assessments for evaluating LV systolic function.

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