Abstract

Biventricular pacing therapy is effective in patients with severe congestive heart failure. Strain Doppler imaging (SDI) is a new tool for measuring regional myocardial deformation. We evaluated regional wall motion by strain Doppler imaging in 13 patients who had conventional indications for a pacemaker (74 +/- 6 years old) and in six with NYHA Class III or IV heart failure with a biventricular pacemaker (HF-RV: during right ventricular pacing, HF-BV: during biventricular pacing). The other seven patients had normal LV function (N-RV). Wall motion was assessed by strain of the myocardium, and the interval between the Q wave of the surface ECG and the peak strain (QPSI) was measured in three septal and three lateral segments. Interventricular contraction delay was determined as the interval between the onset of the left and right ventricular outflow waves. Intraventricular contraction delay was determined as the time difference between minimum and maximum QPSI. Strain of HF-RV was significantly greater than that of N-RV (-9.6%+/- 2.5% vs -14.4%+/- 2.3%, P < 0.0001). Intraventricular contraction delay of HF-RV was significantly greater than that of N-RV (273 +/- 12 vs 151 +/- 69 ms, P = 0.0004). Strain of HF-RV was not significantly greater than that of HF-BV (-9.6% +/- 2.5% vs -10.6% +/- 2.9%). Interventricular contraction delay of HF-RV was greater than that of HF-BV (37.2 +/- 44.7 vs 16.2 +/- 47.4 ms, P < 0.0001). Intraventricular contraction delay of HF-RV was significantly greater than that of HF-BV (322 +/- 101 vs 209 +/- 88 ms, P = 0.0006). In conclusion, biventricular pacing improves both interventricular contraction delay and intraventricular contraction delay in patients with conventional indications for a pacemaker with severe congestive heart failure, and SDI is useful to predict the efficacy of biventricular pacing.

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