Abstract
The right ventricle has a complex contraction pattern of uncertain clinical relevance. We aimed to assess the relationship between right ventricular (RV) contraction pattern and RV-pulmonary arterial (PA) coupling defined by the gold-standard pressure-volume loop-derived ratio of end-systolic/arterial elastance (Ees/Ea). Prospectively enrolled patients with suspected or confirmed pulmonary hypertension underwent three-dimensional echocardiography, standard right heart catheterization, and RV conductance catheterization. RV-PA uncoupling was categorized as severe (Ees/Ea < 0.8), moderate (Ees/Ea 0.8-1.29), and none/mild (Ees/Ea ≥ 1.3). Clinical severity was determined from hemodynamics using a truncated version of the 2022 European Society of Cardiology/European Respiratory Society risk stratification scheme. Fifty-three patients were included, 23 with no/mild, 24 with moderate, and 6 with severe uncoupling. Longitudinal shortening was decreased in patients with moderate vs no/mild uncoupling (p<0.001) and intermediate vs low hemodynamic risk (p<0.001), discriminating low risk from intermediate/high risk with an optimal threshold of 18% (sensitivity 80%, specificity 87%). Anteroposterior shortening was impaired in patients with severe vs moderate uncoupling (p=0.033), low vs intermediate risk (p=0.018), and high vs intermediate risk (p=0.010), discriminating high risk from intermediate/low risk with an optimal threshold of 15% (sensitivity 100%, specificity 83%). Left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic volume was decreased in patients with severe uncoupling (p=0.035 vs no/mild uncoupling). Early RV-PA uncoupling is associated with reduced longitudinal function, whereas advanced RV-PA uncoupling is associated with reduced anteroposterior movement and LV preload, all in a risk-related fashion. GOV: NCT04663217.
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