Abstract

Echocardiographic findings vary with shock severity, as defined by the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) shock stage. Left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) measured by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) can predict mortality in the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU). We sought to determine whether LVSWI could refine mortality risk stratification by the SCAI shock classification in the CICU. We included consecutive CICU patients from 2007 to 2015 with TTE data available to calculate the LVSWI, specifically the mean arterial pressure, stroke volume index and medial mitral E/e' ratio. In-hospital mortality as a function of LVSWI was evaluated across the SCAI shock stages using logistic regression, before and after multivariable adjustment. We included 3635 unique CICU patients, with a mean age of 68.1 ± 14.5 years (36.5% females); 61.1% of patients had an acute coronary syndrome. The LVSWI progressively decreased with increasing shock severity, as defined by increasing SCAI shock stage. A total of 203 (5.6%) patients died during hospitalization, with higher in-hospital mortality among patients with lower LVSWI (adjusted OR 0.66 per 10 J/m2 higher) or higher SCAI shock stage (adjusted OR 1.24 per each higher stage). A LVSWI <33 J/m2 was associated with higher adjusted in-hospital mortality, particularly among patients with shock (SCAI stages C, D and E). The LVSWI by TTE noninvasively characterizes the severity of shock, including both systolic and diastolic parameters, and can identify low-risk and high-risk patients at each level of clinical shock severity.

Highlights

  • Cardiogenic shock is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) [1–3]

  • We demonstrated that patients with a low stroke volume index (SVI) or high E/e’ ratio had higher in-hospital mortality across the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) shock stages, making it likely that ECHO-Left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) would be associated with mortality as well [10]

  • Out of a database of 10,004 unique CICU patients, we excluded 6,369 patients: 317 patients without an echocardiogram, 1,299 whose echocardiogram was not a transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), 2,482 patients whose TTE was more than one day before or after CICU admission, and 2,271 patients whose TTE did not have data available to calculate the ECHO-LVSWI (Fig 2)

Read more

Summary

Background

Echocardiographic findings vary with shock severity, as defined by the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) shock stage. Left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) measured by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) can predict mortality in the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU).

Methods
Results
Conclusions
Introduction
Discussion
Limitations of this study
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call