Abstract

Patients with ischemia with non-obstructive coronary arteries (INOCA) have an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events in the future, which is widespread but underdiagnosed. The purpose of this study is to explore the application value of adenosine stress myocardial contrast echocardiography (ASMCE) in INOCA disease, so that clinicians can early identify and intervene patients with left ventricular function subclinical impairment in INOCA. We enrolled 118 patients with INOCA by ASMCE and invasive coronary angiography (ICA), 97 of whom had complete data. The study population was divided into two subgroups depending on coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR): impaired CFVR group (n = 34) and normal CFVR group (n = 63). Global longitudinal strain endocardial myocardial (GLSendo), mid-myocardial (GLSmid) and epicardial myocardial (GLSepi) increased after stress in both groups; transmural strain, wall motion scored index (WMSI) and myocardial perfusion scored index (MPSI) increased and FORCE decreased in impaired CFVR group after stress, but there was no difference in normal group before and after stress. There was no significant difference in left ventricular myocardial mechanical parameters, including ΔGLSendo, ΔGLSmid, ΔGLSepi, GLSendo-epi Reserve, Δpeak strain dispersion (PSD), PSD Reserve between the two groups, but ΔEF, strain reserve and left ventricular contractile reserve (LVCR) in the impaired CFVR group were lower than those in the normal CFVR group, while ΔWMSI and ΔMPSI were increased. CFVR can be a clinically valuable indicator in the ASMCE diagnosis of patients with microvascular angina pectoris in INOCA. In the evaluation of left ventricular function in INOCA patients, attention should be paid not only to myocardial deformation, but also to the dynamic changes of LVCR and myocardial perfusion during peak hyperemia.

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