Abstract

Introduction: The effects of heart rate, inotropy, and lusitropy on multidimensional flow patterns and energetics within the human heart remain undefined. Recently, reduced volume and end-diastolic kinetic energy (KE) of the portion of left ventricular (LV) inflow passing directly to outflow, Direct flow (DF), have been shown to reflect inefficient LV pumping and to be a marker of LV dysfunction in heart failure patients. In this study, we hypothesized that increasing heart rate, inotropy, and lusitropy would result in an increased efficiency of intraventricular blood flow transit. Therefore, we sought to investigate LV 4D blood flow patterns and energetics with dobutamine infusion.Methods: 4D flow and morphological cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) data were acquired in twelve healthy subjects: at rest and with dobutamine infusion to achieve a target heart rate ~60% higher than the resting heart rate. A previously validated method was used for flow analysis: pathlines were emitted from the end-diastolic (ED) LV blood volume and traced forward and backward in time to separate four functional LV flow components. For each flow component, KE/mL blood volume at ED was calculated.Results: With dobutamine infusion there was an increase in heart rate (64%, p < 0.001), systolic blood pressure (p = 0.02) and stroke volume (p = 0.01). Of the 4D flow parameters, the most efficient flow component (DF), increased its proportion of EDV (p < 0.001). The EDV proportion of Residual volume, the blood residing in the ventricle over at least two cardiac cycles, decreased (p < 0.001). The KE/mL at ED for all flow components increased (p < 0.001). DF had the largest absolute and relative increase while Residual volume had the smallest absolute and relative increase.Conclusions: This study demonstrates that it is feasible to compare 4D flow patterns within the normal human heart at rest and with stress. At higher heart rate, inotropy and lusitropy, elicited by dobutamine infusion, the efficiency of intraventricular blood flow transit improves, as quantified by an increased relative volume and pre-systolic KE of the most efficient DF component of the LV volume. The change in these markers may allow a novel assessment of LV function and LV dysfunction over a range of stress.

Highlights

  • The effects of heart rate, inotropy, and lusitropy on multidimensional flow patterns and energetics within the human heart remain undefined

  • With the infusion of dobutamine heart rate increased from 66 ± 9 to 108 ± 13 bpm (p < 0.001), an increase of 64%, systolic blood pressure increased from 118 ± 13 to 135 ± 15 mmHg (p = 0.02) while diastolic blood pressure had no significant change, 68 ± 9 to 63 ± 8 mmHg (p = 0.25)

  • The left ventricular volumes changed with the infusion: LVEDV decreased from 153 ± 28 to 139 ± 35 mL (p = 0.004), LVESV decreased from 65 ± 17 to 36 ± 13 mL (p < 0.001), resulting in an increase of stroke volume from 88 ± 13 to 102 ± 25 mL (p = 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

The effects of heart rate, inotropy, and lusitropy on multidimensional flow patterns and energetics within the human heart remain undefined. The dynamic flow through the heart itself is yet to be completely characterized, prompting a growing interest in multidimensional intracardiac blood flow as studied with 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) [2, 3] This versatile and promising technique enables visualization and quantification of multidimensional blood flow patterns and energetics in the left ventricle (LV) [4,5,6], right ventricle (RV) [5, 7], left atrium (LA) [8, 9], and right atrium (RA) [9]. The contribution of the KE possessed by the blood at ED to the total external systolic work performed by the heart is small This KE at ED can have other beneficial effects, such as priming the aortic valve for ejection, and serving as a flow-based marker for subtle ventricular dysfunction [12, 13]. Previous 4D flow CMR studies of healthy humans have been conducted at rest, and the effects of heart rate, inotropy and lusitropy on multidimensional flow patterns and energetics within the healthy human heart remain undefined

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