Abstract

The effects of coronary artery disease on patterns of left ventricular contractility have been thoroughly investigated. In contrast, little is known about the incidence of right ventricular dysfunction induced by this disease. To evaluate the frequency of right ventricular asynergy, biplane right ventricular cineangiograms were obtained in 26 patients. Seven segmental axes of shortening were analyzed in each end-systolic and end-diastolic frame and normalized as percent decrease (or increase) in axis from end-diastolic length. Of 26 patients, 8 (Group I) served as normal (control) subjects. The remaining 18 patients had significant coronary artery disease; 6 of these (Group II) had no significant disease of the right coronary artery, whereas 12 (Group III) had significant obstruction of this artery. Four patients in Group II had a previous anteroseptal myocardial infarction, and six in Group III had a previous inferior myocardial infarction. There was a progressive decrease in segmental axes of shortening from Group I to II and from Group II to II, but the decrease was not significant at the level P less than 0.01. Only one patient in Group II had frank dyskinetic segmental motion of the interventricular septum (this patient had had a previous anteroseptal myocardial infarction), whereas two patients in Group III had dyskinetic segmental motion of the free right ventricular wall (both had previous inferior myocardial infarction). Therefore, coronary artery disease seldom produces significant right ventricular asynergy. Abnormal septal motion is associated with previous anteroseptal myocardial infarction; however, dyskinetic motion of the free right ventricular wall occurs only in patients with a right coronary arterial lesion and previous inferior myocardial infarction.

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