Abstract

The present study was undertaken to characterize regional myocardial alterations of reflected ultrasound during the cardiac cycle in normal, ischemic, and postischemic reperfused myocardium. Time-averaged integrated backscatter (IB) and cardiac cycle-dependent amplitude modulation were measured from subepicardial, midmyocardial, and subendocardial regions of the left ventricular apex and the midportion of the right ventricular free wall under normal conditions (n = 5), after 1 hr of 100% acute left anterior descending (LAD) occlusion (n = 8), and after 15 min LAD occlusion plus 120 min reperfusion (n = 5) in anesthetized, ventilated open-chest dogs. A significant increase in time-averaged IB was observed in the subepicardium, the midmyocardium, and the subendocardium during ischemia and reperfusion, but there was no intramyocardial variability. Cardiac cycle-dependent amplitude modulation of IB was significantly higher in the normal subendocardium than in the subepicardium (4.3 +/- 0.6 vs 2.9 +/- 0.8 dB, p less than .01) and midmyocardium (2.8 +/- .05 dB, p less than .01). This transmural gradient in amplitude modulation was abolished during ischemia and reperfusion. We conclude that cardiac cycle-dependent amplitude modulation in IB has a transmural dependence in the normal myocardium and this is abolished during acute myocardial ischemia.

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