Abstract

BackgroundMyocardial iron overload in patients with thalassemia major (TM) is one of the most important complications. The purpose of the study was to identify advanced echocardiography parameters for early identification of myocardial dysfunction during follow-up of patients with TM.MethodsForty TM patients who were 41 ± 5 years old were included in the study and divided into two groups according to cardiac magnetic resonance T2* results (Group 1: Τ2* > 25 ms, Group 2: Τ2* ≤ 25 ms). Liver T2* parameters were also measured. Conventional and deformational echocardiographic parameters were measured at baseline and approximately 2 years later.ResultsThirty-two patients had Τ2* = 34 ± 4 ms (Group 1), and 8 had Τ2* = 17 ± 9 ms (Group 2). Blood consumption was 185 ± 60 and 199 ± 37 ml/kg/yr (p = 0.64), and liver T2* was 4 ± 5 and 17 ± 21 ms (p = 0.01) in Groups 1 and 2, respectively. At baseline, Group 1 had better left ventricular global longitudinal strain (GLS) (− 22 ± 3 vs. − 18 ± 5, p = 0.01) and similar left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (62 ± 5% vs. 58 ± 10%, p = 0.086) than Group 2. At the 28 ± 11-month follow-up, LVEF, GLS, and T2* values in Group 1 (63 ± 3%, − 21 ± 3%, 34 ± 4 ms) and Group 2 (56 ± 11%, − 17 ± 4%, 17 ± 9 ms) did not change significantly compared to their corresponding baseline values. In 8 patients from Group 1, a worsening (> 15%) in LS (p = 0.001) was detected during follow-up, with a marginal reduction in LVEF.ConclusionsGLS seems to be an efficient echocardiographic parameter for detecting hemochromatosis-related cardiac dysfunction earlier than LVEF. It also seems to be affected by other factors (free radical oxygen, immunogenetic mechanisms or viral infections) in a minority of patients, underscoring the multifactorial etiology of cardiomyopathy.

Highlights

  • Myocardial iron overload in patients with thalassemia major (TM) is one of the most important complications

  • The purpose of our study was to evaluate the changes in left ventricular global longitudinal strain and circumferential strain in patients with thalassemia major with and without myocardial iron overload

  • Patients were included in the study if their initial left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was more than 50%, (c) their transthoracic echocardiographic images for the measurement of left ventricular longitudinal and circumferential strain were of adequate quality, and (d) they had undergone a follow-up period between 12 and 36 months

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Summary

Introduction

Myocardial iron overload in patients with thalassemia major (TM) is one of the most important complications. The purpose of the study was to identify advanced echocardiography parameters for early identification of myocardial dysfunction during follow-up of patients with TM. The pathophysiology of the cardiomyopathy that develops in the modern era of iron chelator therapies is more complicated. Even though iron overload is still considered the leading cause of the occurrence of heart failure in patients with TM, the production of free radical. The complex etiopathogenetic milieu of thalassemia cardiomyopathy requires identifying the dysfunctional myocardium at an early stage to make the most of the early implementation of medical therapies. Conventional echocardiography parameters may still be within the normal range before the development of overt heart dysfunction. Newer echocardiographic techniques focusing on the analysis of myocardial deformation have been proven to be potentially useful tools for the early identification of myocardial dysfunction [8]

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