Abstract

Left ventricular filling was evaluated with use of digitized left ventriculograms in patients with (1) restrictive amyloid cardiomyopathy, (2) constrictive pericarditis, and (3) a normal heart. Restrictive cardiomyopathy (four patients) was established by right and left heart hemodynamic studies and postmortem examination; all four patients had cardiac amyloidosis. Constrictive pericarditis (seven patients) was established by characteristic right and left heart catheterizatlon data and pericardial disease at operation; four patients had calcific and three had noncalcific anatomic changes. Normal subjects (seven patients) had normal intracardiac pressures and normal findings on left ventriculography and coronary arteriography. Left ventriculographic silhouettes were digitized and left ventricular volumes were calculated by computer at 16 ms intervals. Curves of left ventricular volume and ventricular filling rate were constructed for each patient and also for each group. Patients with restrictive amyloid cardiomyopathy had no plateau in the diastollc left ventricular filling volume curve, and their left ventricular filling rate was slower than normal during the first half of diastole. Patients with constrictive pericarditis had a sudden and premature plateau in the diastolic left ventricular volume filling curve. In addition, the left ventricular filling rate was faster than normal during the first half of diastole. Statistical analysis of left ventricular filling rate in patients with restrictive amyloid cardiomyopathy, patients with constrictive pericarditis and normal patients showed significant differences during the first half of diastole; those with restrictive amyloid cardiomyopathy had 45 ± 4 percent, those with constrictive pericarditis had 85 ± 4 percent and normal subjects had 65 ± 5 percent of left ventricular filling completed at 50 percent of diastole (p < 0.05). Thus, this study showed a significantly different profile of diastolic left ventricular filling volume and ventricular filling rate curves during the first half of diastole in patients with restrictive cardiomyopathy and those with constrictive pericarditis. The findings suggest the importance of these determinations in differentiating restrictive amyloid cardiomyopathy and constrictive pericarditis at cardiac catheterization.

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