Abstract

Sixty percent of stroke volume (SV) is generated by atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) in a healthy left ventricle (LV). The aims were to determine the effect of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) on AVPD and contribution of AVPD to SV and to study the relationship between AVPD and infarct size (IS) and location. Patients from CHILL-MI and MITOCARE studies with cardiovascular magnetic resonance within a week of STEMI (n=177, 59±11years) and healthy controls (n=20, 62±11years) were included. Left ventricular volumes were quantified in short-axis images. AVPD was measured in six locations in long-axis images. Longitudinal contribution to SV was calculated as AVPD multiplied by the short-axis epicardial area. Patients (IS 17±10% of LV) had decreased ejection fraction (48±8%) compared to controls (60±5%, P<0·001). Global AVPD was decreased in patients (11±2mm versus 15±2mm in controls, P<0·001) and this held true for both infarcted and remote segments. AVPD contribution to SV was lower in patients (58±9%) than in controls (64±8%) (P<0·001). There was a weak negative correlation between IS and AVPD (r2 =0·06) but no differences in global AVPD linked to infarct location. Decrease in global and regional AVPD occur even in remote myocardium within 1week of STEMI. Global AVPD decrease is independent of MI location, and MI size has only minor effect. Longitudinal pumping is slightly lower compared to controls but remains to be the main component to SV even after STEMI. These results highlight the difficulty in determining infarct location and size from longitudinal measures of LV function.

Highlights

  • Myocardial infarction (MI) is common and linked to high morbidity and mortality (McMurray et al, 2012) (WHO 2017)

  • Infarct size was largest in patients with left anterior descending (LAD) infarction (23 Æ 10%) followed by left circumflex (LCx) (15 Æ 8%) and right coronary artery (RCA) (13 Æ 7%)

  • This study has shown that atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) and longitudinal strain is decreased in both infarcted and remote areas of the left ventricle (LV) within a week of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), indicating an effect of longitudinal LV function on a global level

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Summary

Introduction

Myocardial infarction (MI) is common and linked to high morbidity and mortality (McMurray et al, 2012) (WHO 2017). The most commonly used measure of LV systolic function is ejection fraction (EF). It is a strong predictor of morbidity and mortality in patients with reperfused acute STEMI (Group 1983) and is known to negatively correlate with MI size (Ugander et al, 2008) (Wu et al, 2008). Left ventricular function can be measured as stroke volume (SV), and it can be further divided into longitudinal, septal and non-septal radial (previously called lateral) components (Stephensen et al, 2014). The longitudinal component is caused by atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) towards the apex in systole and back towards the base in diastole.

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