Abstract
Background: Clinical implications of mechanical alternans in patients with chronic heart failure have remained uncertain. In this study, prevalence, characteristics, and prognostic implications of mechanical alternans were investigated. Methods and Results: Consecutive 51 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy underwent diagnostic cardiac catheterization using a micromanometer-tipped catheter. Under basal conditions, 7 of 35 patients with sinus rhythm showed mechanical alternans. Physiologic tachycardia (110 bpm) induced mechanical alternans in another 15 patients with sinus rhythm and in another 10 of 16 patients with atrial fibrillation. Low doses of dobutamine also induced mechanical alternans in another 8 patients, but a high dose of dobutamine eliminated mechanical alternans. Consequently, 40 patients (78%) showed mechanical alternans. Mechanical alternans was always accompanied by alternating changes of positive dP/dt, a parameter of contractility during isovolumetric contraction time, but negative dP/dt was occasionally constant. Concordant mechanical alternans between both ventricles was more prevalent than discordant alternans. The left ventricular end-diastolic volume indices and end-systolic volume indices of patients with mechanical alternans were larger than those of patients without. The left ventricular ejection fraction of patients with alternans was significantly lower than that of patients without. Conclusions: Mechanical alternans was highly prevalent in patients with chronic heart failure. The origin of mechanical alternans seems to exist before or at the isovolumetric contraction time.
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