Abstract

Myocardial contractile reserve has been shown to provide important prognostic information in patients with heart failure. We hypothesized that myocardial contractile reserve would predict left ventricular (LV) reverse remodeling after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Thirty-one consecutive patients with heart failure (LV ejection fraction [LVEF] 26% +/- 7%, 35% nonischemic cardiomyopathy) underwent echocardiography during low-dose dobutamine infusion before CRT implantation to assess global contractile reserve (improvement in LVEF) and local contractile reserve in the region of the LV pacing lead (assessed by radial strain using speckle tracking analysis). Responders were defined by a decrease in LV end-systolic volume > or = 15% after 6 months of CRT. During low-dose dobutamine infusion, responders showed a greater increase in LVEF compared with nonresponders (delta 13% +/- 8% vs 3% +/- 4%, P < .001). Furthermore, contractile reserve was directly related to improvement in LVEF after 6 months of CRT (r = 0.80, P < .001). Moreover, a cutoff value of > 7.5% increase in dobutamine-induced LVEF exhibited a sensitivity of 76% and a specificity of 86% to predict response after 6 months of CRT (area under the curve 0.87). Lastly, contractile reserve in the region in the LV pacing lead was present only in responders (delta strain during low-dose dobutamine 6% +/- 5% in responders vs -1% +/- 4% in nonresponders, P = .002). The current study demonstrates that myocardial contractile reserve (> 7.5% increase in LVEF during low-dose dobutamine infusion) predicts LV reverse remodeling after CRT.

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