Abstract

The pathophysiologic correlates of right ventricular ejection fraction, as well as its relation to contractile function as assessed by systolic pressure-volume data, were evaluated in 20 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Radionuclide and hemodynamic measurements were obtained simultaneously. Baseline determinations were obtained in all patients. In seven patients, studies were repeated after intravenous administration of sodium nitroprusside. This procedure allowed characterization of right ventricular performance at decreased afterload and provided two points necessary for definition of the right ventricular systolic pressure-volume relation. Seventeen of the 20 patients had a depressed right ventricular ejection fraction (less than 45 percent). There was a strong inverse linear correlation between right ventricular ejection fraction and afterload as assessed by peak or mean pulmonary arterial pressure (r = −0.81) and pulmonary vascular resistance index (r = −0.73). Right ventricular ejection fraction also correlated, although less strongly, with preload as assessed by right ventricular end-diastolic volume index (r = −0.56) and mean right atrial pressure (r = −0.51). It did not correlate with cardiac index, the ratio of peak pulmonary arterial pressure to right ventricular end-systolic volume index, arterial oxygen tension or left ventricular ejection fraction. After nitroprusside administration, mean arterial pressure, peak pulmonary arterial systolic pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance index decreased significantly. The slope (E) and the volume intercept (V 0) of each pressure-volume line were determined. Administration of dobutamine resulted in a leftward shift from the endsystolic pressure-volume line. There were poor correlations between E and right ventricular ejection fraction, as well as between E and the control ratio between pulmonary arterial systolic pressure and end-systolic volume index. These data demonstrate that, in addition to intrinsic contractile influences, right ventricular ejection fraction is highly dependent on afterload, but less dependent on preload. Right ventricular ejection fraction is a poor indicator of the slope of the systolic pressure-volume relation, raising questions concerning its use as an independent index of chamber contractility.

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