Abstract

To establish the normal limits for various pulsed Doppler echocardiographic indices of left ventricular diastolic function, 92 healthy volunteers aged from 5 to 75 years were prospectively studied. The influence of various variables including age, gender, body surface area, fractional shortening, and left ventricular mass on these parameters was also assessed. Mean (2SD) values for 15 direct and 11 derived parameters were analyzed from transmitral inflow velocity waveform. No statistically significant differences were observed between males and females for any of these parameters. On stepwise multivariate linear regression analysis, age was found to be an independent strong determinant (p less than 0.001) of peak velocity of early diastolic filling wave, area of atrial filling period, deceleration slope, normalized peak filling rate, and early filling fraction. There was a significant correlation between heart rate and time to peak early diastolic velocity, total diastolic time period, early diastolic period, atrial filling period, and atrial filling fraction. It was further observed that a significant correlation (p less than 0.001) persisted between both age and heart rate with area of early filling period, one-third filling area, one-half filling area, ratio of early to atrial peak velocity and area, atrial filling fraction, and one-third filling fraction. None of the parameters were found to correlate with fractional shortening or left ventricular mass. Thus an effort was made to establish normal limits for various Doppler-derived parameters in healthy volunteers for future comparison in diseased states.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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