Abstract

Cineaortography, quantitative biplane left ventricular angiocardiography and Fick cardiac output studies were performed in 69 patients with aortic regurgitation to evaluate the usefulness of the aortogram in quantitating regurgitation. Thirteen patients had coexistent aortic stenosis and 12 had coexistent mitral stenosis. Patients with concomitant mitral regurgitation were excluded because their aortic regurgitant flow cannot be separately quantified with biplane ventriculography. Twenty-eight other patients without valvular regurgitation were also studied to assess further the accuracy of the quantitative ventriculography, and the stroke volumes derived from Fick and angiographic methods were found to correlate well ( r = 0.97). Aortic regurgitation in the 69 patients, graded on a 1 to 5 scale from the aortogram, correlated significantly with the percent and volume of regurgitation ( r = 0.56 and 0.65, P < 0.01), respectively). However, there was a wide range in amount of regurgitant flow within the aortographic grades, especially in grades 4 and 5, and there was considerable overlap between the grades. The degree of aortic regurgitation was more commonly overestimated than underestimated from the aortogram, but the correlation tended to be better in the patients with a large end-diastolic volume and normal ejection fraction and without aortic or mitral stenosis.

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