Abstract

BackgroundThere is scarce data about clinical value of right ventricular (RV) systolic function assessed in pre-discharge transthoracic echocardiography for predicting long-term prognosis in patients with inferior ST-elevation myocardial infarction (MI). MethodsThe aim of this study was to assess correlations of RV function parameters in patients after inferior ST-elevation MI with preserved or mildly impaired left ventricular ejection fraction with prognosis during 5-year follow-up. Primary endpoint was death from any cause or unscheduled hospitalization for cardiac causes (unstable angina/MI, percutaneous coronary intervention/coronary artery bypass grafting due to progression of coronary artery disease, heart failure exacerbation or pacemaker implantation), secondary endpoints were all listed above components analyzed separately. RV systolic function was measured with pulsed tissue Doppler as systolic myocardial velocity at the basal segment of RV free wall in the acute phase and pre-discharge echocardiography. ResultsFollow-up was conducted in 86 consecutive patients (mean age 61±10years, 74% males). Multivariate regression analysis revealed that only RV systolic function in pre-discharge echocardiography correlated independently with the primary endpoint (OR 0.56, 95% CI 0.34–0.92, p=0.02). A positive predictive value of 44% and a negative predictive value of 83% (sensitivity 80%, specificity 49%, AUC 0.7) for predicting the primary endpoint was established for RV systolic myocardial velocity<13cm/s in pre-discharge echocardiography. ConclusionsIn patients after inferior wall ST-elevation MI with preserved or slightly impaired LV systolic function, pre-discharge RV systolic dysfunction correlated independently with worse long-term prognosis.

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