Abstract

Doppler echocardiographic indexes of ascending aortic blood flow veiocity have been found to be an effective method of assessing changes in left ventricular performance induced by myocardial ischemia in both experimental animal preparations and in patients. In eight opened-chest anesthetized dogs, we investigated the influence of heart rate, aortic blood pressure, and size of the ischemic zone on Doppler indexes during regional myocardial ischemia. With control of mean aortic blood pressure and heart rate, trasient coronary artery occlusion resulted in a statistically significant decline in peak velocity and mean velocity when as little as 24% of left ventricular myocardium was rendered ischemic. However, when heart rate and mean aortic blood pressure were not controlled, significant declines in peak velocity and mean velocity occurred only with simultaneous two-vessel occlusions involving >47% of left ventricular myocardium. Although transient coronary artery occlusions generally produced no significant change in heart rate in the absence of atrial pacing, significant declines in sortic blood pressure were observed. We conclude that Doppler indexes of left ventricular performance obtained during myocardial ischemia are influenced not only by the extent of myocardium rendered ischemic, but also by changes in mean aortic blood pressure.

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