D. Fatkin et al., HEMATOLOGIC CORRELATES OF SPONTANEOUS ECHO CONTRAST IN PATIENTS WITH ATRIAL-FIBRILLATION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THROMBOEMBOLIC RISK, The American journal of cardiology, 73(9), 1994, pp. 672-676
Spontaneous echo contrast has been observed in conditions of low blood
Wow velocity, such as rheumatic mitral stenosis and atrial fibrillati
on (AF). The phenomenon has been attributed to increased echogenicity
due to aggregation of blood cells at low shear rates. The aim of this
study was to determine whether abnormalities of blood composition also
might contribute to spontaneous echo contrast formation by promoting
cellular aggregation. Transesophageal echocardiography was performed i
n 185 patients with AF (31 with valvular and 154 with nonvalvular AF).
The left atrium was examined for thrombus and spontaneous echo contra
st, which was graded from 0 (nil) to 4+ (severe) by 2 independent obse
rvers. Forty milliliters of venous blood was obtained from each patien
t for hematologic analysis. Spontaneous echo contrast was observed in
46% of patients (74% with valvular and 41% with nonvalvular AF). In li
near regression analysis, positive correlations were found between tir
ade of spontaneous echo contrast and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (p
< 0.001), lowshear blood viscosity (p <0.001) and anticardiolipin ant
ibody (p = 0.02) in the total study population, and in patients with n
onvalvular AF. Spontaneous echo contrast correlated with mitral valve
area (p <0.01) and gradient (p = 0.03), but not with hematologic param
eters in patients with valvular AF. Left atrial thrombus was present i
n 6 patients, all of whom had spontaneous echo contrast. Age (<0.01),
spontaneous echo contrast (0 = 0.03) and the fibrinogen concentration
(0 = 0.03) correlated with previous embolic events. These results sugg
est that, in addition to now disturbance associated with structural ca
rdiac abnormalities and AF, blood composition may also be important in
spontaneous echo contrast formation, particularly in patients with no
nvalvular AF. The association between spontaneous echo contrast and bo
th the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and low-shear blood viscosity su
pports a role for red cell aggregation in the pathogenesis of this phe
nomenon.