Tissue Doppler imaging enables the identification of diastolic dysfunctionof pseudonormal pattern in Chagas' disease

Citation
Hvl. Barros et al., Tissue Doppler imaging enables the identification of diastolic dysfunctionof pseudonormal pattern in Chagas' disease, J AM S ECHO, 14(5), 2001, pp. 353-359
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Cardiovascular & Respiratory Systems
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
ISSN journal
08947317 → ACNP
Volume
14
Issue
5
Year of publication
2001
Pages
353 - 359
Database
ISI
SICI code
0894-7317(200105)14:5<353:TDIETI>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
The Doppler pseudonormal pattern of left ventricular (LV) diastolic functio n filling, characterized by apparent normal transmitral flow velocities, in dicates advanced diastolic disfunction with abnormal relaxation and complia nce. Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction has been shown to occur in the early stages of the outcome of Chagas cardiopathy, and its identification m ay potentially contribute to the management of those patients. The aim of t his study was to evaluate the usefulness of tissue Doppler imaging (TBI) in identifying LV diastolic dysfunction in patients with Chagas' disease with pseudonormal transmitral flow For this purpose, 89 patients with Chagas' d isease (48 men) who had no other pathology and showed normal (n = 79) or ps eudonormal (n = 10) patterns of diastolic function by pulsed wave Doppler w ere submitted to TDI. A significant LV systolic impairment in terms of the dimensions (P = .00001), ejection fraction (P = .000001), and mall motion s core (P = .000002) was observed in patients with diastolic dysfunction when compared with the group with normal LV diastolic function. Tissue Doppler imaging enabled the recognition of a pseudonormal type of transmitral now v elocity with high statistical significance through early (P = .000008) and late (P = .0003) expansion waves. The sensitivity and specificity in detect ing LV diastolic dysfunction with TDI in the septal, anterior, inferior, po sterior, and lateral walls were 90% and 87.3%, 87.3% and 90%, 84.8% and 90% , 84.8% and 90%, and 84.8 and 90%, respectively. In conclusion, TDT enabled the differentiation of patients with Chagas' disease with normal LV diasto lic function and those with the pathologic LV pseudonormal pattern with hig h statistical significance. Moreover, this article shows the potential in d emonstrating the occurrence of major alterations in the LV performance of p atients with Chagas' disease with LV diastolic dysfunction, as well as the occurrence of signs of an increased LV filling pressure in those patients.