Importance of ventricular longitudinal function in chronic heart failure.

Journal: European Journal Of Echocardiography : The Journal Of The Working Group On Echocardiography Of The European Society Of Cardiology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Despite its immediate relevance, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is infrequently performed in the presence of chronic heart failure (CHF). Previous studies of patients suffering from CHF have found a closer correlation between exercise capacity and measurements of diastolic than systolic ventricularfunction. We examined the correlation between echocardiographic measurements and (i) results of CPET and (ii) cardiovascular prognosis.

Results: We performed resting two-dimensional echocardiograms and CPET in 140 patients with CHF (mean age = 61 ± 13 years, 111 men). The underlying heart disease was ischaemic in 48 patients (34%). They were followed for a mean of 38 months (range 28-52). The mean left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) was 30 ± 9% and peak VO₂ 17.2 ± 6.5 mL/kg/min. LVEF correlated weakly with peak VO₂ (r = 0.21), while systolic and early diastolic LV longitudinal function correlated best [early diastolic peak velocity at the mitral annulus (E'): r = 0.38; global longitudinal strain (GLS): r = -0.4; P <0.001 for both]. By multiple variable regression analysis, the best prediction of peak VO₂ was derived from a model based on age, mitral annulus end-diastolic peak velocity (A'), GLS, right ventricular (RV) systolic strain, and left atrial systolic strain (r² = 0.57; P <0.0001). The two best independent predictors of adverse cardiovascular events at 28 months were GLS (odds ratio 1.31, P <0.001; prognostic cut-off = -8%) and RV systolicstrain (odds ratio 1.05, P =0.01; prognostic cut-off = -22%).

Conclusions: Resting RV and LV longitudinal functions were reliable predictors of adverse cardiovascular events and correlated moderately with, but not took to the place of, CPET measurements.

Relevant Conditions

Heart Failure