Usefulness of Echocardiographic Dyssynchrony in Patients With Borderline QRS Duration to Assist With Selection for Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy
OBJECTIVES: To test the hypothesis that echocardiographic dyssynchrony may assist in the selection of patients with borderline QRS duration for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Although echocardiographic dyssynchrony is currently not recommended to select patients with QRS duration widening for CRT, its utility in patients with borderline QRS widening is unclear.
METHODS: Of 221 consecutive heart failure patients with an ejection fraction (EF)
35% referred for CRT, 86 had a borderline QRS duration of 100 to 130 ms (115 ± 8 ms) and 135 patients had wide QRS >130 ms (168 ± 26 ms). Dyssynchrony was assessed using interventricular mechanical delay, tissue Doppler imaging longitudinal velocity opposing wall delay, and speckle tracking radial strain for septal to posterior wall delay. Response to CRT was defined as
15% increase in EF, and reverse remodeling as
10% decrease in end-systolic volume.
RESULTS: There were 201 patients with baseline quantitative echocardiographic data available, and 187 with follow-up data available 8 ± 5 months after CRT. A smaller proportion of borderline QRS duration patients (53%) were EF responders compared with 75% with widened QRS (p < 0.05). Interventricular mechanical delay
40 ms and opposing wall delay
65 ms were predictive of EF response in the wide QRS duration group, but not the borderline QRS duration group. Speckle tracking radial dyssynchrony
130 ms, however, was predictive of EF response in both wide QRS interval patients (88% sensitivity, 74% specificity) and borderline QRS interval patients (79% sensitivity, 82% specificity) and associated reverse remodeling with reduction in end-systolic volume (p < 0.0005).
CONCLUSIONS: Radial dyssynchrony by speckle tracking strain was associated with EF and reverse remodeling response to CRT in patients with borderline QRS duration and has the potential to assist with patient selection.
PMID: 20159638
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Paul Schoenhagen, MD on March 9th, 2010
See also:
Defining Left Ventricular Apex-to-Base Twist Mechanics Computed From High-Resolution 3D Echocardiography: Validation Against Sonomicrometry.
Muhammad Ashraf, Andriy Myronenko, Thuan Nguyen, Akio Inage, Wayne Smith, Robert I. Lowe, Karl Thiele, Carol A. Gibbons Kroeker, John V. Tyberg, Jeffrey F. Smallhorn, David J. Sahn, and Xubo Song.
J Am Coll Cardiol Img 2010;3 227-234.