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1.
Circulation ; 94(11): 2826-30, 1996 Dec 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8941108

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) has different clinical and prognostic aspects in young than in adult patients. This study was undertaken to determine whether these reported differences are reflected by changes in ultrasonic backscatter parameters and whether oral treatment with verapamil modifies backscatter variables in children with HCM. METHODS AND RESULTS: Sixty-eight subjects underwent backscatter analysis to assess the ultrasonic myocardial reflectivity and the amplitude of the cardiac cycle-dependent variation of the backscatter power curve. Subjects were divided into four groups: 10 HCM and 23 normal subjects < 10 years old and 17 HCM and 18 normal adults. Myocardial reflectivity and amplitude of the cyclic variation were assessed in the septum and in the posterior wall of all subjects. The children with HCM were restudied after long-term oral administration of verapamil. Both children and adult patients, compared with the normal control groups, showed a significant reduction in the amplitude of the cyclic variation both in the septum and in the posterior wall. In contrast, myocardial reflectivity, although significantly increased in adult HCM patients, was unchanged in the young HCM group. Verapamil administration did not significantly alter the results in the children with HCM. CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that in young HCM patients, the ultrasonic myocardial reflectivity is normal, in contrast to the significant increase observed in adult patients affected by the same disease. This observation is in accord with the different clinical manifestations reported in young HCM patients and indicates an age-dependent difference in the echogenic structure of the hypertrophied myocardium in HCM.


Sujet(s)
Vieillissement/physiologie , Cardiomyopathie hypertrophique/imagerie diagnostique , Échocardiographie , Adulte , Cardiomyopathie hypertrophique/traitement médicamenteux , Enfant , Enfant d'âge préscolaire , Humains , Adulte d'âge moyen , Vérapamil/usage thérapeutique
2.
Ann Rheum Dis ; 55(7): 455-60, 1996 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8774164

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the pattern of diastolic abnormalities in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) and the relationship between impaired ventricular filling and systolic function. METHODS: Twenty four patients with SSc underwent M-mode and two dimensional echocardiography using echo-Doppler and gated blood pool cardiac angiography, both at rest and after exercise. RESULTS: An impaired diastolic relaxation of the left ventricle was detected in 10 of the 24 patients with SSc. Left ventricular ejection fraction at rest in these 10 patients with impaired ventricular filling did not differ from that in the remaining 14 patients, but eight of the 10 failed to increase their ejection fraction during exercise, compared with two of the 14 with normal ventricular filling (p = 0.003). CONCLUSION: Impaired relaxation of the left ventricle is a recently described feature of scleroderma heart disease. Diastolic dysfunction in SSc could depend on myocardial fibrosis or myocardial ischaemia, or both. It was found to be associated with a defective cardiac functional reserve. However, its prognostic significance remains to be clarified.


Sujet(s)
Diastole , Sclérodermie systémique/complications , Dysfonction ventriculaire gauche/étiologie , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Échocardiographie-doppler , Exercice physique/physiologie , Femelle , Ventriculographie isotopique à l'équilibre , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Sclérodermie systémique/physiopathologie , Débit systolique , Systole , Dysfonction ventriculaire gauche/imagerie diagnostique
3.
Circulation ; 92(6): 1452-7, 1995 Sep 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7664426

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Experimentally induced myocardial ischemia in animals causes tissue modifications that alter characteristics of the ultrasonic beam backscattered from the myocardial muscle. Alterations of backscatter parameters have been evidenced in human subjects with acute or remote myocardial infarction and during ischemia induced by angioplasty balloon occlusion or pharmacological stimuli. The effects of transient effort ischemia in humans have not been reported. The purpose of this study is to assess ultrasonic backscatter parameter changes induced by transient effort myocardial ischemia in human subjects. METHODS AND RESULTS: Nineteen patients with single left anterior descending coronary stenosis and 15 healthy subjects underwent ultrasonic backscatter analysis (parasternal long-axis view) at rest, immediately after a supine stress test, and 30 minutes later. Two windows were selected in each ultrasonic study: one encompassing the septum; the other, the posterior wall. Integrated backscatter was computed throughout the cardiac cycle, yielding a power curve relative to the midmyocardial region of the myocardial wall (excluding pericardial and endocardial borders). Five parameters were computed from the backscatter power curve: the maximum-minimum difference, amplitude and phase of the first harmonic Fourier fitting, phase-weighted amplitude, and time-averaged integrated backscatter difference from rest (an index of overall myocardial reflectivity). This protocol allowed comparison of the backscatter data from a region at risk of ischemia (the septum) with that from a region normally perfused (posterior wall) and a comparison with the same regions of the control group during the three ultrasonic studies. All backscatter indexes in the septum were altered significantly by exercise compared with rest values, whereas no changes were found in the normally perfused posterior wall or in the septum of the control group. All modified parameters returned to baseline values at the time of the recovery study. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that transient, exercise-induced ischemia is associated with reduction of the cardiac cycle-dependent variation of the integrated backscatter power curve, a temporal shift in the nadir of the power curve with respect to the R wave (phase increase), and a small but detectable increase of myocardial reflectivity. These changes may be detected noninvasively in humans with ultrasonic backscatter analysis.


Sujet(s)
Ischémie myocardique/imagerie diagnostique , Adulte , Échocardiographie , Électrocardiographie , Exercice physique , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen
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