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Featured researches published by Anita Boyd.


American Heart Journal | 2008

Echocardiographic evaluation of left atrial size and function: Current understanding, pathophysiologic correlates, and prognostic implications

Dominic Y. Leung; Anita Boyd; Arnold A. Ng; Cecilia Chi; Liza Thomas

Left atrial (LA) volume has recently been identified as a potential biomarker for cardiac and cerebrovascular disease. However, evidence regarding the prognostic implications of LA volume still remains unclear. Evaluation of LA size and function using traditional and more recent echocardiographic parameters is potentially feasible in the routine clinical setting. This review article discusses the conventional and newer echocardiographic parameters used to evaluate LA size and function. Conventional parameters include the assessment of phasic atrial activity using atrial volume measurements, transmitral Doppler peak A velocity, atrial fraction, and the atrial ejection force. Newer parameters include Doppler tissue imaging (DTI) including segmental atrial function assessment using color DTI, strain, and strain rate. In addition, an overview of the implications and clinical relevance of the findings of an enlarged left atrium, from currently available literature, is presented.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Compensatory changes in atrial volumes with normal aging: is atrial enlargement inevitable?

Liza Thomas; Kate Levett; Anita Boyd; Dominic Y. Leung; Nelson B. Schiller; David L. Ross

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to evaluate left atrial volume and its changes with the phases (active and passive) of atrial filling, and to examine the effect of normal aging on these parameters and pulmonary vein (PV) flow patterns. BACKGROUND Atrial volume change with normal aging has not been adequately described. Pulmonary vein flow patterns have not been volumetrically evaluated in normal aging. Combining atrial volumes and PV flow patterns obtained using transthoracic echocardiography could estimate shifts in left atrial mechanical function with normal aging. METHODS A total of 92 healthy subjects, divided into two groups: Group Y (young <50 years) and Group O (old > or =50 years), were prospectively studied. Maximal (Vol(max)) and minimal (Vol(min)) left atrial volumes were measured using the biplane method of discs and by three-dimensional echocardiographic reconstruction using the cubic spline interpolation algorithm. The passive filling, conduit, and active emptying volumes were also estimated. Traditional measures of atrial function, mitral peak A-wave velocity, velocity time integral (VTI), atrial emptying fraction, and atrial ejection force were measured. RESULTS As age increased, Vol(max), Vol(min), and total atrial contribution to left ventricle (LV) stroke volume were not significantly altered. However, the passive emptying volume was significantly higher (14.2 +/- 6.4 ml vs. 11.6 +/- 5.7 ml; p = 0.03) whereas the active emptying volume was lower (8.6 +/- 3.7 ml vs. 10.2 +/- 3.8 ml; p = 0.04) in Group Y versus Group O. Pulmonary vein flow demonstrated an increase in peak diastolic velocity (Group Y vs. Group O) with no corresponding change in diastolic VTI or systolic fraction. CONCLUSIONS Normal aging does not increase maximum (end-systolic) atrial size. The atrium compensates for changes in LV diastolic properties by augmenting active atrial contraction. Pulmonary vein flow patterns, although diastolic dominant using peak velocity, demonstrated no volumetric change with aging.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2003

Comparison of epicardial and endocardial linear ablation using handheld probes.

Stuart P. Thomas; Duncan Guy; Anita Boyd; Vicki Eipper; David L. Ross; Richard B. Chard

BACKGROUND The optimal technique for producing linear radiofrequency thermal lesions in myocardial tissue is unclear. We compared epicardial ablation on the beating heart with endocardial ablation after cardioplegia. METHODS Radiofrequency lesions were produced using a multielectrode malleable handheld probe in ovine myocardium with three wall thicknesses. Detailed analysis of lesion dimensions was used to assess the effects of site of ablation, muscle thickness, and duration of ablation. RESULTS After epicardial atrial ablation, myocardial lesions were detected in all sections without macroscopically visible epicardial fat (n = 10), but only 43% (6/14) of sections with epicardial fat. Three of 24 atrial epicardial sections (13%) and 92% (23/25) of endocardial atrial lesion sections were clearly transmural. In thicker tissues lesion depth was independent of endocardial (right ventricle: 3.9 +/- 1.1 mm, left ventricle: 3.8 +/- 0.7 mm) or epicardial (right ventricle: 3.4 +/- 0.6 mm, left ventricle: 4.3 +/- 0.9 mm) ablation site. Epicardial lesions are less deep in thinner areas of myocardium (p = 0.003). Lesions were all wider than they were deep. There was no significant increase in lesion depth with the increase in ablation duration from 1 to 2 minutes. CONCLUSIONS Lesions were unlikely to be transmural with either technique when the wall thickness was greater than about 4 mm. Epicardial fat has an important negative effect on epicardial lesion formation. Where epicardial fat is absent epicardially produced lesions penetrate less deeply when the wall thickness is small, possibly due to endocardial cooling by circulating blood. Prolongation of the duration of ablation from 1 to 2 minutes does not significantly increase lesion depth.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2011

Two-dimensional myocardial strain imaging detects changes in left ventricular systolic function immediately after anthracycline chemotherapy

Paul W. Stoodley; David Richards; Rina Hui; Anita Boyd; Paul Harnett; Steven R. Meikle; Jillian L. Clarke; Liza Thomas

AIMS The efficacy of anthracyclines is undermined by potential life-threatening cardiotoxicity. Cardiotoxicity is dependent upon several factors and the timing to its development is variable. Moreover, as adjuvant therapy with trastuzumab often follows, a close monitoring of cardiac function in those treated with anthracyclines is mandatory. Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) by echocardiography is currently used for monitoring cardiotoxicity; however, LVEF has numerous limitations. Two-dimensional strain imaging may provide a more sensitive measure of altered LV systolic function, so the aim of the present study was to compare LVEF and LV systolic strain before and after anthracyclines. METHODS AND RESULTS Fifty-two women with histologically confirmed breast cancer were prospectively studied. Echocardiographic LVEF (by Simpsons method), global and regional peak longitudinal, radial, and circumferential 2D systolic strain were measured 1 week before and 1 week after chemotherapy. Global and regional longitudinal LV systolic strain was significantly reduced after treatment; global longitudinal strain decreased from -17.7 to -16.3% (P < 0.01) with 48% of global measurements reduced by >10%. Global and regional radial LV systolic strain after treatment was also significantly reduced; global radial strain dropped from 40.5 to 34.5% (P < 0.01) with 59% of global measurements reduced by >10%. In contrast, no reduction in LVEF >10% after chemotherapy was observed. CONCLUSION Reduced LV systolic strain immediately after anthracycline treatment may indicate early impairment of myocardial function before detectable change in LVEF.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2004

Noncontact mapping of the left ventricle: insights from validation with transmural contact mapping.

Aravinda Thiagalingam; Elisabeth Wallace; Anita Boyd; Vicki Eipper; Craig R. Campbell; Karen Byth; David L. Ross; Pramesh Kovoor

It is not clear whether the noncontact electrograms obtained using the EnSite system in the left ventricle resemble most closely endocardial, intramural, or epicardial contact electrograms or a summation of transmural electrograms. This study compared unipolar virtual electrograms from the EnSite system with unipolar contact electrograms from transmural plunge needle electrodes using a 256‐channel mapping system. The study also evaluated the effects of differing activation sites (endocardial, intramural, or epicardial). A grid of 50–60 plunge needles was positioned in the left ventricles of eight male sheep. Each needle had four electrodes to record from the endocardium, two intramural sites, and the epicardium. Correlations between contact and noncontact electrograms were calculated on 32,242 electrograms. Noncontact electrograms correlated equally well in morphology and accuracy of timing with endocardial (0.88 ± 0.15), intramural (0.87 ± 0.15), epicardial (0.88 ± 0.15), and transmural summation contact electrograms (0.89 ± 0.14) during sinus rhythm, endocardial pacing, and epicardial pacing. There was a nonlinear relationship between noncontact electrogram accuracy as measured by correlation with the contact electrogram and distance from the multielectrode array (MEA): beyond 40 mm accuracy decreased rapidly. The accuracy of noncontact electrograms also decreased with increasing distance from the equator of the MEA. Virtual electrograms from noncontact mapping of normal left ventricles probably represent a summation of transmural activation. Noncontact mapping has similar accuracy with either endocardial or epicardial sites of origin of electrical activity provided the MEA is within 40 mm of the recording site. (PACE 2004; 27:570–578)


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2011

Atrial dilation and altered function are mediated by age and diastolic function but not before the eighth decade.

Anita Boyd; Nelson B. Schiller; Dominic Y. Leung; David L. Ross; Liza Thomas

OBJECTIVES This study investigated changes in left atrial (LA) volumes and phasic atrial function, by deciles, with normal aging. BACKGROUND LA volume increase is a sensitive independent marker for cardiovascular disease and adverse outcomes. To use this variable more effectively as a marker of pathology and a gauge of outcome, physiological changes due to aging alone need to be quantitated. METHODS A detailed transthoracic echocardiogram was performed in 220 normal subjects; 89 (41%) were male and their age ranged from 20 to 80 years (mean 45 ± 17 years). Maximum (end-ventricular systole), minimum (end-ventricular diastole), and pre-a-wave volumes were measured using the biplane method of disks. LA filling, passive emptying, conduit and active emptying volumes, and fractions were calculated. Transmitral inflow, pulmonary vein flow, and pulsed-wave Doppler tissue imaging parameters were measured as expressions of left ventricular diastolic function. For purposes of analysis, subjects were divided by age deciles. RESULTS LA indexed maximum (0.05 ml/m(2) per year) and minimum (0.06 ml/m(2) per year) volume increased with age but only became significant in the eighth decade (26.0 ± 6.3 ml/m(2), p = 0.02, and 13.5 ± 3.9 ml/m(2), respectively; p < 0.001). Impaired left ventricular diastolic relaxation was apparent in decade 6 and was associated with a shift in phasic LA volumes so that LA expansion index and passive emptying decreased with increasing age, whereas active emptying volume increased. CONCLUSIONS In normal healthy subjects, LA indexed volumes remain nearly stable until the eighth decade when they increase significantly. Therefore, an increase in LA size that occurs before the eighth decade is likely to represent a pathological change. Changes in phasic atrial volumes develop earlier consequent to age-related alteration in LV diastolic relaxation.


Heart | 2011

Atrial strain rate is a sensitive measure of alterations in atrial phasic function in healthy ageing

Anita Boyd; David Richards; Thomas H. Marwick; Liza Thomas

Objective Strain and strain rate measure local deformation of the myocardium and have been used to evaluate phasic atrial function in various disease states. The aim of this study was to define normal values for tissue Doppler-derived atrial strain measurements and examine age-related changes by decade in healthy individuals. Methods Transthoracic echocardiograms were performed on 188 healthy subjects. Tissue Doppler-derived strain and strain rate were measured from the apical four and two-chamber views of the left atrium, and global values were calculated as the mean of all segments. Measurements included peak systolic strain, systolic strain rate, early and late diastolic strain rate. Phasic left atrial volumes and fractions were calculated. Mitral inflow and tissue Doppler imaging were employed to estimate left ventricular diastolic function. Results A significant reduction in global systolic strain was observed from decade 6. Alterations in atrial strain rate were apparent from decade 5; systolic strain rate and early diastolic strain rate decreased, while late diastolic strain rate increased significantly. Changes in phasic atrial volume and function occurred in conjunction with age-related changes in left ventricular diastolic function. Importantly, age-related changes in global atrial systolic strain rate and early diastolic strain rate occurred a decade before corresponding changes in atrial phasic volume parameters. Conclusion Atrial strain and strain rate can be used to quantify atrial phasic function and appear to be altered before traditional parameters with ageing. Strain analysis may therefore be more sensitive in detecting subclinical atrial dysfunction with alterations in strain rate parameters observed before traditional parameters.


Heart | 2009

Strain rate evaluation of phasic atrial function in hypertension

S. Eshoo; Anita Boyd; David L. Ross; Thomas H. Marwick; Liza Thomas

Background: Strain (SI) and strain rate (SR) measure regional myocardial deformation and may be a new technique to assess phasic atrial function. Objective: To examine the feasibility of using SI and SR to evaluate phasic atrial function in patients with mild hypertension (HT). Patients and methods: The study group comprised 54 patients with mild essential HT (29 women) and 80 age-matched normal controls (47 women). Standard two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography was performed as well as Doppler tissue imaging. The following left atrial (LA) volumes were measured: (a) maximal LA volume or Volmax; (b) minimal LA volume or Volmin; (c) just before the “p” wave on ECG (Volp). Phasic LA volumes were also calculated. Systolic (S-Sr), early diastolic (E-Sr), late diastolic (A-Sr) strain rate and SI were measured. Results: Despite no differences in indexed maximal LA volume with only mild increases in left ventricular mass in the HT cohort compared with normal subjects (mean (SD) 86 (18) g/m2 vs 67 (14) g/m2; p = 0.001), E-Sr was significantly lower in the HT cohort. There was a corresponding reduction in indexed conduit volume in the HT cohort compared with normal subjects (10.5 (7.5) ml/m2 vs 13.8 (6.1) ml/m2; p = 0.006). Global E-Sr showed modest negative correlations with LA Volmax and LA ejection fraction. No significant difference was present in S-Sr, A-Sr or global atrial strain between the normal and HT cohorts. Conclusion: Mild HT results in a reduction in LA conduit volume, although maximal LA volume is unchanged. This is reflected by a reduction in E-Sr with preserved S-Sr and A-Sr.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2012

Changes in left atrial volume in diabetes mellitus: more than diastolic dysfunction?

K. Kadappu; Anita Boyd; S. Eshoo; Brian Haluska; Anthony E.T. Yeo; Thomas H. Marwick; Liza Thomas

AIM To evaluate left atrial (LA) volume and function as assessed by strain and strain rate derived from 2D speckle tracking and their association with diastolic dysfunction (DD) in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). METHODS AND RESULTS Seventy three patients with DM were compared with age- and gender-matched normal controls; 30 patients with DM alone were compared to those with hypertension (HT) alone. The maximum LA volume, traditional measures of atrial function, 2D strain and strain rate were analysed. The LA indexed volume (LAVI) was larger in DM group than that in normal controls (38.2 ± 9.9 vs. 20.5 ± 4.8 ml/m(2), P< 0.0001), as well as in DM alone compared with hypertensive patients (33.9 ± 10 vs. 25.7 ± 8 ml/m(2), P< 0.0001). Global strain was significantly reduced in the DM group compared with that in normal controls (22.5 ± 8.67 vs. 30.6 ± 8.27%; P< 0.0001) but was similar with HT. There was a weak correlation between LAVI and global strain with increasing grades of DD (r= 0.439, P< 0.0001 and r= - 0.316, P< 0.0001, respectively) in the diabetic group. However, there was no significant difference in LAVI between these groups. A logistic regression analysis for predictors of LAVI demonstrated that only diabetes was a determinant of LAVI. Patients with diabetes showed a significant reduction in global strain compared with normal controls but no difference with increasing grades of diastolic function. CONCLUSIONS LA enlargement in DM is independent of associated HT and diastolic function. LA enlargement is associated with LA dysfunction as evaluated by 2D strain. It is likely that a combination of DD and a diabetic atrial myopathy contribute to LA enlargement in patients with DM.


Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2005

Cooled Needle Catheter Ablation Creates Deeper and Wider Lesions Than Irrigated Tip Catheter Ablation

Aravinda Thiagalingam; Jim Pouliopoulos; Michael A. Barry; Anita Boyd; Vicki Eipper; Teresa Yung; David L. Ross; Pramesh Kovoor

Objectives: To design and test a catheter that could create deeper ablation lesions.

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Liza Thomas

University of New South Wales

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Dominic Y. Leung

University of New South Wales

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K. Kadappu

University of New South Wales

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