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American Heart Journal | 1984

Transient changes in left ventricular mechanics during attacks of Prinzmetal's angina: An M-mode echocardiographic study

Alessandro Distante; D Rovai; Eugenio Picano; E Moscarelli; Carlo Palombo; Maria Aurora Morales; Claudio Michelassi; Antonio L'Abbate

M-mode echocardiograms were recorded in 12 patients with Prinzmetals angina during 29 episodes of transient myocardial ischemia at rest (18 spontaneous and 11 ergonovine-induced). At peak ST segment elevation a regional mechanical impairment was observed in the interventricular septum during 23 episodes of angina and in the posterior wall during six episodes. In the 18 spontaneous episodes the left ventricular ischemic wall, when compared to the basal state, was found to have a significant reduction in motion (-76.3 +/- 9.1%) (mean +/- SEM), in diastolic thickness (-11.7 +/- 2.5%), and in percent systolic thickening (-88.0 +/- 5.6%). Increase in left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (+13.1 +/- 2.1%) and decrease in percent fractional shortening (-38.1 +/- 3.7%) were also observed. When ST segment was back to the isoelectric line, a transient overshoot in regional left ventricular function was observed. In induced episodes statistically significant changes could be detected by M-mode echocardiography even before appearance of ST segment elevation and anginal pain. No significant difference was found in type or degree of mechanical impairment between induced and spontaneous episodes. Therefore, in patients with Prinzmetals angina: (1) M-mode echocardiography allows detection of mechanical changes due to transient myocardial ischemia; and (2) mechanical impairment occurs earlier than clinical (pain) and electrocardiographic (ST segment elevation) signs of transmural ischemia.


American Heart Journal | 1985

Transient myocardial ischemia with minimal electrocardiographic changes: An echocardiographic study in patients with Prinzmetal's angina

D Rovai; Alessandro Distante; E Moscarelli; Maria Aurora Morales; Eugenio Picano; Carlo Palombo; Antonio I'Abbate

Kn patients with Prinzmetals angina, episodes of transient T wave abnormalities (T abn) are often documented in addition to the typical episodes of ST segment elevation (ST). As the interpretation of these minor ECG changes is still uncertain, we investigated if transient T abn are associated with reversible ventricular asynergies, similar to episodes with ST. For this purpose an ECG lead and a two-dimensional echocardiographic projection, which showed clear-cut changes during previous episodes of ST, were simultaneously monitored in five patients with Prinzmetals angina for a total of 13 hours and 20 minutes. In all patients, the 30 episodes of ST recorded were all accompanied by reversible ventricular asynergies. Furthermore, in four of these patients, 14 episodes of T abn (peaking, flattening, or the appearance of a diphasic T wave) were recorded. All T abn were associated with reversible asynergies, as detected by three independent observers. The mechanical impairment occurred in the same ventricular wall both during ST and during T abn. During T abn the degree of mechanical impairment appeared less severe (hypokinesia in 12 and akinesia in two episodes) than during ST (hypokinesia in one, akinesia in 25, and dyskinesia in four episodes) (p less than 0.001). The duration of asynergies was less during T abn (107 +/- 76 seconds) than during ST (169 +/- 83 seconds) (p less than 0.05). Chest pain was reported in 5 of 14 episodes of T abn (36%) and in 20 of 30 (66%) episodes of ST (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Intracoronary air-filled albumin microspheres for myocardial blood flow measurement

D Rovai; Gianna Ghelardini; Maria Giovanna Trivella; Gunilla Björklund; Edoardo Nevola; Luigi Taddei; Alessandro Distante; Antonio L'Abbate

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to explore the possibility of quantifying coronary blood flow by myocardial contrast echocardiography with air-filled serum albumin microspheres (Albunex). BACKGROUND Air-filled albumin microspheres have been proposed as an intravascular tracer for the study of myocardial perfusion by contrast echocardiography. METHODS In six anesthetized open chest dogs, the left circumflex coronary artery was cannulated and perfused by a roller pump with blood from the femoral artery. Both air-filled albumin microspheres (0.4 ml, 2 x 10(8) spheres/ml) and technetium-99m-labeled albumin were injected as a bolus into the coronary cannula at baseline and after treatment with dipyridamole (0.56 mg/kg body weight intravenously for 4 min). Two-dimensional echographic images of the left ventricular short axis were digitized to generate myocardial time-intensity curves; myocardial radioactivity was measured by an external detector to generate radionuclide time-activity curves. RESULTS After dipyridamole, left circumflex coronary artery blood flow (as measured by both the pump and an electromagnetic flow meter) significantly increased (from 1.06 +/- 0.28 to 3.61 +/- 1.43 ml/min per g of myocardium). Peak intensity and rise time of contrast echo curves were able to differentiate baseline myocardial perfusion from coronary hyperemia but did not show any significant correlation with coronary blood flow. A weak inverse correlation with coronary blood flow was provided by myocardial mean transit time of air-filled albumin microspheres (r = 0.33). Conversely, a close inverse correlation with coronary blood flow was obtained by myocardial mean transit time of technetium-99m-labeled albumin (r = 0.95). Myocardial transit time of air-filled albumin microspheres (1.95 +/- 0.60 s) was also markedly shorter than that of labeled albumin (5.35 +/- 3.43 s, p < 0.001) and the measurements were less reproducible. CONCLUSIONS In this experimental study, coronary blood flow was not adequately quantified by myocardial contrast echocardiography with intracoronary injection of air-filled albumin microspheres.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992

Myocardial washout of sonicated iopamidol reflects coronary blood flow in the absence of autoregulation

D Rovai; Gianna Ghelardini; M. Lombardi; Maria Giovanna Trivella; Edoardo Nevola; Luigi Taddei; Claudio Michelassi; Alessandro Distante; Anthony N. DeMaria; Antonio L'Abbate

OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to evaluate the relation between measurements derived from myocardial contrast echocardiography and coronary blood flow. BACKGROUND Contrast echocardiography has the potential for measuring blood flow. METHODS In six open chest anesthetized dogs, the left circumflex coronary artery was cannulated and perfused with blood drawn from the left femoral artery. While adenosine was infused into the circuit, circumflex flow was generated by a calibrated roller pump to the point of abolishing coronary autoregulation. At each of 25 levels of coronary blood flow, paired bolus injections of sonicated iopamidol were performed proximal to a mixing chamber. The perfused area of the left circumflex coronary artery was labeled by radioactive microspheres injected into the perfusion line. Two-dimensional echocardiographic images of the left ventricular short axis were digitized off-line, and myocardial videodensity was measured in the area perfused by the left circumflex coronary artery to generate time-intensity curves. RESULTS The washout slope of curves showed a good correlation with coronary blood flow, ranging from 0.5 to 12.5 ml/min per g of tissue. This correlation was good both in individual dogs (correlation coefficient [r] ranging from 0.78 to 0.96) and in the group of animals as a whole (r = 0.85). Washout slope also showed a good correlation with coronary diastolic pressure (r = 0.80), which ranged from 23 to 114 mm Hg, suggesting a possible primary effect of pressure on contrast washout. However, coronary blood flow appeared to be a stronger predictor of washout slope (partial F = 26.5, p < 0.001) than did perfusion pressure (partial F = 5.9, p < 0.05 by multiple regression). The injection to injection variability in myocardial washout slope appeared to be high (24%). The gamma variate fitting of curves did not improve the correlation with coronary flow (r = 0.78). CONCLUSIONS Myocardial washout of sonicated iopamidol reflects coronary blood flow in a model in which coronary autoregulation is abolished.


International Journal of Cardiac Imaging | 1993

Flow quantitation by radio frequency analysis of contrast echocardiography.

D Rovai; M. Lombardi; Alessandro Mazzarisi; Luigi Landini; Luigi Taddei; Alessandro Distante; A. Benassi; Antonio L'Abbate

Contrast echocardiography has the potential for measuring cardiac output and regional blood flow. However, accurate quantitation is limited both by the use of non-standard contrast agents and by the electronic signal distortion inherent to the echocardiographic instruments. Thus, the aim of this study is to quantify flow by combining a stable contrast agent and a modified echo equipment, able to sample the radio frequency (RF) signal from a region of interest (ROI) in the echo image. The contrast agent SHU-454 (0.8 ml) was bolus injected into anin vitro calf vein, at 23 flow rates (ranging from 376 to 3620 ml/min) but constant volume and pressure. The ROI was placed in the centre of the vein, the RF signal was processed in real time and transferred to a personal computer to generate time-intensity curves. In the absence of recirculation, contrast washout slope and mean transit time (MTT) of curves (1.11–8.52 seconds) yielded excellent correlations with flow: r=0.93 and 0.95, respectively. To compare the accuracy of RF analysis with that of conventional image processing as to flow quantitation, conventional images were collected in the same flow model by two different scanners: a) the mechanical sector scanner used for RF analysis, and b) a conventional electronic sector scanner. These images were digitized off-line, mean videodensity inside an identical ROI was measured and time-intensity curves were built. MTT by RF was shorter than by videodensitometric analysis of the images generated by the same scanner (p<0.001). In contrast, MTT by RF was longer than by the conventional scanner (p<0.001). Significant differences in MTT were also found with changes in the gain setting controls of the conventional scanner. To study the stability of the contrast effect, 6 contrast injections (20 ml) were performed at a constant flow rate during recirculation: the spontaneous decay in RF signal intensity (t1/2=64±8 seconds) was too long to affect MTT significantly.In conclusion, the combination of a stable con trast agent and a modified echocardiographic instrument provides accurate quantitation of flow in anin vitro model; RF analysis is more accurate than conventional processing as to flow quantitation by contrast echocardiography.


International Journal of Cardiac Imaging | 1993

Flow quantitation by contrast echocardiography. Effects of intervening tissue and of the angle of incidence between flow and ultrasonic beam.

D Rovai; M. Lombardi; Luigi Taddei; Alessandro Mazzarisi; Luigi Landini; Gianna Ghelardini; Alessandro Distante; A. Benassi; Antonio L'Abbate

The combination of a standardized echographic contrast agent with the analysis of the ultrasonic radio frequency (RF) signal allowedin vitro flow quantitation in a circulation model. The purpose of this study was to investigate both the effects of biological tissues, intervening between probe and insonated structure, and the effects of the angle of incidence between flow and ultrasonic beam on RF flow quantitation. Thus, the contrast agent SHU 454 was intravenously injected (0.4 ml) as a bolus into a circulation model, at variable flow rates, while keeping the pressure and volume of the vessel constant. Injections were performed with saline interposed between probe and vessel and after the addition of the subcutaneous tissue of a pig; injections were also performed using the probe normal to the flow and with an angle of incidence of 45°. Echographic data were recorded by a mechanical sector scanner, capable of sampling the RF signal from a region of interest positioned in the center of the vein. Contrast echo time-intensity curves were generated. As expected, both peak intensity and the area under the curves decreased with intervening tissue (− 58 and − 70% of baseline values, respectively, p<0.001). Surprisingly, mean transit time also decreased with intervening tissue (from 1.12±0.25 seconds with saline, to 0.92±0.13 seconds with tissue, p<0.001), thus producing a systematic overestimation of flow (21% on the average). To compensate for signal attenuation, contrast injections were repeated in the presence of tissue after increasing the electronic signal amplification (10 dB), and transit time did not significantly differ from control. Moreover, mean transit time was slightly shorter with an angle of 45° (1.03 ° 0.19 seconds) than with an angle of 90° (1.12±0.25 seconds, p<0.05). However, when the data collected with both angles of incidence were plotted together, the correlation with flow remained very close (r=0.94). In conclusion: intervening tissue influences flow quantitation by contrast echocardiography: these modifications can be compensated for by increasing the electronic signal amplification; the angle of incidence between flow and ultrasonic beam also influences flow quantitation: however, this influence is trivial, and can be neglected for practical purposes.


Circulation | 1984

Transient predominant right ventricular ischemia caused by coronary vasospasm.

Oberdan Parodi; Paolo Marzullo; Danilo Neglia; Michele Galli; Alessandro Distante; D Rovai; Antonio L'Abbate

This study describes the clinical experience with four patients with variant angina caused by spasm of the right coronary artery who were assessed for evidence of right ventricular involvement. The patients were suspected of having predominant right ventricular ischemia on the basis of normal thallium-201 scans, left ventricular ejection fraction, regional wall motion assessed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography (RNA), two-dimensional echocardiographic findings, and left ventricular hemodynamics; all procedures were performed during transient ST segment elevation in the inferior leads. Right ventricular ischemia was documented in four patients by first-pass radionuclide studies and phase analysis of RNA, and in three patients by simultaneous right and left hemodynamic monitoring. The clinical findings from these four patients are compared with those from four other patients with similar electrocardiographic changes, coronary anatomic distribution, and documented right coronary spasm but with evidence of left ventricular involvement as documented by abnormal thallium-201 scintigraphy, RNA, two-dimensional echocardiography, and left hemodynamics during ischemic episodes. Although preliminary, these data indicate the existence of prevalent right ventricular ischemia during variant angina caused by right coronary vasospasm. This condition should be suspected whenever typical anginal symptoms and/or ischemic electrocardiographic changes are accompanied by normal thallium-201 scintigraphic findings and/or normal left ventricular function as assessed by RNA, echocardiography, and left hemodynamic monitoring. Among noninvasive procedures, first-pass radionuclide study and phase analysis of RNA represent suitable techniques for detecting transient right ventricular dysfunction.


American Heart Journal | 1987

Limitations of digital subtraction contrast echocardiography in enhancing left ventricular endocardial definition

D Rovai; Steven E. Nissen; Jonathan L. Elion; Alessandro Distante; Anthony N. DeMaria

The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the digital subtraction technique, applied to contrast echocardiography of the left ventricle (LV), might improve endocardial edge identification by two-dimensional echocardiography. Injections of the polysaccharide agent SHU-454 were made into the LV of five closed-chest dogs. Data were obtained at different levels of ejection fraction (EF) induced by pharmacologic or mechanical interventions and were documented by left ventriculography (VGRAM) in the right anterior oblique projection. Contrast echocardiography was recorded in the apical four-chamber view. The echocardiographic images were digitized off-line into a 256 X 256 pixel matrix with 256 gray levels/pixel. Two end-diastolic frames prior to contrast appearance were averaged to obtain a mask that was subtracted from end-diastolic contrast frames corresponding to the two beats of peak intensity. The same procedure was repeated for the systolic frames. LV edges from echocardiographic images prior to contrast appearance, from digitally subtracted echo-contrast images, and from VGRAM were traced on two occasions by two different observers. LV volumes were calculated by single-plane Simpsons rule and EF was derived by the classical equation. The intra- and interobserver reproducibility in the measurement of EF was excellent for VGRAM (r = 0.95 and 0.94, respectively), it was good for two-dimensional echocardiography (r = 0.87 and 0.73), and was fair for contrast-echo (r = 0.79 and 0.68).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2008

Pharmacological Methods Instead of Exercise for the Assessment of Coronary Artery Disease

Alessandro Distante; E Moscarelli; Maria Aurora Morales; Fabio Lattanzi; Barbara Reisenhofer; M. Lombardi; Eugenio Picano; D Rovai; Antonio L'Abbate

Due to new knowledge of pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment, the clinical approach to the patient with suspected coronary artery disease has deeply changed over the last few years. The central role of functional factors‐independent from or in association with organic stenosis‐are important in the genesis of myocardial ischemia. On the diagnostic side, the widespread use of new methodologies permits detection of ischemia by means of perfusion, mechanical, and metabolic markers. Drugs such as beta blockers, nitrates, and calcium antagonists, and procedures such as coronary angioplasty, have fostered a new era in which it is crucial not only to document ischemia, but also to understand the underlying mechanism. The present article deals with the most important pharmacological tests that can fit into a modern approach to noninvasive ultrasonic diagnosis of coronary artery disease. (ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Volume 8, January 1991)


computing in cardiology conference | 2002

Signal heterogeneity in contrast-enhanced echocardiographic imaging despite uniform concentration of the contrast agent

Ezio Maria Ferdeghini; M.A. Morales; O. Rodriguez; Antonio L'Abbate; D Rovai

To quantify the heterogeneity of contrast enhancement inside left ventricular (LV) cavity, 10 patients were studied by harmonic intermittent power Doppler following venous echo contrast administration. Regions of interest were drawn in the LV cavity along the main axis and transversally to derive time-intensity curves. Signal intensity at plateau (A) significantly decreased along LV longitudinal axis: from apex (48/spl plusmn/6 dB), to center (41/spl plusmn/7) and base (31/spl plusmn/9 dB, p<0.05), while intensity rise (b) was unaltered. A also was lower in proximity of the septum than in the center of LV cavity (p<0.05). Finally, beat-to-beat variability increased with increasing depth. Thus, LV contrast intensity varies despite a uniform concentration of the contrast agent at each time, due to ultrasound attenuation and heterogeneous beam intensity. Parameter b appears more consistent than A in deriving quantitative flow information.

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Antonio L'Abbate

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Antonio Abbate

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Oberdan Parodi

National Research Council

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