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Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2003

Correlation of the Tei index with invasive measurements of ventricular function in a porcine model.

Jared LaCorte; Santos E. Cabreriza; David G. Rabkin; Beth F. Printz; Lindita Çoku; Alan D. Weinberg; Welton M. Gersony; Henry M. Spotnitz

BACKGROUNDnThe Doppler myocardial performance (Tei) index has been reported to be clinically useful in assessing left ventricular systolic and diastolic function in both adults and children. However, there are limited data to compare the Tei index with invasive measurements of ventricular function. We used a porcine model to directly correlate the Tei index with invasive indices of systolic and diastolic function.nnnMETHODSnPressure volume loops were obtained from 10 pigs (32-45 kg). A micromanometer and a conductance catheter were placed in the left ventricle to record pressure and volume, respectively. A flow probe was placed around the ascending aorta to record cardiac output. Baseline pressure volume loops were generated during preload reduction through caval occlusion. Epicardial echocardiograms were performed just before the caval occlusion. Invasive indices including preload recruitable stroke work, ventricular stiffness constant, and cardiac output were assessed, as were noninvasive echocardiographic indices including Tei index and ejection fraction. An ischemic insult, ventricular fibrillation, was induced to alter ventricular function. After cardioversion and 40 minutes of reperfusion, echocardiographic and invasive measurements were repeated.nnnRESULTSnThere was a statistically significant inverse relationship between the percent change in Tei and the percent change in preload recruitable stroke work after ventricular fibrillation (r = -0.70, P =.02), although the correlation between the actual values of Tei and preload recruitable stroke work were not statistically significant. There was a statistically significant inverse relationship between the percent change in Tei and the percent change in cardiac output (r = -0.65, P =.03). There was a direct correlation between the value of Tei and the ventricular stiffness constant at baseline (r = 0.63, P <.05). As anticipated, the value of Tei was inversely related to ejection fraction by epicardial echocardiogram at baseline (r = -0.85, P <.001). The percent change in Tei was inversely related to the percent change in ejection fraction as well (r = -0.69, P <.05).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThis animal model is one of the first studies to demonstrate a direct correlation between the Tei index and systolic and diastolic invasive measurements of ventricular function. This supports the clinical use of this index as a measure of global ventricular function.


Asaio Journal | 1996

Validation Study of a New Transit Time Ultrasonic Flow Probe for Continuous Great Vessel Measurements

David A. Dean; Chao-Xiang Jia; Santos E. Cabreriza; David A. D Alessandro; Marc L. Dickstein; Michael J. Sardo; Natalya Chalik; Henry M. Spotnitz

Continuous measurement of cardiac output is important during experimental and clinical cardiac surgery as an indicator of ventricular function. Previous flow probes underestimated flow secondary to position and flow (S-series probes; Transonic Systems, Inc., Ithaca, NY), required frequent calibrations (electromagnetic), and were cumbersome to use. The new A-series probe (ASP) by Transonic Systems, Inc., uses a new X method of ultrasonic illumination insensitive to perturbations in flow. The ASPs were found to be accurate during in vitro studies, but have not been validated in vivo. Six anesthetized pigs were instrumented for right atrium to left atrium bypass, and ASPs were placed on the ascending aorta and pulmonary artery. Baseline measurements included aortic (Ao) and pulmonic flow (P), and thermodilution (Td) cardiac output. Animals then were placed on right heart bypass, and flow was randomly varied from 1 to 6 L/min, and Ao flow was recorded. In addition, ASPs were rotated and their direction reversed. After data collection, the occlusive roller pump (RP) was calibrated using a timed collection method. Calibrated RP flows were plotted versus ASP flows, and regression was applied. There was no difference between mean Ao, P, and Td cardiac outputs at baseline. In addition, changes in position and direction of the probe did not affect measurement of flow. The ASPs showed a highly linear correlation with RP ([r = 0.98, p < 0.01] ASP[L/min] = 0.98 RP-0.032). During laminar flow states, ASPs are accurate and insensitive to position on the great vessels.


Circulation | 2006

Ventricular Diastolic Stiffness Predicts Perioperative Morbidity and Duration of Pleural Effusions After the Fontan Operation

Cara A. Garofalo; Santos E. Cabreriza; T. Alexander Quinn; Alan D. Weinberg; Beth F. Printz; Daphne T. Hsu; Jan M. Quaegebeur; Ralph S. Mosca; Henry M. Spotnitz

Background— We validated the clinical relevance of ventricular stiffness by examining surgical morbidity in children with univentricular hearts undergoing Fontan operation. We hypothesized that ventricular stiffness affects Fontan morbidity, particularly duration of pleural effusions. Methods and Results— Sixteen children with right ventricular (RV) (n =11) or left ventricular (LV) (n =5) dominance were studied intraoperatively at a median age of 3.3 years (1.8 to 5.1). Transesophageal long-axis echocardiograms and ventricular pressure by micromanometer provided end-diastolic pressure (P) area (A) relations during initiation and conclusion of cardiopulmonary bypass. Curve fitting to the equation P=αeβA defined the ventricular stiffness constant, β. Changes in β and clinical correlations were examined. Ventricular stiffness increased after bypass in patients with complete pre-bypass and post-bypass data (n =11, P=0.023, mixed models methodology). Pre-bypass β correlated well with duration of chest tube (CT) drainage (r=0.90, n =16), net perioperative fluid balance (r=0.71, n=14), and length of stay (LOS) (r=0.81, n =16). CT duration and LOS also correlated significantly with post-bypass β (r=0.77 for both, n=11), but insignificantly with preoperative catheterization pressures. Conclusions— Intraoperative β predicts duration of CT drainage, net perioperative fluid balance, and LOS after the Fontan operation. These observations could improve risk stratification and clinical management of children at high-risk undergoing the Fontan operation.


Asaio Journal | 1996

Transluminal aortic valve placement. A feasibility study with a newly designed collapsible aortic valve.

Nader Moazami; Marc Bessler; Michael Argenziano; Asim F. Choudhri; Santos E. Cabreriza; John D. Allendorf; Eric A. Rose; Mehmet C. Oz

Percutaneous stents are used in vascular applications in conjunction with angioplasty and in combination with graft material for repair of abdominal aneurysms. The authors have designed a collapsible bioprosthetic aortic valve for placement by a transluminal catheter technique. This trileaflet stent valve is composed of stainless steel and bovine pericardium. Stent valves, 23 and 29 mm, were tested in a pulse duplicator system with rigid rings from 21 to 31 mm in 2 mm increments. At a mean flow of 3.1 L/min (+/-0.7), normal systemic aortic pressure was generated with a transvalvular gradient of 14.9 +/- 7 mmHg (mean +/- SD). Regurgitation fraction ranged from 10 to 18% (mean 13.8 +/- 3%) in the best ring size. Valves with the best hemodynamic profile were used for implantation in three 70 kg pigs in an open chest model. The valve was collapsed in a 24 Fr catheter designed to allow slow, controlled release. After resection of the native leaflets, the new valve was placed in the subcoronary position. No additional sutures were used for securing the valve. Two animals were successfully weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass and maintained systemic pressures of 100/45 (+/-10) and 116/70 (+/-15) mmHg, respectively. Intraoperative color echocardiography revealed minimal regurgitation, central flow, full apposition of all leaflets, and no interference with coronary blood flow. Both animals were sacrificed after being off bypass for 2 hr. Postmortem examination revealed the valves to be securely anchored. The third animal was weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass but developed refractory ventricular fibrillation because of valve dislodgment due to structural failure. Although long term survival data are needed, development of a hemodynamically acceptable prosthetic aortic valve for transluminal placement is feasible.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Iatrogenic Myocardial Edema: Increased Diastolic Compliance and Time Course of Resolution in Vivo

Mehrdad M.R. Amirhamzeh; David A. Dean; Chao-Xiang Jia; Santos E. Cabreriza; Joanne P. Starr; Michael J. Sardo; Natalya Chalik; Marc L. Dickstein; Henry M. Spotnitz

BACKGROUNDnPerfusion-induced edema reduces diastolic compliance in isolated hearts, but this effect and the time for edema to resolve after blood reperfusion have not been defined in large animals.nnnMETHODSnEdema was induced by coronary perfusion with Plegisol (750 mL, 289 mOsm/L) during a 1-minute aortic occlusion in 6 pigs. This was followed by whole blood reperfusion, inotropic support, and circulatory assistance until sinus rhythm and contractile function were restored. A control group (n = 6) was treated similarly, with 1 minute of electrically induced ventricular fibrillation and no coronary perfusion. Recorded data included electrocardiogram, left ventricular pressure and conductance, aortic flow, and two-dimensional echocardiography. Preload reduction by vena caval occlusion was used to define systolic and diastolic properties. Data were recorded at baseline and at 15-minute intervals for 90 minutes after reperfusion.nnnRESULTSnIn the edema group, average left ventricular mass (132 +/- 7 [standard error of the mean] versus 106 +/- 4 g) and ventricular stiffness constant (0.15 +/- 0.02 versus 0.05 +/- 0.01) increased after Plegisol versus baseline (p < 0.05), returning to normal after 45 minutes of reperfusion. In controls, mass (118 +/- 6 versus 116 +/- 4 g) and ventricular stiffness (0.06 +/- 0.01 versus 0.05 +/- 0.01) did not change significantly. There was no significant change in systolic function. Myocardial water content at the end of the study was not different for the two groups.nnnCONCLUSIONSnCrystalloid-induced edema and diastolic stiffness resolve after 45 minutes in pigs. This suggests that edema caused solely by cardioplegia during cardiac operations should not cause significant perioperative ventricular dysfunction.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2004

Load dependence of cardiac output in biventricular pacing

David G. Rabkin; Santos E. Cabreriza; Lauren J. Curtis; Sean P. Mazer; Josh P. Kanter; Alan D. Weinberg; Allan J. Hordof; Henry M. Spotnitz

BACKGROUNDnThe effect of biventricular pacing on stroke volume is believed to be dependent on right ventricular/left ventricular delay, but effects in individual patients are unpredictable. This variability may reflect relative right and left ventricular volume and/or pressure overloads. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that the relation of cardiac output to right ventricular/left ventricular delay is load dependent in a pig model of pulmonary stenosis.nnnMETHODSnAfter median sternotomy in 6 anesthetized, domestic pigs, complete heart block was induced by ethanol ablation. During epicardial, atrial tracking DDD biventricular pacing, atrioventricular delay was varied between 60 and 180 ms in 30-ms increments. Right ventricular/left ventricular delay was varied at each atrioventricular delay from +80 ms (right ventricle first) to -80 ms (left ventricle first) in 20-ms increments. Aortic flow, right ventricular pressure, peripheral arterial pressure, and electrocardiogram were measured in the control state and during pulmonary stenosis, created by tightening a snare around the pulmonary artery until cardiac output decreased by 50%.nnnRESULTSnAtrioventricular and right ventricular/left ventricular delay had no effect on cardiac output during the control state, but during pulmonary stenosis there was a statistically significant (P =.0001, repeated-measures analysis of variance) right ventricular/left ventricular delay-related trend toward higher cardiac output with right ventricular pacing first. This effect was more pronounced when the optimal atrioventricular delay was determined first, resulting in a 20% increase in cardiac output when the optimal right ventricular/left ventricular delay was compared with simultaneous biventricular pacing.nnnCONCLUSIONSnOptimized biventricular pacing in swine is associated with increased cardiac output during acute pulmonary stenosis, but not during the control state. Further studies are needed to determine whether specific types of right ventricular and left ventricular overload predictably affect the relation between right ventricular/left ventricular delay and cardiac output.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2011

Optimized temporary biventricular pacing acutely improves intraoperative cardiac output after weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass: A substudy of a randomized clinical trial

Daniel Y. Wang; Marc E. Richmond; T. Alexander Quinn; Ajay J. Mirani; Alexander Rusanov; Vinay Yalamanchi; Alan D. Weinberg; Santos E. Cabreriza; Henry M. Spotnitz

OBJECTIVEnPermanent biventricular pacing benefits patients with heart failure and interventricular conduction delay, but the importance of pacing with and without optimization in patients at risk of low cardiac output after cardiac surgery is unknown. We hypothesized that pacing parameters independently affect cardiac output. Accordingly, we analyzed aortic flow measured with an electromagnetic flowmeter in patients at risk of low cardiac output during an ongoing randomized clinical trial of biventricular pacing (n = 11) versus standard of care (n = 9).nnnMETHODSnA substudy was conducted in all 20 patients in both groups with stable pacing after coronary artery bypass grafting, valve surgery, or both. Ejection fraction averaged 33% ± 15%, and QRS duration was 116 ± 19 ms. Effects were measured within 1 hour of the conclusion of cardiopulmonary bypass. Atrioventricular delay (7 settings) and interventricular delay (9 settings) were optimized in random sequence.nnnRESULTSnOptimization of atrioventricular delay (171 ± 8 ms) at an interventricular delay of 0 ms increased flow by 14% versus the worst setting (111 ± 11 ms, P < .001) and 7% versus nominal atrioventricular delay (120 ms, P < .001). Interventricular delay optimization increased flow 10% versus the worst setting (P < .001) and 5% versus nominal interventricular delay (0 ms, P < .001). Optimized pacing increased cardiac output 13% versus atrial pacing at matched heart rate (5.5 ± 0.5 vs 4.9 ± 0.6 L/min, P = .003) and 10% versus sinus rhythm (5.0 ± 0.6 L/min, P = .019).nnnCONCLUSIONSnTemporary biventricular pacing increases intraoperative cardiac output in patients with left ventricular dysfunction undergoing cardiac surgery. Atrioventricular and interventricular delay optimization maximizes this benefit.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Validation of right and left ventricular conductance and echocardiography for cardiac function studies.

Mehrdad M.R. Amirhamzeh; David A. Dean; Chao-Xiang Jia; Santos E. Cabreriza; Osvaldo J. Yano; Daniel Burkhoff; Henry M. Spotnitz

Background. Continuous estimation of left ventricular volume from instantaneous conductance has compared favorably with gold standards, is less labor intensive, and provides real-time data. Little information exists, however, correlating right ventricular conductance with such gold standards or examining the effects of an electrical field generated in the opposite ventricle. Methods. In open-chested sheep, right and left ventricular conductance, two-dimensional echocardiography, and thermodilution cardiac outputs were measured at steady-state conditions. After these measurements, postmortem pressure-volume relations, ventricular mass, and ventricular casting were performed. Results. The corrected end-diastolic volume measured by conductance correlated well with volumes measured by echocardiography ( r = 0.89), postmortem pressurevolume relations ( r = 0.84), and casts ( r = 0.85). Left ventricular end-diastolic volume measured by conductance did not differ significantly from other standards by analysis of variance. The presence of an electrical field in the opposite ventricle did not affect measured conductance in the studied ventricle. Conclusions. Conductance is useful for the measurement of right and left ventricular end-diastolic volumes in the beating heart and is not affected by the presence of an electrical field in the opposite ventricle. Hence, conductance is a useful tool in studies involving interventricular dependence and function.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Myocardial edema: Comparison of effects on filling volume and stiffness of the left ventricle in rats and pigs

Mehrdad M.R. Amirhamzeh; Daphne T. Hsu; Santos E. Cabreriza; Chao-Xiang Jia; Henry M. Spotnitz

BACKGROUNDnThis study compared the adverse effects of crystalloid-induced myocardial edema on left ventricular (LV) compliance in small and large hearts.nnnMETHODSnPlegisol (289 mOsm/L) was perfused into the coronary arteries of pigs (n = 8) and 1:1 dilute Plegisol (145 mOsm/L) into the coronary arteries of rats (n = 6). Pressure-volume relations, heart weight, and water content were then determined. The pressure-volume relations were compared using an LV volume at a pressure of 10 mm Hg.nnnRESULTSnEdema in rats was associated with significant (p < 0.05) increases in heart weight (1.1 +/- 0.0 g versus 1.4 +/- 0.1 g [average +/- standard error of the mean]) and water content (76.8% +/- 0.4% versus 81.3% +/- 0.8%), but an increase in LV stiffness (7.91 +/- 0.52 versus 9.27 +/- 1.42) and a decrease in the LV volume at 10 mm Hg (0.25 +/- 0.02 mL versus 0.14 +/- 0.05 mL) were not statistically significant. Edema in pigs was associated with statistically significant (p < 0.05) increases in LV stiffness beta (0.050 +/- 0.004 versus 0.072 +/- 0.008), heart weight (207 +/- 8 g versus 274 +/- 9 g), and water content (79.8% +/- 0.6% versus 85.3% +/- 0.6%) and a significant decrease in the LV volume at 10 mm Hg (88.4 +/- 5.8 mL versus 60.4 +/- 6.8 mL).nnnCONCLUSIONSnMyocardial edema is associated with an increase in water content and LV stiffness and a decrease in the LV volume at 10 mm Hg in both species. In rats, however, the water content is smaller in the control state and a more hypotonic perfusate is needed to induce a given degree of edema.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2013

Temporary biventricular pacing decreases the vasoactive-inotropic score after cardiac surgery: A substudy of a randomized clinical trial

Huy V. Nguyen; Vinod Havalad; Linda Aponte-Patel; Alexandra Y. Murata; Daniel Y. Wang; Alexander Rusanov; Bin Cheng; Santos E. Cabreriza; Henry M. Spotnitz

OBJECTIVEnVasoactive medications improve hemodynamics after cardiac surgery but are associated with high metabolic and arrhythmic burdens. The vasoactive-inotropic score was developed to quantify vasoactive and inotropic support after cardiac surgery in pediatric patients but may be useful in adults as well. Accordingly, we examined the time course of this score in a substudy of the Biventricular Pacing After Cardiac Surgery trial. We hypothesized that the score would be lower in patients randomized to biventricular pacing.nnnMETHODSnFifty patients selected for increased risk of left ventricular dysfunction after cardiac surgery and randomized to temporary biventricular pacing or standard of care (no pacing) after cardiopulmonary bypass were studied in a clinical trial between April 2007 and June 2011. Vasoactive agents were assessed after cardiopulmonary bypass, after sternal closure, and 0 to 7 hours after admission to the intensive care unit.nnnRESULTSnOver the initial 3 collection points after cardiopulmonary bypass (mean duration, 131 minutes), the mean vasoactive-inotropic score decreased in the biventricular pacing group from 12.0 ± 1.5 to 10.5 ± 2.0 and increased in the standard of care group from 12.5 ± 1.9 to 15.5 ± 2.9. By using a linear mixed-effects model, the slopes of the time courses were significantly different (P = .02) and remained so for the first hour in the intensive care unit. However, the difference was no longer significant beyond this point (P = .26).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe vasoactive-inotropic score decreases in patients undergoing temporary biventricular pacing in the early postoperative period. Future studies are required to assess the impact of this effect on arrhythmogenesis, morbidity, mortality, and hospital costs.

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