Correlation of minimum coronary lumen diameter with left ventricular functional impairment induced by atrial pacing

To understand whether quantitative measurement of minimal coronary luminal diameter is a better method than percent diameter narrowing for assessing the functional impairment of myocardial contractility produced by coronary artery stenoses, measurements were made from 37 stenotic segments in 27 pati...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of cardiology 1988-04, Vol.61 (10), p.697-703
Hauptverfasser: Tobis, Jonathan, Sato, David, Nalcioglu, Orhan, Johnston, Warren D., Mallery, John, See, Jackie, Qu, Lian, Reese, Tim, Paynter, Jim, Montelli, Steve, Henry, Walter L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To understand whether quantitative measurement of minimal coronary luminal diameter is a better method than percent diameter narrowing for assessing the functional impairment of myocardial contractility produced by coronary artery stenoses, measurements were made from 37 stenotic segments in 27 patients with coronary artery disease and from corresponding segments in 10 subjects without coronary artery narrowing. An assessment of the reliability of the 2 types of measurements was made by correlating them with the physiologic parameters of both segmental wall motion and global ejection fraction response induced by atrial pacing. Digitally acquired coronary angiograms were used to facilitate quantitative analysis. Measurements by edge detection and videodensitometry correlated closely (r = 0.94). Percent diameter narrowing correlated moderately with the change in ejection fraction (r = −0.41) or with the change in segmental wall motion (r = −0.44). The measurement of minimal lumen diameter correlated with the change in global ejection fraction (r = 0.61) and did so even better with the change in segmental wall motion (r = 0.78, p < 0.05). A minimal lumen diameter of ≤1.5 mm identified patients likely to have a functional impairment during atrial pacing as assessed by either global ejection fraction or segmental wall motion defects. We conclude that minimal coronary luminal diameter provides a better method than percent diameter narrowing calculations to measure the anatomic severity of coronary artery narrowing.
ISSN:0002-9149
1879-1913
DOI:10.1016/0002-9149(88)91051-X