Early and late diastolic strain rate vs global longitudinal strain at rest and during dobutamine stress for the assessment of significant coronary artery stenosis in patients with a moderate and high probability of coronary artery disease

2016 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 1512-1522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Egle Rumbinaite ◽  
Diana Zaliaduonyte-Peksiene ◽  
Tomas Lapinskas ◽  
Ruta Zvirblyte ◽  
Arnas Karuzas ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (8) ◽  
pp. 1222-1232
Author(s):  
Ahmed A. Elamragy ◽  
Mohamed A. Abdelwahab ◽  
Dalia R. Elremisy ◽  
Mohamed Hassan ◽  
Waleed A. Ammar ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
LF Ludovica Fiorillo ◽  
CS Ciro Santoro ◽  
MS Martina Scalise ◽  
VC Valentina Capone ◽  
LLM Lucia La Mura ◽  
...  

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Background Critical peripheral artery disease (PAD) is expression of systemic chronic atherosclerosis, it being often associated with  cardiovascular events. The assessment of global longitudinal strain (GLS) at rest by speckle tracking echocardiography could be useful to unmask significant coronary artery disease (CAD) in asymptomatic PAD patients. Purpose To determine whether resting GLS is able to predict significant coronary artery stenosis in PAD patients selected for peripheral or carotid angiography. Methods One-hundred three clinically relevant PAD patients (M/F = 76/27, age = 66.8 ± 10,2 years, 72 with significant  lower limb artery stenosis and 31 with carotid artery stenosis ≥50%), asymptomatic for CAD,  underwent standard echo-Doppler exam at rest, comprehensive of GLS analysis, prior peripheral and coronary angiography. Information on cardiovascular (CV) risk factors and comorbidities were collected. Patients with know CAD and previous myocardial infarction, left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction < 50% and inadequate echocardiographic imaging were excluded. According to the results of coronary angiography, patients were divided in two groups: with significant coronary artery stenosis (>50% of obstruction. n = 73) and without significant coronary artery lesions (n = 30). Results No intergroup difference in the prevalence of CV risk factors and comorbidities was found. Age, body mass index and blood pressure were comparable between the two groups. LV ejection fraction (59.9 ± 4.2% in patients with significant coronary stenosis vs. 60.2 ± 4.7% in those without coronary stenosis, p = 0.75) and wall motion score index (1.02 ± 0.09 vs 1.03 ± 0.09 respectively, p = 0.67) did not differ significantly. Conversely, GLS was lower in patients with significant coronary artery stenosis than in those without (21.6 ± 2.7% vs. 22.8 ± 2%, p < 0.02) (Figure 1). This difference remained significant comparing the carotid subgroup with coronary stenosis vs. those without (p < 0.05) whereas it did not achieve the statistical significance in patients with lower limb artery lesions (p = 0.42). Conclusion In PAD patients, GLS at rest shoes the capability in identifying patients at higher probability of significant coronary artery stenosis. This involves in particular patients with carotid artery stenosis. GLS might be helpful to select patients who need to extend the peripheral angiographic evaluation to the coronary tree.


Heart India ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 81
Author(s):  
GauravKumar Chaudhary ◽  
AkhilKumar Sharma ◽  
RajivBharat Kharwar ◽  
Mahim Saran ◽  
Sharad Chandra ◽  
...  

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