Evaluation of systolic effectiveness and its determinants: pressure/midwall-volume relations

1989 ◽  
Vol 257 (6) ◽  
pp. H2070-H2080 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Regen

It is generally agreed that systolic performance of a heart chamber is the fractional inward displacement of its wall during contraction and that this depends on preload, afterload, and characteristics of the relation between afterload and end-ejection dimensions. However, there is no consensus on the details of this statement. How can one define and identify the wall element, the displacement of which best expresses performance? What is preload? What parameters best characterize the relation between afterload and end-ejection dimensions? Dividing a thick-wall compliance equation by a thick-wall pressure equation reveals the midwall element, the normalized displacements of which depend consistently on normalized pressure changes according to wall properties regardless of wall-to-cavity ratio. This midwall element's reference dimensions best express chamber size, its reference-normalized dimensions best express wall stretch or distension, and its fractional displacements best express systolic performance. The hydraulically unloaded state is a poor reference for expressing size, normalizing dimensions, and defining chamber characteristics; it is inaccessible, immeasurable, acutely variable, and not a mechanically unloaded state. Therefore stiffness is neither a characteristic nor an expression of systolic vigor. A better reference state is the "average basal end-diastolic distension to which the chamber is accustomed"; it is accessible, measurable, and a state where stretches throughout the wall are near a characteristic value. End-diastolic midwall dimension relative to its average basal value is a valid expression of preload. There are two main hydrodynamic characteristics expressing systolic vigor: 1) peak isovolumic pressure at reference distension and 2) displacement from reference distension if afterload were zero. An additional characteristic is shape of the pressure-volume relation. It appears possible to account for systolic performance in terms of preload, afterload, and these hydrodynamic characteristics.

ASVIDE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 005-005
Author(s):  
Thai Truong ◽  
Hang Thi Tuyet Nguyen ◽  
Vien Thi Xuan Phan ◽  
Minh Huong Phu Ly ◽  
Van Thi Tuong Phan ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuxiang Zhang ◽  
Eric Larose ◽  
Ludovic Moreau ◽  
Grégoire d’Ozouville

Locadiff, an innovative imaging technique based on diffuse waves, has recently been developed in order to image mechanical changes in heterogeneous, geological, or man-made materials. This manuscript reports the on-site application of Locadiff to locate several pre-existing cracks on an aeronautical wind tunnel made of pre-stressed concrete. Using 32 transducers working at ultrasonic frequencies (80–220 kHz) where multiple scattering occurs, we monitor during 15 min an area of 2.5 m×2.5 m of a 35-cm-thick wall. With the wind tunnel in its routine operation, structural changes around the cracks are detected, thanks to their closing or opening due to slight pressure changes. By mapping the density of such microstructure changes in the bulk of the material, locating three pre-existing cracks is properly performed in three dimensions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 240 (6) ◽  
pp. 1548-1557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anya Sedletcaia ◽  
Todd Evans
Keyword(s):  

Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 132 (suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chieh-Ju Chao ◽  
Michael B Gotway ◽  
Dawn E Jaroszewski ◽  
Steven Lester ◽  
Samuel Unzek ◽  
...  

Background: Pectus excavatum (PE) deformity involves posterior depression of the sternum and adjacent costal cartilages. The relationship of CT/MRI chest cardiac compression indices used as indications for surgical repair of PE with echocardiographic findings and with improvement in cardiac chamber compression and function post PE repair is unknown. Methods: We evaluated right atrial (RA) size, tricuspid annulus (TA size, right ventricular (RV) outflow tract size as well as RV 2D strain on intra-operative trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE) immediately pre and post surgical PE repair. Inspiratory and expiratory Haller Index (HI) and cardiac compression indices (CCI) were measured on pre op CT/MR scans (Figure). Offline measurement of chamber dimensions on TEE images was performed and Speckle tracking strain measurements were made using Syngo US Workplace software (Siemens). P<0.05 was considered significant. Results: 60 patients, 73% male, 27% female, age 33.6±10.3 yrs underwent PE repair following CT/MRI from 2010-2014 (Figure). There was a strong correlation between expiratory CT/MRI chest AP diameter and pre-op RA size (panel A). Pre op RA and TA compression on TEE inversely correlated with pre op RV global longitudinal strain rate(RVGLSR) (panels B & C). CCI predicted improvement in RA size post PE repair (panels D & E). In addition pre op RA size on TEE correlated with improvement in RVGLSR post PE repair surgery (panel F). Conclusion: In patients with PE deformity, pre surgical CCI correlated with right-sided cardiac chamber compression on pre op TEE. Severity of chest and cardiac compression also predicted magnitude of improvement in right-sided chamber size and RV longitudinal deformation post PE repair. Our findings provide insight regarding the beneficial effects of PE surgery on right heart chamber compression and improvement in RV function and the important role of intraoperative TEE for patients undergoing PE repair surgery.


1978 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony N. DeMaria ◽  
Leslie E. Oliver ◽  
Hugo G. Borgren ◽  
Lilly George ◽  
Dean T. Mason

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