Contraction-relaxation coupling: determination of the onset of diastole.

Am J Physiol

Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery and the Department of Biophysics and Physiology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA.

Published: July 1999

AI Article Synopsis

  • Left ventricular relaxation during systole is influenced by afterload conditions, with an abrupt increase in afterload affecting the duration of systole differently at various points.
  • Researchers performed aortic occlusions in six dogs to identify the onset of relaxation by analyzing changes in systolic time relative to control beats.
  • Findings indicate that left ventricular relaxation starts earlier in the ejection phase than previously thought, occurring around 34% of systolic time, suggesting that relaxation is affected by changing loading conditions during ejection.

Article Abstract

Left ventricular relaxation is dependent on afterload conditions during systole. An abrupt increase in afterload while the ventricle is actively contracting prolongs the duration of systole. An increase in afterload during ventricular relaxation shortens the duration of systole. Therefore, we hypothesized that the point during systole when an abrupt increase in afterload had no effect on the duration of systole represented the onset of ventricular relaxation. To determine when this point occurs, we performed aortic occlusions progressively throughout the duration of systole in six dogs. We determined the change in systolic time (t(sys)) after an intervention normalized to t(sys) of a control beat (t(sys,i)/t(sys, c)) as a function of systolic occlusion time as a percentage of total systolic time (t(occ)/t(sys,c)), where t(sys) is the duration from time of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure to the time of minimum first derivative of left ventricular pressure. Our results show the onset of left ventricular relaxation during normal ejection occurs at 34 +/- 3% of systolic time and approximately 16% after the onset of ejection. Thus the beginning of relaxation occurs soon after the beginning of ejection, suggesting that relaxation is modulated by variable loading conditions during ejection, significantly before what has been conventionally been assumed to be the beginning of ventricular relaxation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1999.277.1.H23DOI Listing

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