AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the role of right ventricular presystolic peak velocity (RVPrP) in assessing right ventricular (RV) function, particularly in stable patients with cardiovascular risk factors, as RV function impacts patient morbidity and mortality.
  • - A total of 436 patients underwent echocardiographic assessments, revealing that RVPrP was significantly lower in patients with RV dysfunction compared to those with preserved function, indicating its potential as a useful marker.
  • - The findings suggest that RVPrP can help detect RV dysfunction in stable patients, highlighting its relationship with other echocardiographic parameters like TAPSE and RV Systolic Peak (RVSyP), despite the latter showing poor agreement in defining dysfunction.

Article Abstract

Background: Right ventricular (RV) function is difficult to be measured but plays a role in morbility and mortality of patients with cardiopulmonary diseases, so many echocardiographic parameters have been developed from M-mode, B-mode and Doppler tissue imaging (DTI) evaluation. Right ventricular presystolic peak velocity (RVPrP) measured with DTI of the tricuspidal annulus and its changes in RV dysfunction have never been assessed in a patient's cohort of stable patients with cardiovascular risk factors. RVPrP velocity could have a role in RV function evaluation; this study addresses such issue.

Methods: Four hundred thirty-six consecutive patients were submitted to a complete echocardiographic examination with the contemporary evaluation of the following RV function indexes: Tricuspid Annulus Plane Systolic Excurtion (TAPSE), RV Systolic Peak (RVSyP) and RVPrP. Pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP), left ventricular and RV diastolic function were also evaluated.

Results: According to TAPSE and RVSyP taken alone or in combination, 113 patients had RV dysfunction, while 323 patients had normal RV function. RVPrP was reduced in patient's group with RV dysfunction with respect to patient's group with preserved RV function (16.48±7.3 cm/s vs. 23.98±8.4 cm/s, respectively, P<0.001). RVPrP was related with RVSyP (P<0.001) and with TAPSE (P=0.002). TAPSE and RVSyP revealed a poor concordance to define RV dysfunction. PASP was higher in patient's group with reduced RV function (P=0.033).

Conclusions: The study showed RVPrP able to detect stable patients with RV dysfunction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S0026-4725.16.04174-8DOI Listing

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