Characteristics of left-ventricular isovolumic pressure waves in isolated dog hearts.

Heart Vessels

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232.

Published: September 1994

The peak pressure which a chamber would develop in isovolumic contraction at end-diastolic distention (peak source pressure) is an expression of contractile vigor and a determinant of systolic performance. One can predict source pressure of an ejecting beat by fitting its isovolumic phases with a model isovolumic-wave function. Characteristics of the left-ventricular isovolumic pressure wave (amplitude, duration, shape) were studied in isolated, perfused, artificially loaded dog hearts, where strictly isovolumic conditions could be obtained over a wide range of cavity volumes at constant heart rate and approximately constant contractile state. The characterization involved two steps: (1) beginning and ending points were identified by a transition-locating algorithm, and (2) Fourier analysis was performed on points in between. The amplitude of the isovolumic pressure wave increased with cavity volume as expected, the duration of contraction increased with cavity volume, and the shape of the wave (normalized Fourier coefficients) depended slightly on the cavity volume. Duration of contraction declined slightly with increasing heart rate, but the shape of the isovolumic pressure wave was independent of heart rate. The mean shape was similar to that found in dog hearts subjected to one-beat aortic-root clamping in vivo-the wave being less sharply peaked than a cosine wave and tilted to the left because relaxation was slower than contraction. When ejecting beat duration declined linearly with increasing ejection fraction. This relation could be used to predict the duration of the isovolumic beat corresponding to the duration of an ejecting beat. Source pressure could then be predicted by fitting a model isovolumic wave of predicted duration to the isovolumic contraction phase of the ejecting beat. In 270 comparisons, the ratio of predicted peak source pressure to observed peak source pressure was 1.04 +/- 0.10 (SD). This method provides a reasonably accurate prediction of an important determinant of systolic performance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01745241DOI Listing

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