Reproducibility and sensitivity of Doppler echocardiographic indices of left ventricular function during exercise

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Date
1987
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Publisher
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Abstract

The two most common methods used for the assessment of left ventricular function (LVF) are two-dimensional echocardiography and nuclear ventriculography. Recent technological advances have led to the development of an inexpensive, noninvasive alternative: the stand-alone continuous wave Doppler echocardiograph. The purposes cf this study were twofold: 1) to examine the repeatability of three Doppler measured indices of LVF during repeated exercise trials, and 2) to determine if induced changes in myocardial contractility would be reflected by changes in the Doppler indices. The Doppler indices of LVF were the peak acceleration of ascending aortic blood (pkA), peak Velocity of ascending aortic blood (pkV), and the integral of the Velocity-time waveform (SVI). The study was conducted in two phases. In the first phase, 44 young, healthy males performed similar graded cycle exercise tasks on two separate days. Exercise levels were increased by 50 W every three minutes. PkA, pkV, SVI, blood pressure, heart rate and oxygen consumption were recorded every stage. The test was continued until the subject reached symptom-limited maximum. Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were used to determine the reproducibility of the dependent measures between the two tests.

The second phase involved the testing of a subset of the original 44 subjects (N=18) under a placebo (control) condition, acute beta-blockade, and oral hyperhydration states. Hematocrit was measured as a means to assess blood volume changes. The subjects exercised at levels requiring 20, 40 and 60% of their maximum oxygen consumption. Each stage lasted six minutes. PkA, pkV, SVI, heart rate, blood pressure, cardiac output, and stroke volume were measured. The latter two were determined by a carbon dioxide rebreathing technique. This was a split-plot design with multiple dependent measures. The statistical analysis was a multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) with repeated measures. Appropriate univariate tests were utilized as post-hoc procedures.

With respect to the first phase, the correlation coefficients for pkA ranged from 0.54-0.81, for pkV, 0.65-0.77, and for SVI, 0.40-0.71. The results of the second phase indicated that alterations in contractile status by beta-blockade was reflected by changes in the Doppler measures, but the hyperhydration state did not produce a change in cardiac contractile response that was detectable. There were no documented changes in plasma volume as measured by change in hematocrit, therefore, the effectiveness of the hyperhydration procedure was judged ineffective. PkA and pkV were significantly reduced (p<.01) at all stages of exercise in the beta-blocked state as compared to the placebo values. Cardiac output and heart rate were significantly lower in the beta-blocked state, and stroke volume was significantly higher.

The results of this experiment indicates that continuous wave Doppler echocardiographic estimates of LVF are reproducible (r=0.40-0.81) and reflect changes in myocardial contractility induced by acute beta-blockade.

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Keywords
Doppler effect, Echocardiography, Exercise
Citation