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European Heart Journal 1995 16(11):1726-1730;
Copyright © 1995 by the European Society of Cardiology.
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©1995 The European Society of Cardiology

Heterogeneity of left ventricular regional wall thickening following dobutamine infusion in normal human subjects

A quantitative two-dimensional echocardiographic study

A. C. BORGES*,, A. PlNGITORE, A. CORDOVIL, R. SlCARI, G. BAUMANN* and E. PlCANO

CNR, Institute of Clinical Physiology Pisa, Italy
*I Medical Department of Humboldt University (Charite) Berlin, Germany

accepted 7 March 1995.

Correspondence: Adrian C. Borges, MD, 1st Medical Dept., Humboldt-Universitaet Berlin, Charite, Schumannstrasse 20–21, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.

Abstract

Background: Pathophysiological data and pragmatic clinical experience with stress echocardiography suggest that inotropic stimulation with simultaneous changes in heart rate and loading conditions can affect the function of various myocardial regions asymmetrically, inducing heterogeneity in wall motion and thickening, possibly mimicking ‘ischaemic’ regional hypokinesis or lack of hyperkinesis during stress.

Objectives: To describe, in a quantitative fashion, the physiological contractile response of different left ventricular regions following dobutamine infusion.

Methods: Two hundred and twenty-three in-hospital patients undergoing dobutamine stress echocardiography and coronary angiography were initially considered. Of these 223 patients, 18 had angiographically normal coronary arteries, normal resting function, negative ergonovine and exercise stress tests, and negative dobutamine stress echo-cardiograms; of the 18, only in 11 patients (six females, age=56 ± 10 years) was it possible to obtain quantitative measurements of the middle segments of the inferior, anterior, lateral, and septa! walls. Two-dimensional echocardio-graphic measurements of wall thickness were obtained at the end-diastolic (onset of Q wave) and end-systolic phases, both at baseline (rest) and at the peak of the dobutamine infusion (40 fig. min–1.kg–1 plus atropine).

Results: Dobutamine increased heart rate (rest-69 ±9 vs dobutamine=138 ± 13 beats. min–1; P<0.01), whereas systolic blood pressure did not change significantly (rest-136 ± 75 vs dobutamine.150 ± 25 mmHg, P=ns). During stress, % systolic thickening decreased in the inferior wall (rest = 73 ± 24 vs dobutamine ± 50 ± 9%; P<0.01), whereas it tended to increase to a variable extent in the other regions, i.e. septal (rest=46± 17 vs dobutamine=68 ± 13%, P<0.01), anterior (rest 62 ± 19 vs dobutamine=69 ± 11%, P=ns), and lateral wall (rest=48± 16 vs dobu-tamine=61 ± 18%, P=ns). The decrease in % systolic thickening of the inferior wall was inversely correlated with the increase in end-diastolic wall thickness (r=– 0.75; P<0.01), but neither with heart rate (r=0.15; P=ns) nor with systolic blood pressure changes (r=0.05; P=ns).

Conclusions: Heterogeneity of left ventricular wall thickening can be induced or magnified by dobutamine infusion even in subjects without coronary artery disease, with the inferior wall showing a lack of hyperkinesis, up to relative hypokinesis, in comparison with other myocardial regions. Caution in aggressive dobutamine stress echocardiography reading, especially in the inferior wall, might be warranted.

Key Words: Echocardiography • dobutamine stress test • systolic thickening


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