• Clinical cardiology · Mar 1985

    Combining left ventricular systolic time intervals and M-mode echocardiography in the evaluation of primary pulmonary hypertension in women.

    • C V Leier, D Sahar, J B Hermiller, and D V Unverferth.
    • Clin Cardiol. 1985 Mar 1; 8 (3): 166-72.

    AbstractEight patients with primary pulmonary hypertension underwent systolic time intervals, M-mode echocardiography, and direct hemodynamic studies in order to determine the correlation between noninvasive parameters and hemodynamic variables and to evaluate the utility of these noninvasive studies in primary pulmonary hypertension. The ratio of the pre-ejection period to left ventricular ejection time (PEP/LVET) of the systolic time intervals was abnormally increased (greater than 0.42) for each subject; the increase in the PEP/LVET was secondary to a shortening of the left ventricular ejection time in four patients, prolongation of the pre-ejection period in one, or a combination of such, noted in three patients. In contrast, echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular function, specifically percent change in the minor axis of the left ventricle with systole, velocity of circumferential fiber shortening, and ejection fraction, were normal. In addition, a very good correlation was noted between PEP/LVET and total pulmonary resistance (r value = -0.89, p less than 0.05), while the echocardiographic parameters correlated well with stroke volume and cardiac output (r values ranged from 0.68 to 0.72, p less than 0.05). These results indicate that in primary pulmonary hypertension, the performance of both systolic time intervals and M-mode echocardiography noninvasively provides useful information concerning the hemodynamic status of these patients. Systolic time intervals provide an estimation of overall cardiac-cardiovascular performance, rather than left ventricular function alone, which in turn, is validly examined by M-mode echocardiography.

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