• Rev Port Cardiol · May 2002

    Comparative Study

    Evaluation of aortic stenosis severity: role of contrast echocardiography in comparison with conventional echocardiography and cardiac catheterization.

    • Ana G Almeida, Luís Sargento, Henrique M Gabriel, J Marques da Costa, José Morais, Francisco Madeira, Cláudio David, Joaquim Oliveira, J Correia da Cunha, and M Celeste Vagueiro.
    • Serviço de Cardiologia do Hospital de Santa Maria, Clínica Universitária de Cardiologia da Faculdade de Medicina de Lisboa. ana.almeida@mail.telepac.pt
    • Rev Port Cardiol. 2002 May 1;21(5):555-72.

    ObjectivesTo evaluate the role of contrast Doppler echocardiography in the assessment of aortic stenosis severity, in comparison with the conventional method and using the catheterization study as the gold standard.Study DesignProspective comparative study.SettingEchocardiography Laboratory of Cardiology Department.PopulationWe included 36 consecutive patients, 20 male, aged 67 +/- 11 years, referred for catheterization study to evaluate aortic stenosis severity.MethodsAll patients underwent conventional and contrast Doppler echocardiography and catheterization study. For contrast Doppler, we used Levovist (300 mg/ml infusion). We analyzed the following echocardiographic parameters: a) left ventricle dimensions, wall thickness and function; b) aortic valve morphology; c) post-stenotic aortic valve flow--peak velocity, velocity-time integral, peak gradient, mean gradient; d) left ventricle outflow tract flow--peak velocity, velocity-time integral; e) aortic valve functional area; f) acquisition time and Doppler signal intensity for post-stenotic aortic valve flow. Catheterization parameters analyzed: a) peak aortic valve gradient; b) mean aortic valve gradient.ResultsContrast Doppler yielded higher peak gradients than conventional Doppler (85.6 +/- 30.2 vs 72.6 +/- 26.1 mmHg, p < 0.001), as well as higher mean gradients (51.4 +/- 19.0 vs 44.2 +/- 15.9 mmHg, p < 0.001). Peak gradients obtained with contrast Doppler correlated with those obtained invasively (r = 0.88, p < 0.001), although the values were higher (85.6 +/- 30.2 vs 73.6 +/- 32.0 mmHg, p < 0.001). There was no difference between mean contrast Doppler gradients and mean catheterization gradients, which showed a high correlation (r = 0.89, p < 0.001). There was no difference between peak and mean gradients obtained by conventional Doppler and invasively, which yielded correlations of 0.73 and 0.75, respectively (p < 0.001). The sensitivity of contrast Doppler for detection of severe aortic stenosis was 100% for peak gradient and 84% for mean gradient, while for conventional Doppler it was 68% and 58%. The specificity of contrast Doppler was 65% for peak gradient and 88% for mean gradient, while for conventional Doppler it was, respectively, 58% and 88%. Acquisition time for aortic flow visualization was lower (p < 0.001) and flow intensity higher for contrast Doppler, in comparison with conventional Doppler.ConclusionsIn this study, contrast Doppler yielded high correlations with invasive data and higher sensitivity and specificity for detection of severe aortic stenosis than conventional Doppler. It is a useful method for evaluation of aortic stenosis severity.

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