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- L Aklog, M P Murphy, F Y Chen, W J Smith, R G Laurence, R F Appleyard, and L H Cohn.
- Division of Cardiac Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston MA 02115.
- Circulation. 1994 Nov 1; 90 (5 Pt 2): II112-9.
BackgroundDynamic cardiomyoplasty remains a promising but poorly understood surgical modality for selected patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. Despite encouraging clinical results, objective evidence of enhanced ventricular function using traditional indexes (cardiac output, ejection fraction, and dP/dt) has been difficult to document after cardiomyoplasty. Several investigators have suggested that cardiomyoplasty acts partly by unloading the left ventricle. These indexes all depend somewhat on loading conditions, however, and might not detect such an interaction. The time-varying elastance model provides an index of contractility, Emax, that is relatively insensitive to changes in loading conditions. We applied this model to study the effect of right latissimus dorsi cardiomyoplasty on left ventricular function in an acute canine model.Methods And ResultsFive dogs underwent acute cardiomyoplasty using untrained right latissimus dorsi muscle. Instrumentation included Millar pressure transducers in the left ventricle and aortic root, an electromagnetic flow probe around the ascending aorta, and a volume conductance catheter in the left ventricle. A cuffed nerve electrode around the thoracodorsal nerve and a right ventricular sensing lead were connected to a Medtronic Cardiomyostimulator (5 V, 30 Hz, 1:1 synchronization). Transient caval occlusions were performed with the stimulator both off and on to calculate Emax and the slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship (Ees). Turning the stimulator on significantly increased peak systolic elastance (Emax) and end-systolic elastance (Ees) in all five dogs by an average of 56% and 78%, respectively (P < .05). End-diastolic volume and end-systolic volume decreased by 18% and 28%, respectively (P < .05). All other measured hemodynamic parameters, including peak left ventricular pressure, mean arterial pressure, cardiac output, stroke volume, stroke work, ejection fraction, preload-recruitable stroke work, and dP/dt, did not change significantly.ConclusionsThese results show that, in this acute canine model, right latissimus dorsi cardiomyoplasty significantly improves left ventricular function while decreasing left ventricular volumes. The results are consistent with the theory that cardiomyoplasty increases contractility while unloading the ventricle by decreasing end-diastolic volume. This increase in Emax despite inconsistent changes in other indexes underlies the importance of using load-insensitive indexes of ventricular function when studying cardiomyoplasty.
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