LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Ventricular systolic dysfunction with and without altered myocardial contractility: Clinical value of echocardiography for diagnosis and therapeutic decision-making.

Photo from wikipedia

The inability of one of the two or both ventricles to contract normally and expel sufficient blood to meet the functional demands of the body results from a complex interplay… Click to show full abstract

The inability of one of the two or both ventricles to contract normally and expel sufficient blood to meet the functional demands of the body results from a complex interplay between intrinsic abnor-malities and extracardiac factors that limit ventricular pump function and is a major cause for heart failure (HF). Even if impaired myocardial contractile function was the primary cause for ventricular dysfunction, with the progression of systolic dysfunction, additionally developed diastolic dysfunction can also contribute to the severity of HF. Although at the first sight, the diagnosis of systolic HF appears quite easy because it is usually defined by reduction of the ejection fraction (EF), in reality this issue is far more complex because ventricular pumping performance depends not only on myocardial contractility, but also largely on loading conditions (preload and afterload), being also influenced by valvular function, ventricular interdependence, pericardial constraint, synchrony of ventricular contrac-tion and heart rhythm. Conventional echocardiography (ECHO) combined with new imaging tech-niques such as tissue Doppler and tissue tracking can detect early subclinical alteration of ventricular systolic function. However, no single ECHO parameter reveals alone the whole picture of systolic dys-function. Multiparametric ECHO evaluation and the use of integrative approaches using ECHO-parameter combinations which include also the ventricular loading conditions appeared particularly useful especially for differentiation between primary (myocardial damage-induced) and secondary (hemodynamic overload-induced) systolic dysfunction. This review summarizes the available evidence on the usefulness and limitations of comprehensive evaluation of LV and RV systolic function by using all the currently available ECHO techniques.

Keywords: systolic dysfunction; diagnosis; dysfunction; ventricular systolic; myocardial contractility; function

Journal Title: International journal of cardiology
Year Published: 2020

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.