Circulation, Vol 74, 410-419, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
MS Visner, CE Arentzen, AJ Crumbley 3d, EV Larson, MJ O'Connor and RW Anderson
To determine whether chronic pressure overload and hypertrophy of the right
ventricle alter the diastolic properties of the left ventricle, six adult
dogs underwent banding of the pulmonary artery and were instrumented for
studies 8 months later. Fourteen control dogs were also studied. Pressure
and dimension data were collected from the dogs while they were awake and
unsedated. The anterior-posterior, septal- free wall, and base-apex axis
diameters of the left ventricle were measured with ultrasonic dimension
transducers. Right and left ventricular pressures were measured with
micromanometers. Pulmonary arterial banding resulted in increased right
ventricular/body mass ratios (2.70 +/- 0.36 g/kg vs 1.52 +/- 0.15 g/kg
control; p less than or equal to .05) and increased left ventricular/body
mass ratios (4.84 +/- 0.64 g/kg vs 4.21 +/- 0.49 g/kg control; p less than
or equal to .05). Right ventricular peak systolic and end-diastolic
pressures were higher among the banded dogs (50 +/- 20/7 +/- 5 mm Hg vs 31
+/- 6/3 +/- 2 mm Hg control; p less than or equal to .05). A rearrangement
in the three-dimensional geometry of diastolic filling occurred in the
banded dogs. Extension from unstressed diastolic dimension (strain) in the
base-apex axis was significantly larger in the banded dogs at left
ventricular transmural pressures of 12, 8, and 4 mm Hg; strains in the
septal-free wall axis were significantly smaller at transmural pressures of
12 and 8 mm Hg. Normalized diastolic left ventricular pressure-volume data
and midwall circumferential stress-strain data were fit to the Kelvin
viscoelastic equation. The normalized pressure- volume relationships of the
banded dogs lay significantly to the left of those of the controls,
indicating a loss of left ventricular chamber compliance. The midwall
circumferential stress-strain relationships of the banded dogs were also
shifted to the left, indicating a loss of intrinsic myocardial compliance.
Thus, during the course of right ventricular hypertrophy caused by right
ventricular pressure overload, alterations in the mass, geometry, and
material properties of the left ventricle occur. At 8 months the chamber
compliance of the left ventricle is compromised by these changes.
ARTICLES
The effects of pressure-induced right ventricular hypertrophy on left ventricular diastolic properties and dynamic geometry in the conscious dog
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