Measurement of exercise gas exchange during quantitative stress echocardiography might improve differentiation of myocardial ischemia from fibrosis

    Authors

    Keywords

    exercise gas exchange, quantitative stress echocardiography, ischemia, fibrosis

    DOI

    https://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2022.230

    Full Text

    **Introduction**: Doppler myocardial imaging provides sensitive indicators for diagnosing subendocardial dysfunction, but their specificity is low (1). We wanted to establish whether exercise gas exchange measurement might improve differing myocardial ischemia from fibrosis. **Case report**: In the case of 79-year-old woman with the history of the myocardial infarction and the left anterior descending artery stenting 7 years ago, quantitative exercise stress echocardiography was done due to emerging atypical chest pain. In mid anteroseptal segment, there was significant decrease in myocardial systolic velocity /delta Vs -73,83/, in deformation velocity /delta SR-88,96/ and deformation /delta S-62,21/. Deformation velocity was decreased in mid inferior segment as well /delta SR-20,23/. Measurement of exercise gas exchange showed slight decrease of oxygen consumption parameters /pVO2 76%, ATVO2 30%, O2 pulse 67% of the predicted values and dVO2/dWR 8.80 ml/min/W/ but without “ischemic threshold”. **Conclusion**: Measurement of exercise gas exchange during quantitative stress echocardiography might help differentiating myocardial ischemia from fibrosis.

    Literature

    1. Santoro C, Sorrentino R, Esposito R, Lembo M, Capone V, Rozza F, et al. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing and echocardiographic exam: an useful interaction. Cardiovasc Ultrasound. 2019 December 3;17(1):29. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12947-019-0180-0
    Cardiologia Croatica
    Back to search

    Measurement of exercise gas exchange during quantitative stress echocardiography might improve differentiation of myocardial ischemia from fibrosis

    Extended Abstract
    Issue9-10
    Published
    Pages230
    PDF via DOIhttps://doi.org/10.15836/ccar2022.230
    exercise gas exchange
    quantitative stress echocardiography
    ischemia
    fibrosis

    Authors

    Ana Fabris*ORCIDPolyclinic for cardiovascular diseases and prevention „Sv. Nikola“, Korčula, Croatia
    Mila JakovljevićORCIDPolyclinic for cardiovascular diseases and prevention „Sv. Nikola“, Korčula, Croatia

    *Correspondence email: fabrisana@yahoo.com

    Full Text

    Introduction: Doppler myocardial imaging provides sensitive indicators for diagnosing subendocardial dysfunction, but their specificity is low (1). We wanted to establish whether exercise gas exchange measurement might improve differing myocardial ischemia from fibrosis.

    Case report: In the case of 79-year-old woman with the history of the myocardial infarction and the left anterior descending artery stenting 7 years ago, quantitative exercise stress echocardiography was done due to emerging atypical chest pain. In mid anteroseptal segment, there was significant decrease in myocardial systolic velocity /delta Vs -73,83/, in deformation velocity /delta SR-88,96/ and deformation /delta S-62,21/. Deformation velocity was decreased in mid inferior segment as well /delta SR-20,23/. Measurement of exercise gas exchange showed slight decrease of oxygen consumption parameters /pVO2 76%, ATVO2 30%, O2 pulse 67% of the predicted values and dVO2/dWR 8.80 ml/min/W/ but without “ischemic threshold”.

    Conclusion: Measurement of exercise gas exchange during quantitative stress echocardiography might help differentiating myocardial ischemia from fibrosis.

    Literature

    1. 1.
      Santoro C, Sorrentino R, Esposito R, Lembo M, Capone V, Rozza F, et al. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing and echocardiographic exam: an useful interaction. Cardiovasc Ultrasound. 2019 December 3;17(1):29.DOI