Reproducibility of echocardiography in chronic congestive heart failure
β Scribed by Donald V. Unverferth; Richard P. Lewis; Carl V. Leier; Raymond D. Magorien; Phillip K. Fulkerson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 352 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0091-2751
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to define the reproducibility of serial echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular size and function. Fourteen patients in stable condition after heart failure (Group I) had five weekly outpatient echocardiograms performed by a single technician with blinded interpretation. The average endβdiastolic diameter (EDD) of all patients was 68 mm, with a mean standard deviation of 4 mm and a 95% confidence interval of 8 mm. The average endβsystolic diameter (ESD) was 58 mm; the 95% confidence interval was 6 mm. The % Ξ D averaged 15.7%; the 95% confidence interval was 5.6%. A group of four patients with heart failure (Group II) had daily echocardiograms while undergoing continuous hemodynamic monitoring. Pulmonary capillary blood pressure and thermodilution cardiac outputs were stable throughout the 4βday study period. Daily morning echographic measurements were constant, with the 95% confidence interval of the EDD being only 4 mm. The ESD and % Ξ D had 95% confidence intervals of 2 mm and 3.2%, respectively. The narrow range of measurements (narrow confidence intervals) demonstrates the excellent reproducibility of these echocardiographic parameters.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This study examined whether or not there is progressive loss of individual myocytes in established heart failure, accounting for the progressive left ventricular dysfunction; whether such loss is by necrosis or apoptosis; and whether such loss is more pronounced in ischaemic heart disease or idiopat