Prognostic value of myocardial viability in medically treated patients with global left ventricular dysfunction early after an acute uncomplicated myocardial infarction: A dobutamine stress echocardiographic study
Academic Article
Publication Date:
1998
abstract:
Background--Residual viable myocardium identified by dobutamine stress after myocardial infarction may act as an
unstable substrate for further events such as subsequent angina and reinfarction. However, in patients with severe global
left ventricular dysfunction, viability might be protective rather than detrimental. The aim of this study was to assess
the impact on survival of echocardiographically detected viability in medically treated patients with global left
ventricular dysfunction evaluated after acute uncomplicated myocardial infarction.
Methods and Results--The data bank of the large-scale, prospective, multicenter, observational Echo Dobutamine
International Cooperative (EDIC) study was interrogated to select 314 medically treated patients (271 men; age, 5869
years) who underwent low-dose (#10 mg z kg21 z min21
) dobutamine for the detection of myocardial viability and
high-dose dobutamine for the detection of myocardial ischemia (#40 mg z kg21 z min21 with atropine #1 mg) performed
1266 days after an acute uncomplicated myocardial infarction and showing a moderate to severe resting left ventricular
dysfunction (wall motion score index [WMSI] .1.6). Patients were followed up for 967 months. Low-dose dobutamine
stress echocardiography identified myocardial viability in 130 patients (52%). Dobutamine-atropine stress echocardiography
was positive for ischemia in 148 patients (47%) and negative in 166 patients (53%). During the follow-up, there
were 12 cardiac deaths (3.8% of the total population). With the use of Cox proportional hazards model, delta low-dose
WMSI (the variation between rest WMSI and low-dose WMSI) was shown to exert a protective effect by reducing
cardiac death by 0.8 for each decrease in WMSI at low-dose dobutamine (coefficient, 20.2; hazard ratio, 0.8; P,0.03);
WMSI at peak stress was the best predictor of cardiac death in this set of patients (hazard ratio, 14.9; P,0.0018).
Conclusions--In medically treated patients with severe global left ventricular dysfunction early after acute uncomplicated
myocardial infarction, the presence of myocardial viability identified as inotropic reserve after low-dose dobutamine is
associated with a higher probability of survival. The higher the number of segments showing improvement of function,
the better the impact is of myocardial viability on survival. The presence of inducible ischemia in this set of patients
is the best predictor of cardiac death
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Dobutamine; Echocardiography; Infarction; Prognosis
List of contributors:
Sicari, Rosa; Landi, Patrizia; Raciti, Mauro; Picano, Eugenio
Published in: