Left ventricular ejection fraction in severe chronic obstructive airways disease
- PMID: 1138548
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(75)90317-4
Left ventricular ejection fraction in severe chronic obstructive airways disease
Abstract
The subject of left ventricular involvement in chronic obstructive airways disease is controversial. We measured left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in 120 patients with severe chronic obstructive airways disease, 92 of them acutely decompensated and 28 stable. A bedside radionuclide technic using a scintillation probe was used to measure LVEF. Of the 28 patients with acute respiratory failure, LVEF was normal (larger than or equal to 55 per cent) in 60 and subnormal in 32. Of the 28 patients with stable chronic obstructive airways disease, LVEF was normal in 12 and low in 16. Coronary artery disease could be demonstrated clinically or at autopsy in 13 of the patients with acute and in 7 of the patients with stable chronic obstructive airways disease. LVEF was 28 plus or minus 10.4 per cent (average plus or minus SEM) in the patients with acute chronic obstructive airways disease and coronary artery disease which was significantly different (P smaller than 0.001) from LVEF in patients without coronary artery disease (61 plus or minus 1.9 per cent). In the patients stable with chronic obstructive airways disease and coronary artery disease, LVEF was (42 plus or minus 3.5 per cent), significantly different (P smaller than 0.001) from LVEF in those without coronary artery disease (55 plus or minus 2.1 per cent). There was no relationship between LVEF and arterial oxygen, or carbon dioxide tension, or pH. Results suggest that LVEF is normal in patients with severe lung disease alone and that reduced LVEF in patients with chronic obstructive airways disease can reasonably be ascribed to coronary artery disease.
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