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. 2023 May 23;81(20):1979-1991.
doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2023.03.398.

Hemodynamic Assessment in Takotsubo Syndrome

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Hemodynamic Assessment in Takotsubo Syndrome

Thomas Stiermaier et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. .

Abstract

Background: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is a reversible form of heart failure with incompletely understood pathophysiology.

Objectives: This study analyzed altered cardiac hemodynamics during TTS to elucidate underlying disease mechanisms.

Methods: Left ventricular (LV) pressure-volume loops were recorded in 24 consecutive patients with TTS and a control population of 20 participants without cardiovascular diseases.

Results: TTS was associated with impaired LV contractility (end-systolic elastance 1.74 mm Hg/mL vs 2.35 mm Hg/mL [P = 0.024]; maximal rate of change in systolic pressure over time 1,533 mm Hg/s vs 1,763 mm Hg/s [P = 0.031]; end-systolic volume at a pressure of 150 mm Hg, 77.3 mL vs 46.4 mL [P = 0.002]); and a shortened systolic period (286 ms vs 343 ms [P < 0.001]). In response, the pressure-volume diagram was shifted rightward with significantly increased LV end-diastolic (P = 0.031) and end-systolic (P < 0.001) volumes, which preserved LV stroke volume (P = 0.370) despite a lower LV ejection fraction (P < 0.001). Diastolic function was characterized by prolonged active relaxation (relaxation constant 69.5 ms vs 45.9 ms [P < 0.001]; minimal rate of change in diastolic pressure -1,457 mm Hg/s vs -2,192 mm Hg/s [P < 0.001]), whereas diastolic stiffness (1/compliance) was not affected during TTS (end-diastolic volume at a pressure of 15 mm Hg, 96.7 mL vs 109.0 mL [P = 0.942]). Mechanical efficiency was significantly reduced in TTS (P < 0.001) considering reduced stroke work (P = 0.001), increased potential energy (P = 0.036), and a similar total pressure-volume area compared with that of control subjects (P = 0.357).

Conclusions: TTS is characterized by reduced cardiac contractility, a shortened systolic period, inefficient energetics, and prolonged active relaxation but unaltered diastolic passive stiffness. These findings may suggest decreased phosphorylation of myofilament proteins, which represents a potential therapeutic target in TTS. (Optimized Characterization of Takotsubo Syndrome by Obtaining Pressure Volume Loops [OCTOPUS]; NCT03726528).

Keywords: Takotsubo syndrome; hemodynamics; pathophysiology.

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Conflict of interest statement

Funding Support and Author Disclosures The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.

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