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. 1998 Jul;19(7):1099-108.
doi: 10.1053/euhj.1998.0872.

Myocardial structure as a determinant of pre- and postoperative ventricular function and long-term prognosis after valve replacement for aortic stenosis

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Myocardial structure as a determinant of pre- and postoperative ventricular function and long-term prognosis after valve replacement for aortic stenosis

O Lund et al. Eur Heart J. 1998 Jul.

Abstract

Background: Long-term results after aortic value replacement for aortic stenosis can be correlated to a cardiac-related pre-operative risk profile. This predictability indicates that there is a common basis in subtle or overt structural abnormalities of left ventricular myocardium.

Methods and results: Forty-nine patients aged 24-82 (mean 61) years, with aortic stenosis had a full wall thickness transmural biopsy of the left ventricular antero-lateral free wall during aortic valve replacement. Echocardiography and radionuclide ventriculography were performed prior to, and 18 months (n = 41) after, the operation. Postoperative follow-up to a maximum of 7.7 years was 100% complete. Pre-operatively, all patients had an increase in both the left ventricular mass index (202 +/- 67 g.m-2) and the muscle cell diameter (41 +/- 8 microns); other morphological data included a muscle cell nucleus volume of 752 +/- 192 microns3, a muscle cell mass index of 163 +/- 54.m-2, and a fibrous tissue mass index of 39 +/- 16 g.m-2. Patients with a pre-operative episode of clinical left ventricular failure (n = 19) had significantly greater morphological variables than those without. Pre-operative ejection fraction and other measures of systolic function correlated inversely with the morphological data, except for the fibrous tissue mass index; diastolic function indices correlated inversely with all the morphological variables. At the 18-month re-study, the same general picture was noted, but with an underlying strengthening, especially of the muscle cell mass index. Overall, the mass index dropped to 152 +/- 51 g.m-2 (P < 0.0001), but in 17% of the patients it became normal; the mass index at 18 months was directly correlated to morphological variables. A high muscle cell nucleus volume was identified as an independent predictor of early and late mortality.

Conclusions: Abnormalities of the hypertrophied left ventricular muscle cell and the degree of muscle hypertrophy are, to some degree, underlying determinants of pre-operative symptomatology, pre- and postoperative ventricular function, and early and late mortality after valve replacement for aortic stenosis. Incomplete hypertrophy impaired results, was related to pre-operative myocardial structural abnormalities.

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