Effect of Posterolateral Scar Tissue on Clinical and Echocardiographic Improvement After Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy
Leiden University Medical Center · Netherlands Heart Institute · +1 more institution
Abstract
Currently, one third of patients treated with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) do not respond. Nonresponse to CRT may be explained by the presence of scar tissue in the posterolateral left ventricular (LV) segments, which may result in ineffective LV pacing and inadequate LV resynchronization. In the present study, the relationship between transmural posterolateral scar tissue and response to CRT was evaluated. METHODS AND RESULTS: Forty consecutive patients with end-stage heart failure (NYHA class III/IV), LV ejection fraction 120 ms, left bundle-branch block, and chronic coronary artery disease were included. The localization and transmurality of scar tissue were evaluated with contrast-enhanced MRI. Next, LV dyssynchrony was assessed at baseline and immediately after implantation with tissue Doppler imaging. Clinical parameters, LV volumes, and LV ejection fraction were assessed at baseline and at a 6-month follow-up. Fourteen patients (35%) had a transmural (>50% of LV wall thickness) posterolateral scar. In contrast to patients without posterolateral scar tissue, these patients showed a low response rate (14% versus 81%; P or =65 ms) showed an excellent response rate of 95% compared with patients with a posterolateral scar and/or absent LV dyssynchrony (11%).
CRT does not reduce LV dyssynchrony in patients with transmural scar tissue in the posterolateral LV segments, resulting in clinical and echocardiographic nonresponse to CRT.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
9- GBGabe B. BleekerCorresponding
Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands Heart Institute, Erasmus University Rotterdam
- TATheodorus A.M. Kaandorp
Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands Heart Institute, Erasmus University Rotterdam
- HJHildo J. Lamb
Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands Heart Institute, Erasmus University Rotterdam
- EBEric Boersma
Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands Heart Institute, Erasmus University Rotterdam
- PSPaul Steendijk
Leiden University Medical Center, Netherlands Heart Institute, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cardiac resynchronization therapy
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine
- Ejection fraction
- Heart failure
- Doppler imaging
- Ventricular dyssynchrony
- Good health and well-being