Echo in cardiomyopathies part 1

2,932 views 51 slides Feb 16, 2021
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About This Presentation

Echocardiographic assessment of dilated cardiomyopathies


Slide Content

Echocardiographicevaluation of
cardiomyopathies
Dr.S.R.SruthiMeenaxshi
MBBS,MD,PDF

Left ventricular cavity dimensions

•Cardiomyopathyis defined as a disease of
heart muscle.
•Cardiomyopathiesinclude a variety of
myocardial disorders that manifest with
various structural and functional phenotypes
with familial and nonfamilialtypes.
•This topic will review the echocardiographic
features of the various types of
cardiomyopathy.

Classification
•Morphological and functional attributes have
been described by the 2006 American Heart
Association and 2008 European Society of
Cardiology classification systems
•Famililal
•Non familial

Types of cardiomyopathy

Types of cardiomyopathy

•Heart disease secondary to coronary artery, valvular, or congenital heart
disease is excluded from the cardiomyopathyclassification.
•However, in clinical practice, the terms "ischemic," "valvular," and
"hypertensive cardiomyopathy" have been used commonly.
•There are five types of cardiomyopathythat are each recognized by
echocardiography
•In the MOGE(S) classification endorsed by the World Heart Federation,
cardiomyopathyis categorized by the following characteristics:
1)morphofunctional(M),
2)organ involvement (O),
3)genetic or familial inheritance (G),
4)etiological annotation (E),
5)stage (S)

Morphological classification
❖Dilated cardiomyopathyarising as primary myocardial
disease of unknown etiology or as disorders of toxic,
familial, or infective origin. In clinical practice, ischemic
cardiomyopathyis frequently viewed as a type of dilated
cardiomyopathy, although current major society
classification systems exclude it
❖Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, including various causes of
increased left ventricular wall thickness not caused by
hypertension or valve disease
❖Arrhythmogenicright ventricular cardiomyopathy
❖Restrictive cardiomyopathy.
❖Unclassified cardiomyopathy, including ventricular
noncompactionand stress cardiomyopathy.

Should be differentiated from EICR
•Cardiomyopathiesshould be differentiated from exercise-
induced cardiac remodeling (EICR), or so-called athlete’s
heart.
•EICR may be characterized by mild and symmetric wall
thickening associated with cavity dilatation, and with high
mitral inflow E velocities
•Right ventricular enlargement has been observed in
Olympic athletes, meeting a criterion for ARVC in 32
percent, and caution must be utilized not to classify these
individuals as abnormal.
•Left atrialenlargement may also occur with EICR
•Doppler tissue imaging and speckle tracking show promise
in identifying normal function in EICR

Dilated Cardiomyopathy
•Dilated cardiomyopathy(DCM) is characterized
by dilatation and impaired contraction of one or
both ventricles .
•DCM is readily identified by echocardiography
when it is fully developed but is more difficult to
detect in its early stages.
•Without the clinical history, patient examination,
and other diagnostic test results,
echocardiography alone is often unable to
establish the cause of myocardial disease.

Causes of Dilated cardiomyopathy
❖Idiopathic
❖Myocarditis
❖Ischemic heart disease
❖infiltrative disease
❖Peripartumcardiomyopathy
❖Hypertension
❖HIV infection
❖Connective tissue disease
❖Substance abuse-alcohol
❖Doxorubicin
❖Other

Causes of dilated cardiomyopathy

Echocardiographicfindings
•The most distinctive two-dimensional (2D)
echocardiographic findings in a DCM are left ventricular
(LV)
•spherical dilatation,
•normal or reduced wall thickness,
•poor systolic wall thickening
•reduced inward endocardial systolic motion
All of the systolic indices are reduced, including LV fractional
shortening, fractional area change, and ejection fraction.
Four chamber cardiac enlargement is often present .

Dilated cardiomyopathy

Moderate mitral regurgitation with
annular dilatation in DCM

Mitral inflow profiles in impaired
diastolic dysfunction in dilated
cardiomyopathy.
Reversal of E/A ratio with prolonged
deceleration time more than 200ms

M mode in DCM
•On M-mode echocardiography, additional
features related to systolic dysfunction are
increased separation of the mitral leaflet E point
from the septum, poor mitral valve opening,
poor aortic valve opening and early closure from
a reduced stroke volume, and poor systolic aortic
root motion
•A 2D image of a normal heart in a young athlete
with a slow heart rate may qualitatively suggest
DCM.

Left ventricular volume
•Based on the American Society of Echocardiography guidelines,
quantitative measurements should be obtained for accurate
evaluation of cardiac chamber sizes.
•While linear (M-mode) measurements are useful, they may not
reflect true cardiac dimensions, especially in distorted ventricles.
•For this reason, linear derived volumetric measurements are no
longer recommended
•In patients with DCM, the LV end-diastolic volume index often
exceeds 100 mL/m
2
(upper normal is 74 mL/m
2
in men and 61
mL/m
2
in women)

Estimation of left ventricular volumes

Simpson method

End-systolic volume index
❖We routinely measure the LV end-systolic volume index (ESVI)
because it provides important information in several clinical
settings.
❖An ESVI that rises progressively from normal (<31 mL/m
2
in men
and <24 mL/m
2
in women is an important clinical indicator of
deteriorated global function .
❖In patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy who have global
dysfunction with segmental evidence of infarction, an ESVI of 45
mL/m
2
identifies patients with a poor outcome .
❖Inthe later Heart and Soul study, the risk of an adverse outcome
began to increase sharply once the end systolic volume exceeded
25 mL/m

Strain echocardiography
•Global longitudinal strain (GLS) is a sensitive
measure of LV contractility and is an
independent predictor of all-cause mortality
in patients with systolic heart failure .
•In cardiomyopathy patients with recovered
LVEF, abnormal GLS predicts recurrent
reduced LVEF

Right ventricle
•Involvement of the right heart has important implications since right
ventricular (RV) failure is most commonly caused by pulmonary
hypertension and/or a pathologic process involving the RV myocardium.
•The prognosis is considerably worsened when there is RV dilatation and/or
a reduced RV ejection fraction
•A useful and easily obtained measurement of RV function is the tricuspid
annular plane systolic excursion, also called tricuspid annulus plane
systolic excursion, an expression of longitudinal muscle function or
descent of the RV cardiac base.
•In one report, an excursion ≤14 mm added significant prognostic
information to other clinical and echocardiographic findings in DCM

•Gradients of tricuspid regurgitation and end
diastolic pulmonary regurgitation correlate
with pulmonary artery systolic and diastolic
pressures, and have been shown to predict
heart failure hospitalization and mortality in
patients with coronary artery disease

Left atrium
•The left atrial end-systolic volume index may be
increased and often exceeds 50 mL/m
2
(upper limits of
normal approximately 34 mL/m
2
)
•Data suggest that minimal atrial volume (at ventricular
end-diastole) may be more predictive of outcomes
than maximal left atrial volume (at ventricular end-
systole)
•Left atrial volume estimates from biplane 2D
measurements are more accurate than single linear
dimensions for measuring left atrial size

Doppler echocardiography
•Doppler has been used in DCM to measure decreased
stroke volume. The velocity time integral of the LV
outflow tract is decreased (<18 cm) in this disorder
•In addition, acceleration or deceleration of the mitral
regurgitant jet can be used as an analog of dP/dT (ie,
the change in LV pressure over time)
•As an example, one study of 61 patients found that
dP/dT <600 mmHg/second and -dP/dT <450
mmHg/second identified a high risk group with a
reduced event-free survival

•mitral regurgitation is a constant feature of DCM and is
usually mild to moderate in severity but, on occasion,
may be severe
•The pathophysiology of mitral regurgitation in DCM is
usually not due to organic leaflet disease but rather
due to abnormal leaflet tethering mandated by the
change in LV shape from ellipsoid to spherical.
•As cardiomyopathy progresses, the point of leaflet
coaptation migrates from its normal basal location to a
spot deeper in the LV cavity

DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION
•Evaluation of mitral inflow patterns can
identify patients with restrictive physiology
due todiastolic dysfunction.
•Restrictive or pseudonormaldiastolic inflow
patterns connote a poor prognosis and aid in
guiding treatment
•Patients with DCM have abnormally low
diastolic suction and blunted capacity to
recruit suction

•The pulmonary vein flow signal should always be
sought as an adjunct to the mitral inflow pattern.
•Abnormal pulmonary venous systolic flow patterns
have been shown to correlate with future development
of pulmonary hypertension
•Loss of the systolic dominant flow pattern suggests
elevated filling pressure.
•Pulmonary venous flow reversal duration minus mitral
inflow duration at atrial contraction >30 ms predicts
mortality and hospitalization
•Similarly, Doppler tissue imaging has patterns
associated with elevated LV filling pressures.

•Cardiac synchrony—Echocardiographic
methods of evaluation for LV dyssynchrony
include:
•M-mode septal to posterior wall motion
delay,
•pre-ejection right and LV time intervals,
•Doppler tissue imaging delay,
•strain, strain rate, and tissue tracking

•features of specific types of dilated cardiomyopathy—
Although echocardiography cannot distinguish the specific
cause of DCM, certain types of disease processes have
characteristic echocardiographic features.
•Dilated LVs may occur after chemotherapy
•peri-partum; or
•may be tachycardia-mediated, premature ventricular
complex/contraction-mediated (premature ventricular
complex/contraction
•pacing-induced
•thyrotoxic, or
•muscular dystrophy-associated cardiomyopathy, among
other causes

Ischemic cardiomyopathy
•As noted above, ischemic heart disease is not considered a type of
cardiomyopathy in formal classification systems, although the term
"ischemic cardiomyopathy" is commonly used clinically to describe
significantly impaired LV function that results from coronary artery
disease.
•Wall motion abnormalities may be due to previous myocardial infarction
and/or associated with multivessel coronary artery disease.
•In both ischemic and idiopathic forms, LV wall motion abnormalities and
the intensity of scarring can be segmentally variable or heterogeneous.
•Ischemic cardiomyopathy is often associated with regional remodeling,
which is characterized by local segments that have their own radius of
curvature.
•Ischemic cardiomyopathy also tends to have areas of endocardial
brightening or scarring in infarcted areas.

chagas cardiomyopathy
•Chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy
•In relatively early stages of cardiac involvement, diastolic
dysfunction due to fibrotic myocardium and segmental wall motion
abnormalities may be seen, most commonly at the apex and
inferior to inferolateral walls.
•LV apical aneurysm has been described as the hallmark lesion in
Chagas heart disease, which helps differentiate it from other
cardiomyopathies.
•More advanced disease is characterized by global ventricular
dilation, diffuse hypokinesis, and longitudinal strain
abnormalities.
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