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  • Title: Evaluation of left ventricular function and mitral regurgitation during left ventricular-based pacing in patients with heart failure.
    Author: Etienne Y, Mansourati J, Touiza A, Gilard M, Bertault-Valls V, Guillo P, Boschat J, Blanc JJ.
    Journal: Eur J Heart Fail; 2001 Aug; 3(4):441-7. PubMed ID: 11511430.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Beneficial effects of left ventricular (LV)-based pacing on acute hemodynamic parameters were reported in several series, but only a few studies examined the long-term effects of this new pacing procedure. AIMS: To assess long-term effects of permanent LV-based pacing on LV function and mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients with refractory congestive heart failure (CHF). METHODS: A prospective evaluation of LV function and MR was performed in 23 patients with severe but stable CHF and left bundle branch block (mean QRS: 186+/-31 ms) by radionuclide and echocardiographic techniques at baseline and 6 months after implantation of a permanent LV-based (LV alone: 13 patients; biventricular: 10 patients) pacemaker programmed either in a DDD mode (sinus rhythm; n=14) or in a VVIR mode (atrial fibrillation; n=9). RESULTS: Compared to baseline, the 6 months follow-up visit demonstrated a significant increase in radionuclide derived LV ejection fraction from 23.3+/-7 to 26.2+/-7% (P<0.01) and in echocardiographic LV fractional shortening from 13+/-4 to 16+/-6% (P<0.05), without any change in cardiac index, a significant decrease in LV end-diastolic diameter (from 73.2+/-6 to 71.2+/-7 mm; P<0.05), end-systolic diameter (from 63.6+/-6 to 60.2+/-8 mm; P<0.05) and color Doppler MR jet area (from 11.5+/-6 to 6.6+/-4 cm(1); P<0.001). A comparison of patients with LV pacing alone and patients with biventricular pacing showed similar beneficial effects of pacing on MR severity in the two subgroups and a non-significant trend for a better improvement of LV function during biventricular pacing. CONCLUSION: Thus, in patients with severe CHF and left bundle branch block, permanent LV-based pacing may significantly improve LV systolic function and decrease MR.
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