Background: This study prospectively assessed the left ventricular (LV) diastolic function changes in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and determined if the early revascularization of the infarct-related coronary artery in acute phase achieve a better recovery of diastolic function than late recanalization.
Methods: Forty-five consecutive patients (61.20±11.37years, 8 females) presenting with STEMI and treated with PCI were prospectively enrolled in this study. The important inclusion criteria were first acute coronary syndrome episode and LV ejection fraction exceeded 45%. The patients were divided to two different groups by total ischemia time (TIT): early reperfusion (TIT<6h) and late reperfusion group (TIT≥6h). Transthoracic echocardiography were performed within the first week after PCI, and data were compared between groups. Evaluation of diastolic function was based on integrated assessment of trans-mitral Doppler flow pattern, tissue Doppler, and color M-mode ECT.
Results: A normal diastolic filling pattern was seen in only 9 patients, and the other 80% patients had abnormal filling patterns: 16 impaired relaxation, 14 pseudonormal, and 6 restrictive filling patterns. The e'septal velocity was lower in early reperfusion group compared to late reperfusion group (5.52±1.67cm/s vs 7.11±2.14cm/s, P<0.05), but no statistical difference was found in E/e' average (11.99±4.30 vs 9.85±3.47, P>0.05). There was also no statistical difference for left atrial volume index and mitral annulus propagation velocity between groups.
Conclusions: LV diastolic dysfunction was present in most of acute MI patients even after successful PCI. It seemed STEMI patients receiving early myocardial reperfusion had no better diastolic functions compared with late-reperfused patients within the acute phase.
Keywords: Echocardiography; Left ventricular diastolic function; Myocardial infarction.
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