Abstract

BACKGROUND: Atrial electromechanical delay (AEMD) that reflects delayed conduction may show us the clinical reflection of pathological changes in the atria. The main objective of the present study is to investigate AEMD in patients who had previous rheumatic carditis but without hemodynamically significant valvular disease.
METHODS: A total of 40 patients, previously diagnosed as rheumatic carditis but without significant valvular stenosis/regurgitation and atrial enlargement; and 39 age- and-sex matched controls were enrolled for the present study. Parameters of AEMD (lateral mitral annulus electromechanical delay, septal mitral annulus electromechanical delay and lateral tricuspid annulus electromechanical delay) were measured with tissue Doppler echocardiography and left intra-atrial and inter-atrial conduction times were calculated accordingly. A 24h ambulatory Holter monitoring was used in both groups to detect atrial fibrillation episodes and quantify atrial extrasystoles.
RESULTS: Parameters of AEMD, including left intra-atrial and inter-atrial conduction times of subjects in the study group were longer compared to the control group (23.7 ± 7.0 vs. 18.3 ± 6.2).
CONCLUSIONS: Increased AEMD is observed in patients with previous rheumatic carditis and no significant valvular stenosis/regurgitation and atrial enlargement, which may partly explain the increased incidence of atrial fibrillation observed in these patients.

Details

Title
Evaluation of atrial electromechanical conduction delay in case of hemodynamically insignificant rheumatic heart disease: A tissue Doppler study
Author
Cagdas, Metin 1 ; Velibey, Yalcin 2 ; Guvenc, Tolga Sinan 1 ; Gungor, Baris 1 ; Guzelburc, Ozge 1 ; Calik, Nazmi 1 ; Ugur, Murat 1 ; Tekkesin, Ahmet Ilker 1 ; Gurkan, Kadir 1 ; Eren, Mehmet 1 

 Department of Cardiology, Training and Research Hospital, Siyami Ersek Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Center, Istanbul, Turkey 
 Department of Cardiology, Training and Research Hospital, Siyami Ersek Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Center, Istanbul, Turkey. [email protected] 
First page
683
End page
690
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Wydawnictwo Via Medica
ISSN
18975593
e-ISSN
1898018X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2464205077
Copyright
© 2015. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.