In:
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, American Physiological Society, Vol. 323, No. 3 ( 2022-09-01), p. H559-H568
Kurzfassung:
Atrial cardiomyopathy has been recognized as having important consequences for cardiac performance and clinical outcomes. The pathophysiological role of the left atrial (LA) appendage and the effect of percutaneous left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO) upon LA mechanics is incompletely understood. We evaluated if changes in LA stiffness due to endocardial LAAO can be detected by LA pressure-volume (PV) analysis and whether stiffness parameters are associated with baseline characteristics. Patients undergoing percutaneous endocardial LAAO ( n = 25) were studied using a novel PV analysis using near-simultaneous three-dimensional LA volume measurements by transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and direct invasive LA pressure measurements. LA stiffness (dP/dV, change in pressure with change in volume) was calculated before and after LAAO. Overall LA stiffness significantly increased after LAAO compared with baseline (median, 0.41–0.64 mmHg/mL; P ≪ 0.001). LA body stiffness after LAAO correlated with baseline LA appendage size by indexed maximum depth (Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient R s = 0.61; P 〈 0.01). LA stiffness change showed an even stronger correlation with baseline LA appendage size by indexed maximum depth ( R s = 0.70; P 〈 0.001). We found that overall LA stiffness increases after endocardial LAAO. Baseline LA appendage size correlates with the magnitude of increase and LA body stiffness. These findings document alteration of LA mechanics after endocardial LAAO and suggest that the LA appendage modulates overall LA compliance. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our study documents a correlation of LA appendage remodeling with the degree of chronically abnormal LA body stiffness. In addition, we found that LA appendage size was the baseline parameter that best correlated with the magnitude of a further increase in overall LA stiffness after appendage occlusion. These findings offer insights about the LA appendage and LA mechanics that are relevant to patients at risk for adverse atrial remodeling, especially candidates for LA appendage occlusion.
Materialart:
Online-Ressource
ISSN:
0363-6135
,
1522-1539
DOI:
10.1152/ajpheart.00083.2022
Sprache:
Englisch
Verlag:
American Physiological Society
Publikationsdatum:
2022
ZDB Id:
1477308-9
SSG:
12