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Echocardiographic left ventricular wall thickness: A poor predictor of the severity of aortic valve stenosis

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AbstractEchocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy is thought to be helpful in grading the severity of aortic stenosis. This study compared M‐mode echocardiographic left ventricular wall dimensions with Gorlin aortic valve area. Good quality echocardiograms were obtained in 294 patients with aortic stenosis who also underwent cardiac catheterization. Patients with grade 3 or 4 aortic regurgitation were excluded. The correlation was calculated between the aortic valve area and the left ventricular wall dimensions. Correlation coefficients were poor; r=0.13 for the septum, r=0.15 for the posterior wall, and r=0.17 for the mean wall dimension. Correlation was not improved significantly if patients with poor left ventricular function or systemic hypertension were excluded. Correlation with other hemodynamic parameters was better, peak left ventricular systolic pressure having r values of 0.36 and 0.30 for posterior wall and septum. Mean and peak aortic valve gradient had r values approaching 0.30 for both dimensions. If the peak gradient was included in multivariate analysis, the wall dimensions then had no predictive power for severity of aortic stenosis. This study demonstrates that the degree of left ventricular wall hypertrophy is not related to the severity of aortic outflow obstruction and therefore cannot be used to grade the severity of aortic stenosis.
Title: Echocardiographic left ventricular wall thickness: A poor predictor of the severity of aortic valve stenosis
Description:
AbstractEchocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy is thought to be helpful in grading the severity of aortic stenosis.
This study compared M‐mode echocardiographic left ventricular wall dimensions with Gorlin aortic valve area.
Good quality echocardiograms were obtained in 294 patients with aortic stenosis who also underwent cardiac catheterization.
Patients with grade 3 or 4 aortic regurgitation were excluded.
The correlation was calculated between the aortic valve area and the left ventricular wall dimensions.
Correlation coefficients were poor; r=0.
13 for the septum, r=0.
15 for the posterior wall, and r=0.
17 for the mean wall dimension.
Correlation was not improved significantly if patients with poor left ventricular function or systemic hypertension were excluded.
Correlation with other hemodynamic parameters was better, peak left ventricular systolic pressure having r values of 0.
36 and 0.
30 for posterior wall and septum.
Mean and peak aortic valve gradient had r values approaching 0.
30 for both dimensions.
If the peak gradient was included in multivariate analysis, the wall dimensions then had no predictive power for severity of aortic stenosis.
This study demonstrates that the degree of left ventricular wall hypertrophy is not related to the severity of aortic outflow obstruction and therefore cannot be used to grade the severity of aortic stenosis.

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