Acute Modifications of Left Ventricular Torsional Mechanics Induced by Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Affect Short-Term Reverse Remodeling

2019 
BACKGROUND: Left ventricular (LV) torsion is an important aspect of cardiac mechanics and is altered in heart failure patients. Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) has a positive effect on LV function, but the exact mechanisms through which it works are not completely depicted. Our aim was to investigate (1) the acute CRT effect on LV torsional mechanics in heart failure patients using 3D speckle tracking echocardiography (3DSTE) and (2) its effect on short-term LV remodeling. Methods and Results: We considered 48 patients (age 72±11 years, 35 men) who received CRT. They underwent 3DSTE during CRT-on (biventricular stimulation) vs. CRT-off (intrinsic conduction/right atrial/ventricular stimulation alone), in a random fashion. Patients were classified as CRT responders based on LV systolic volume reduction ≥15% at 6 months (final population: 31 responders, 17 non-responders). Acute CRT positively affected responders in terms of LV torsion (from 0.32±0.06°/cm CRT-off to 0.41±0.06°/cm CRT-on), but adversely affected non-responders (from 0.54±0.08°/cm CRT-off to 0.28±0.08°/cm CRT-on, interaction P=0.02). A similar trend was confirmed for apical (interaction P<0.04), but not for basal torsion (interaction P=0.351). CONCLUSIONS: CRT has a positive role in acute recovery of LV torsion (particularly in its apical component) in responders, likely modulating the improvement in LV remodeling at early follow-up.
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