Is functional capacity related to left atrial contractile function in nonobstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy?

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Abstract

The mechanisms underlying reduced exercise capacity in patients with nonobstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (NHCM) could include perturbations of ventricular relaxation, diastolic compliance, or compensatory atrial systolic function. We hypothesized that a loss of atrial contractility in NHCM patients leads to reduced functional capacity. To test this hypothesis, we compared resting noninvasive left atrial ejection phase indices in 49 consecutive patients with NHCM (ages 36+/-10 years; 41% female) and normal left ventricular ejection fraction (mean, 68%+/-8%) with objective metabolic exercise parameters. Left atrial active emptying fraction, ejection force, and kinetic energy failed to predict exercise capacity. Only left atrial total and active emptying volumes correlated weakly with minute volume/CO2 production slope (r=0.31 and r=0.33; p<0.05 for both). Furthermore, when subjects were stratified by New York Heart Association symptomatology, exercise parameters--but not atrial contractility--differed between groups. These data, obtained at rest, fail to suggest that NHCM-related heart failure symptoms are due to an atrial myopathy.

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Shizukuda, Y., Sachdev, V., Fananapazir, L., Tripodi, D., Mohiddin, S. A., Arai, A. E., … Plehn, J. F. (2005). Is functional capacity related to left atrial contractile function in nonobstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy? Congestive Heart Failure (Greenwich, Conn.), 11(5), 234–240. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-5299.2005.04457.x

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