The introduction of new anticancer treatment modalities has improved survival rates, transforming cancer into a chronic disease in many instances. One of the most devastating complications of cancer treatment is cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction. Adequate preoperative assessment of any significant cancer therapy-related cardiac impairment is critical, and may be missed with conventional measures. The assessment of global longitudinal strain by speckle-tracking echocardiography is more sensitive for the early detection of cardiac contractility before a decline in ejection fraction can be discovered. Global longitudinal strain can also predict postoperative cardiac dysfunction, which makes it a good alternative for preoperative cardiac assessment in the oncology population when cancer therapies have been administered that can alter normal performance.
CITATION STYLE
Shehata, I. M., Odell, T. D., Elhassan, A., Urits, I., Viswanath, O., & Kaye, A. D. (2021, June 1). Global Longitudinal Strain: Is It Time to Change the Preoperative Cardiac Assessment of Oncology Patients? Oncology and Therapy. Adis. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40487-020-00134-0
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