Worsening Left Ventricular Apical Peak Strain Early After Right Ventricular Pacing

2013 
Abstract We aimed to determine the effect of short-term right ventricle pacing (RV) on left ventricle (LV) mechanics using speckle tracking analysis. Conventional echocardiography and two-dimensional strain imaging was studied in 38 patients, mean age 81.6 ± 7.0, that had undergone pacemaker placement and were greater than 90% ventricularly paced. Mean duration of 24 months of RV pacing resulted in a significant decline in: LV apical diastolic rotational velocities (−59.0 ± −38.9 °/s to −28.0 ± −11.5 °/s, p 0.02), peak strain in the LV apical septal wall (−15.6 ± 8.5 to −13.5 ± 7.6, p 0.02), peak strain in LV apical lateral wall (−13.4 ± 8.9 to −11.4 ± 7.3, p 0.02). Thus, with only 24 months of RV pacing, there was a significant decline in peak strain of the LV apex and in apical diastolic rotational velocity that could account for eventual decline in left ventricular function.
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