Prognostic implications of left ventricular function in endomyocardial disease in infants and children

1975 
Hemodynamic factors measured at cardiac catheterization in 40 infants and children with chronic endomyocardial disease were analyzed in regard to subsequent clinical condition. The patients were followed for periods ranging from 2 months to 11 years (average 4.3 years) after initial cardiac catheterization. There were no statistically significant differences in left ventricular end-diastolic volume among survivors with no symptoms, survivors with persistent congestive heart failure, and nonsurvivors. Ejection fractions were depressed in about four fifths of patients with chronic endomyocardial disease and were significantly lower in the group of patients who died subsequently LVEDP in patients who did not survive was significantly higher than in asymptomatic survivors, but there was too much overlapping of individual values to be of prognostic value. Left ventricular pressure-volume loops appeared to offer an improved, although more tedious, method of assessing LV function. In addition to offering information on LVEDV, LVEDP, and EjF, LV stroke work may easily be estimated from pressure-volume loops. There was generally good correlation between hemodynamic status assessed from pressure-volume loops and subsequent clinical outcome.
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