SwnmaryBackground: Left ventricular (LV) shape tends to become spherical in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy of diverse etiology. Clinical and echocardiographic factors which affect the degree of LV spherical distortion and the impact of altered LV shape on prognosis have not been studied adequately.Hypothesis: This study was undertaken to investigate the prognostic implications of altered LV shape on clinical outcome in dilated cardiomyopathy.Methods: In 1 12 patients with depressed LV ejection fraction ( I 9 f 9%) and symptomatic heart failure, and in 10 ageand gender-matched normal controls, we performed 2-dimensional echocardiography to assess LV shape using the eccentricity index. Eccentricity index was defined as the ratio of the LV long axis to the LV transverse diameter, measured at end systole and end diastole in the apical four-chamber view. We sought univariate and multivariate clinical and echocardiographic correlates of LV shape. Further, we sought correlations between eccentricity index and clinical outcomes (death and composite outcome of death or emergent heart transplant).Results: Compared with controls, patients with cardiomyopathy had significantly lower systolic (2.04 vs. 1.56; p = 0.001) and diastolic (1.75 vs. 1.53; p = 0.003) eccentricity index, implying a more spherical LV shape. Of all clinical and echocardiographic variables tested, mitral regurgitation, right ventricular dysfunction, and increased LV mass were independently associated with spherical LV shape. At a follow-up period of 17 k 12 months, no correlation was found between eccentricity index and the occurrence of death or the combined endpoint of death or emergent heart transplant, in univariate or multivariate analysis.Conclusions: In patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, the degree of spherical distortion of the LV does not correlate with prognosis.
Left ventricular geometry is suspected to affect heterogeneity of myocardial repolarization; therefore, it is plausible but unproven that increased sphericity of the left ventricle is associated with greater QT interval dispersion. In 60 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy with left ventricular ejection fraction < or = 30%, we found that spherical distortion of the left ventricle was associated with increased QT dispersion, implying increased heterogeneity of myocardial repolarization.
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