The aim of the present study was to serially track how myocardial infarction (MI) impacts regional myocardial strain and mechanical properties of the left ventricle (LV) in a large animal model. Post-MI remodeling has distinct regional effects throughout the LV myocardium. Regional quantification of LV biomechanical behavior could help explain changes in global function and thus advance clinical assessment of post-MI remodeling. The present study is based on a porcine MI model to characterize LV biomechanics over 28 days post-MI via speckle-tracking echocardiography (STE). Regional myocardial strain and strain rate were recorded in the circumferential, radial, and longitudinal directions at baseline and at 3, 14, and 28 days post-MI. Regional myocardial wall stress was calculated using standard echocardiographic metrics of geometry and Doppler-derived hemodynamic measurements. Regional diastolic myocardial stiffness was calculated from the resultant stress-strain relations. Peak strain and phasic strain rates were nonuniformly reduced throughout the myocardium post-MI, whereas time to peak strain was increased to a similar degree in the MI region and border zone by 28 days post-MI. Elevations in diastolic myocardial stiffness in the MI region plateaued at 14 days post-MI, after which a significant reduction in MI regional stiffness in the longitudinal direction occurred between 14 and 28 days post-MI. Post-MI biomechanical changes in the LV myocardium were initially limited to the MI region but nonuniformly extended into the neighboring border zone and remote myocardium over 28 days post-MI. STE enabled quantification of regional and temporal differences in myocardial strain and diastolic stiffness, underscoring the potential of this technique for clinical assessment of post-MI remodeling. NEW & NOTEWORTHY For the first time, speckle-tracking echocardiography was used to serially track regional biomechanical behavior and mechanical properties postmyocardial infarction (post-MI). We found that changes initially confined to the MI region extended throughout the myocardium in a nonuniform fashion over 28 days post-MI. Speckle-tracking echocardiography-based evaluation of regional changes in left ventricular biomechanics could advance both clinical assessment of left ventricular remodeling and therapeutic strategies that target aberrant biomechanical behavior post-MI.
Drug‐coated balloon (DCB) percutaneous interventional therapy allows for durable reopening of the narrowed lumen via physical tissue expansion and local anti‐restenosis drug delivery, providing an alternative to traditional uncoated balloons or a permanent indwelling implant such as a conventional metallic drug‐eluting stent. While DCB‐based treatment of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) has been incorporated into clinical guidelines, DCB use has been recently curtailed due to reports that showed evidence of increased mortality risk in patients treated with paclitaxel (PTX)‐coated balloons. Given the United States Food and Drug Administration's 2019 consequent warning regarding PTX‐eluting DCBs and the subsequent marked reduction in clinical DCB use, there is now a critical need to better understand the compositional and mechanical factors underlying DCB efficacy and safety. Most work to date on DCB refinement has focused on designing both the enabling balloon catheter and alternate coatings composed of various drugs and excipients, followed by device evaluation in preclinical and clinical studies. We contend that improvement in DCB performance will require a better understanding of the biophysical factors operative during and following balloon deployment, and moreover that the elaboration and demonstrated control of these factors are needed to address current concerns with DCB use. This article provides a perspective on the biophysical interactions that govern DCB performance and offers new design strategies for the development of next‐generation DCB devices.
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