Left ventricular function in patients with centrifugal left ventricular assist device.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
We used blood pool radionuclide angiography to study the left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) in 17 patients with a centrifugal assist device (AD) placed because of severe postoperative LV dysfunction. During maximal LVAD flow, the 12 patients who could be weaned had a higher LV-EF than the 5 who could not be weaned (18 +/- 12% vs. 9 +/- 2%, p = 0.04). Sequential studies during variable AD flows in 12 patients revealed an increase in LV-EF from 15 +/- 7% at maximal flows to 33 +/- 8% during minimal flows (p less than 0.005) in the 10 patients who could be weaned and no change in LV-EF in 2 patients who could not be weaned. The LV-EF during maximal LVAD flow rates was similar in the 10 patients with long-term survival (192 +/- 129 days) and in the 7 patients with only short-term (9 +/- 6 days) survival (LV-EF 17 +/- 12% vs. 12 +/- 6%, p = ns). The long-term survivors, however, had a substantial increase in LV-EF from 20 +/- 13% to 34 +/- 9% (p less than 0.01), as the LVAD flow was decreased from maximal to minimal, whereas the short-term survivors had an insignificant increase in LV-EF from 12 +/- 7% to 21 +/- 12% (p = ns). The long-term survivors increased the LV-EF from maximal to minimal LVAD flows by 182%, in contrast with the short-term survivors, who increased the LV-EF by only 44%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)