Title of article :
Usefulness of low-dose dobutamine stress echocardiography for evaluating reversibility of brain death–induced myocardial dysfunction
Author/Authors :
Kono، نويسنده , , Tatsuji and Nishina، نويسنده , , Takuya and Morita، نويسنده , , Hiroshi and Hirota، نويسنده , , Yuzo and Kawamura MD، نويسنده , , Keishiro and Fujiwara، نويسنده , , Akira، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages :
5
From page :
578
To page :
582
Abstract :
Many of the myocardial wall motion abnormalities in heart donors are reversible after transplantation, indicating that the presence of wall motion abnormalities should not automatically lead to the exclusion of donor hearts. The present study observes the natural course of brain death–induced myocardial dysfunction, and investigates whether low-dose dobutamine stress echocardiography could identify reversible myocardial dysfunction in brain-dead patients. We prospectively measured the serial changes of left ventricular fractional shortening (FS) using echocardiography and cardiac troponin T from admission to the time of cardiac standstill in 30 brain-dead patients. Patients were divided into 2 groups according to FS at the time of brain death; group I (FS ≥30%) and group II (FS <30%). Dobutamine stress echocardiography was performed in group II. Twenty-three patients were in group I and 7 patients were in group II. Four patients among 7 patients in group II showed dobutamine-nonresponsive wall motion (group IIa) and the remaining 3 patients showed dobutamine-responsive wall motion (group IIb). Troponin T at the time of brain death was markedly higher in group IIa than in groups I and IIb (5.13 ± 3.79 vs 0.23 ± 0.20, 0.22 ± 0.16 ng/ml, p <0.0001, respectively). FS remained normal and troponin T was not increased until cardiac standstill in group I. FS remained decreased and troponin T remained elevated until cardiac standstill in group IIa, whereas FS became normal at 7 days after brain death with no change in troponin T in group IIb. Thus, some brain death–induced myocardial dysfunction is reversible and low-dose dobutamine stress echocardiography may identify reversible myocardial dysfunction.
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Serial Year :
1999
Journal title :
American Journal of Cardiology
Record number :
1891415
Link To Document :
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