Stress Echocardiography - Gvsu - Grand Valley State University
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Transcript Stress Echocardiography - Gvsu - Grand Valley State University
Stress Echocardiography
Susan A. Raaymakers, MPAS, PA-C, RDCS (AE)(PE)
Radiologic and Imaging Sciences - Echocardiography
Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, Michigan
1
Brief History
1980s
Improvement in image quality
Development of digital acquisition
technology (“frame grabbers”)
2
Physiologic Basis
1930s: Tennant and Wiggers
Relationship between systolic contraction
and myocardial blood supply to the left
ventricle
Demonstrated rapid and predictable
development of dyskinesis
3
Physiologic Basis
Physiologic stress results in
An increase in heart rate and
Contractility
HR and contractility maintained by an
increase in myocardial blood flow
4
Physiologic Basis
Increase in
Systolic wall thickening
Endocardial excursion
Global contractility
Leads to decrease in end-systolic volume
Increase in ejection fraction
May be blunted in advanced age,
hypertension or in presence of beta blocker
5
therapy
Physiologic Basis
Presence of coronary artery stenosis
Increased oxygen demand not adequately
accommodated (supply-demand mismatch)
Development of ischemic cascade
6
Physiologic Basis
Stressor elimination
Myocardial oxygen demand is reduced and
ischemia resolves
Normalization
may occur rapidly
Typically recovery takes 1 to 2 minutes depending on
severity of ischemia
Stunned myocardium: functional abnormalities persist
after transient ischemia for a longer period
May last days or weeks
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Utility Of Echocardiography In
Conjunction With Stress Testing
Wall motion abnormalities at rest
Infarction
Cardiomyopathy
Myocarditis
Left bundle branch block
Hypertension/afterload mismatch
Hibernating myocardium
Stunned myocardium
Toxins (e.g., alcohol)
Postoperative state
Paced rhythm
Right ventricular volume/pressure overload
Wall Motion abnormalities during stress
Ischemia
Translational cardiac motion
Cardiomyopathy
Rate-dependent left bundle branch block
8
Methodologies
Advantage: versatility
Exercise
Treadmill
Supine bicycle
Upright bicycle
Handgrip
Stair step
Non-exercise
Dobutamine
Dipyridamole
Adenosine
Pacing
9
Treadmill
Most commonly form of stress
testing in U.S.
Provides useful clinical information
Exercise capacity
Blood pressure response
Arrhythmias
Protocols: Bruce, Balke, Naughton,
etc.
10
Treadmill
Addition of echocardiography
Not intended to alter exercise protocol
Echocardiography
images obtained pre- and post-
exercise
Challenge of obtaining images immediately
post exercise
Ischemia
may resolve quickly after exercise
Must obtain images with 1 to 1.5 minutes
11
Treadmill Exercise Stress
Echocardiography
Traditional approach
Parasternal long-axis
Parasternal short-axis
Apical four chamber
Apical two chamber
12
Treadmill Exercise Stress Echocardiography
Protocol
Patient is prepared for treadmill stress testing
Instructions provided on transition from the treadmill to the examination table
after exercise
Resting echocardiographic images obtained, reviewed, and stored (both
digitally and on videotape)
Standard treadmill exercise examination performed
Patient moves as quickly as possible after exercise to the examination table
Post exercise imaging acquiring and recorded on videotape and digitally
Digital images reviewed and representative loops selected
Digital images stored on permanent medium
13
Treadmill Exercise Stress Echocardiography
Rapid Recovery – Images acquired in 75 seconds
Anterior ischemia
Long and short axis
Four chamber
Resolved in two chamber over the course of post-stress image
acquisition
14
Supine Bicycle Exercise Stress
Echocardiography
Rapid Recovery - Images acquired in 75 seconds
Apical Wall Motion Abnormality
15
Bicycle Ergometry
Stationary bicycle ergometry: first form of exercise in
conjunction with echocardiography
Currently: Availability of supine bicycle systems permit
a variety of patient positions
Advantage: ability to image throughout exercise,
particularly at peak stress
Avoids potential problem of rapid recovery
Allows onset of wall motion abnormality to be documented
Wall motion abnormalities are more easily seen in peak exercise
versus post exercise
Image acquisition is less rushed lending itself to better quality
16
images
Bicycle Ergometry
Disadvantage
Workload
Bicycling in supine position may be uncomfortable for some
patients
Supine position appears to facilitate the
induction of ischemia
Perhaps by increasing venous return and preload
Associated with greater blood pressure response
Ischemia occurs at a lower heart rate during supine
versus upright exercise
17
Bicycle Ergometry Protocol
Patient prepared for standard stress testing
Patient instructed how to perform bicycle exercise
Patient positioned on supine ergometer and secured in place
Rest images obtained (table inclined to optimize images)
Exercise protocol begins at a workload of 25 W and a cadence of 60 rpm
Images monitored throughout exercise
At peak exercise, a full series of images is obtained
After cessation of exercise, wall motion is monitored to document
resolution of induced ischemia
Representative images are selected and rearranged for digital storage
18
Dobutamine Stress Echocardiography
Dobutamine: synthetic catecholamine causes
Inotropic and
chronotropic effects
Affinity for ß1, ß2 and α receptors in the myocardium and
vasculature
Cardiovascular effects are dose dependent
Augmented contractility occurring at lower doses followed by a
progressive chronotropic response at increasing doses
Peripheral effects may result in either predominant:
Vasoconstriction or vasodilation
Changes in vascular resistance (i.e. blood pressure) are
unpredictable
19
Dobutamine Stress Echocardiography
Distinction between exercise and Dobutamine
Change in venous return is increased in exercise
Autonomic nervous system-mediated changes in
systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance are
quite different
Heart rate is less important with Dobutamine compared with
exercise
Ischemia may be induced even if target heart rate is not
achieved due to greater augmentation of contraction
Primary indication for Dobutamine as a substitute for
exercise stress echocardiography
Patients unwilling or unable to exercise adequately
Detection of viable myocardium
20
Dobutamine Stress Echocardiography
Atropine
May be used in conjunction with Dobutamine
to augment heart rate increases
Patients
on beta blockers
21
Protocol for Dobutamine Stress
Echocardiography
Patient preparation for stress testing
IV access obtained
Digital images obtained for baseline study
Continuous EKG and BP monitoring
Dobutamine infusion of 5 (or 10) µg/kg/min
Infusion rate is increased every 3 minutes to doses of 10, 20, 30, and 40 µg/kg/min
EKG, Echocardiograms and BP are monitored continuously
Low-dose images are acquired at 5 or 10 µg/kg/min (at first sign of increased contractility)
Atropine in aliquots of 0.5 to 1.0 mg can be given during the mid and high doses to augment the
heart rate response
Mid-dose images are acquired at either 20 or 30 µg/kg/min
Peak images are acquired before termination of the infusion
Post-stress images are recorded after return to baseline
The patient is monitored until he or she returns to baseline status
22
End Points and Reasons to Terminate
Dobutamine Infusion During Stress Testing
Exceeding target heart rate of 85%
age-predicted maximum
Development of significant angina
Recognition of a new wall motion
abnormality
Arrhythmias such as atrial
fibrillation or non-sustained
ventricular tachycardia
Limiting side effects or symptoms
23
Safety of Dobutamine
Short-half life
May be utilized in patients with
bronchospastic disease
Common side effects
Minor arrhythmias
Palpitations or anxiety
24
Dipyridamole and Adenosine
Potent vasodilators
Adenosine: short-acting direct coronary vasodilator
Dipyridamole: slower acting.
Inhibits adenosine uptake
Adenosine and dipyridamole generally cause changes
less significant and shorter lived than Dobutamine
Used in nuclear imaging studies more often than
echocardiography
25
Choosing Among the Different
Stress Modalities
26
Interpretation of Stress
Echocardiography
Most analyzed based on subjective assessment of regional wall
motion
Wall thickness and endocardial excursion at baseline and during
stress
Normal response is development of global hyperdynamic wall motion
Some heterogeneity of response may be expected
27
Abnormal response to exercise
Increase in LV systolic dimension
Increase in RV
28
Strain Rate Imaging
Relies on tissue Doppler imaging to
quantify myocardial deformation in
response to applied stress
Strain
Simply the change in length of tissue that
occurs when force is applied
Strain rate
First derivative of strain or how strains
changes over time
29
Strain Rate Imaging
Measured as difference in velocity
between two points normalized for the
distance between them
Theoretic advantages:
Relative independence of translational
movement and tethering
This will be covered in more depth in future
lecture
30
Wall Motion Score Index
16 segment
1989 ASE recommendation
6 segments both basal and mid ventricular levels (12 total)
4 segments at apex
Commonly used in echocardiography
Nuclear perfusion imaging, cardiovascular magnetic resonance
and cardiac computed tomography commonly use more
segments
Did not include apical cap
31
Wall Motion Score Index
17 segment model
2002 American Heart Association Writing Group on
Myocardial Segmentation and Registration for
Cardiac Imaging attempt to establish common
segmentation for all types of imaging
Includes apical cap
32
Wall Motion Score Index
1: normal
2: hypokinesis
3: akinesis
4: dyskinesis
5: aneurysmal
6: akinetic/scar
7: dyskinetic/scar
33
Characterization of Wall Motion
Hypokinesis
Mildest form of abnormal function
Preservation of some degree of thickening and
inward motion of endocardium during systole but
less than normal (<5 mm of endocardial excursion)
Truly abnormal if:
Limited to a region or territory that corresponds to the
distribution of one coronary artery and
Associated with normal (or hyperdynamic) wall motion
elsewhere
Tardokinesis
Delayed, sometimes post systolic, inward motion or
thickening
34
Characterization of Wall Motion
Akinesis
Dyskinesis
Absence of systolic myocardial thickening and
endocardial excursion
Most extreme form of a wall motion abnormality
Systolic thinning and outward motion or bulging of
the myocardium during systole
Scar
Thin and/or highly echogenic
35
Example of Wall Motion Scoring
Index
36
Wall Motion Response to Stress
Wall motion that increases or augments with stress is
normal
Development of wall motion abnormalities with stress is
considered resultant of ischemia
Abnormal segments at rest remaining unchanged with
stress: infarcted sans additional ischemia
Hypokinetic baseline that worsens with exercise:
ischemic
37
Localization of Coronary Artery Lesions
Practical Application
Predict presence of disease in specific
coronary arteries or branches
In general
Stress
echocardiography is more sensitive in
patients with multi-vessel disease in comparison
to single-vessel disease
More accurate specifically identifying disease in
the left anterior descending artery or right
coronary artery in comparison to left circumflex
Variability in coronary artery distribution
Left
circumflex versus right coronary artery
distribution not always possible
38
Localized Apical Ischemia Induced
with Dobutamine
Normal at 20
µg/kg/min
stage
Abnormal at
higher stage
and heart rate
39
Previous Anterior MI, Development
of Inferior Ischemia
Baseline: basal
inferior wall
akinesis
Entire inferior
wall dyskinesis
40
Multi-Vessel Disease
41
Correlation with Symptoms and
Electrocardiographic Changes
Most instances
ECG, symptoms and echocardiography concordance
Discordance
Limitation of interpretation of ECG changes and
symptoms
Virtually every study indicates
Wall motion more sensitive and specific than symptoms
and/or ST-segment changes for CAD
Echo relied upon heavily for final report
Most common indications for echocardiography with stress
testing due to anticipation of abnormal or non-diagnostic
ECG
42
Detection of Coronary Artery
Disease – False Negatives
Single Vessel
Sensitivity is higher with multivessel disease
Left ventricular hypertrophy
Studies shown: patients with LVH in setting of normal mass
(small chamber size) have a disproportionately high
frequency of false-negative results
Concentric remodeling (thick walls with small internal
chamber size): common finding in elderly patients with
hypertension
(Smart et al., 2000) Authors postulated blunted increase in endsystolic wall stress at peak Dobutamine infusion may account
for reduced sensitivity in this subgroup
43
Detection of Coronary Artery Disease –
Significant LVH W/CAD
44
Detection of Coronary Artery Disease –
False Negative: Left Bundle Branch Block
Abnormal septal motion both at rest and stress
Preservation of septal thickening
Evidence against ischemia as cause of abnormal
endocardial excursion
45
Comparison with Nuclear Techniques
Gold standard: angiographic testing
Nuclear: more sensitive
Echocardiographic: more specific
Overall accuracy: nuclear and
echocardiography are similar
Both
operator dependent
Advantages of echocardiography: versatility
of technique, lower cost of test, and
avoidance of radiation exposure
46
Stress Echocardiography After Revascularization
Used to
Evaluate initial success of the procedure
Look for recurrence of disease
Assess symptoms in patients with known
CAD
47
Pre-Operative Risk Assessment
Non-cardiac surgery
Dobutamine stress echocardiography
most commonly used
Absence of inducible wall motion
abnormality
Very favorable prognosis with negative
predictive value of 93% to 100%
Predictive
ability: identification of patients who
subsequently experience perioperative events
48
Stress Echocardiography in Women
Higher rates of false positive ECG
response
49
Assessment of Myocardial Viability
Viable
Myocardium that has potential for functional
recovery
Stunned
or hibernating
More severe wall motion abnormality, less
likely to be viable (i.e. dyskinetic regions are
less viable than hypokinetic regions)
Thinned, scarred segments likely to be nonviable
Resting echocardiogram non-sensitive, need
stress echocardiography (Dobutamine)
50
Assessment of Viability
Anterior And Lateral Viability Is Demonstrated
51
Use of Myocardial Contrast Techniques in
Stress Echocardiography
Two Distinct Categories
Left ventricular opacification for border
enhancement
Covered
in previous lecture
Myocardial perfusion imaging
Perfusion
defect precedes regional wall motion
abnormality
Differing protocols
Bolus vs. continuous infusion
Continuous vs. intermittent triggered imaging
Most studies rely on vasodilator stress (dipyridamole or
adenosine) to induce regional changes in blood flow
52
Use of Myocardial Contrast Techniques in
Stress Echocardiography
Vasodilator and intermittent triggered imaging during
continuous infusion of an experimental agent
Displayed image recorded from the fourth cycle after
bubble destruction (long enough for contrast to
adequately replenish within the tissue)
Peak exercise: bubbles should refill more quickly (one
to two cycles) due to vasodilation
Approval for contrast agents for specific purpose of
perfusion imaging is not yet approved by U.S. Food and
Drug Administration
Experimental and clinical studies have demonstrated feasibility
of myocardial perfusion studies in comparing with nuclear and
angiography
53
Use of Myocardial Contrast Techniques in
Stress Echocardiography
Following
image
Delay
in rate of replenishment of
the microbubbles: inferior wall
perfusion defect
54
Use of Myocardial Contrast Techniques in
Stress Echocardiography
55
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular
Heart Disease
Echocardiogram and stress
echocardiogram
Study (Gauer et al., 2003)
1,272 consecutive patients
5%
significant mitral regurgitation
13% aortic regurgitation
Approximately 1% each aortic or mitral stenosis
56
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Utilization Specifically For Valvular Heart Disease
Correlation Of Symptoms With Severity
Some patients with relatively mild disease may have significant increase
in mean gradient during exercise
MS: may have inappropriate increase in pulmonary artery pressure
MR: unexpected worsening with exercise
Worsening of mitral regurgitation has been reported in the absence of ischemia or LV
dilation
57
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Utilization specifically for valvular heart disease
LV dysfunction and moderate aortic valve
gradient
Resting study often fails to differentiate
between
moderate
and severe aortic stenosis based on
gradient alone
Dobutamine
Increasing
transvalvular flow can be used to
distinguish moderate
58
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Review of Utilization of Dobutamine Stress
Echocardiography for Aortic Stenosis
Dobutamine infusion 5 µg/kg/min
If leaflets are relatively flexible (mild to
moderate stenosis)
Valve area will increase in response to increasing
stroke volume
Increase in velocity outflow tract will be much greater
than that of the jet
Ratio of LVOT/Ao velocity will increase
Example:
Baseline: LVOT velocity of 1.0 and Ao velocity of 2.0 (ratio ½)
Exercise: LVOT velocity 2.0 and Ao velocity of 2.0 (ratio 1/1)
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Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Review of Utilization of Dobutamine Stress
Echocardiography for Aortic Stenosis
True severe aortic stenosis is associated with a fixed
valve area
Maximal velocity of both outflow tract and jet will
proportionately increase
Ratio of LVOT/Ao peak velocity remains the same
Example:
Baseline: LVOT velocity of 1.0 and Ao velocity of 2.0 (ratio ½)
Exercise: LVOT velocity 2.0 and Ao velocity of 4.0 (ratio 2/4 or 1/2)
Limitation: study non-diagnostic if
ventricular does not respond to Dobutamine with an increase in
contractility, which may occur with significant coronary artery disease
60
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Review of Utilization of Dobutamine Stress
Echocardiography for Aortic Stenosis
Rest: 0.6/2.8 = 0.21
20 mcg/kg: 0.8/3.6 = 0.22
30 mcg/kg: 0.9/3.8 = 0.23
61
Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
Prosthetic valves
Detection of exercise
Increase substantially with exercise
Helpful in understanding differences in
hemodynamics of different prosthetic valves
Patient-prosthetic valve mismatch
Induced changes in pulmonary artery pressure in
patients with chronic lung disease
LVOT obstruction
62
Practice
63
Review
What type of test is this?
Is this a normal response?
64
Review
What type of test was performed?
Would you consider this as a normal response?
65
Review
What type of test is being performed?
Is this normal?
66
Review
What type of test is being performed?
Is this a normal response?
67
Review
What type of test is being performed?
Is this a normal response?
68
Review
What type of test is being performed?
Is this a normal response?
69
Review
What type of test is being performed?
Is this a normal response?
70
Review
History: patient with diabetes, smoking and peripheral
vascular disease
What type of test is being performed?
Is this a normal response?
71
Sources
Feigenbaum H, Armstrong W. (2004). Echocardiography. (6th
Edition). Indianapolis. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Goldstein S., Harry M., Carney D., Dempsey A., Ehler D., Geiser E.,
Gillam L., Kraft C., Rigling R., McCallister B., Sisk E., Waggoner A.,
Witt S., Gresser C.. (2005). Outline of Sonographer Core Curriculum
in Echocardiography.
Otto C. (2004). Textbook of Clinical Echocardiography. (3rd
Edition). Elsevier & Saunders.
Reynolds T. (2000). The Echocardiographer's Pocket Reference.
(2nd Edition). Arizona. Arizona Heart Institute.
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