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Cardiovascular Research Institute and Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0124
Regional
ischemia impairs early diastolic filling due, in part, to
changes in left ventricular relaxation. This study uses open-chest pigs
instrumented with high-fidelity pressure transducers to investigate the
effect of regional ischemia on the active component of
relaxation independent of the passive effects of filling and the effect
of left ventricular filling and stretch on the rate, duration, and
extent of relaxation. During regional ischemia, active
relaxation was impaired in the nonfilling ventricle, with a slower rate
of relaxation. Stretching the myocardium as the ventricle fills slows
the rate of relaxation more during regional ischemia than
during normal perfusion, reflecting an increased sensitivity to stretch
due to filling and an increased dependence of relaxation on volume. The
duration of relaxation depends on the effect of regional
ischemia on the end-diastolic pressure-volume relation.
Stronger baseline contractile function results in an upward shift in
the end-diastolic pressure-volume relation during regional
ischemia and no net effect on the duration of relaxation. If
this curve is shifted upward, the duration of relaxation shortens. All
these effects combine to reduce the atrioventricular pressure gradient
and left ventricular filling during regional ischemia.
diastolic function; myocardial stretch; preload; cardiac mechanics
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