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Right Atrium Volume Index in Non-Severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease


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Introduction: Right atrium volume index (RAVI) has recently been reported as a quantitative echocardiographic parameter associated with right ventricular systolic dys-function (RVSD) in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Aims: The aim of the current study was to assess right atrium remodeling (RAVI) in COPD patients without echocardiographic parameters of RVSD or PAH at rest and to analyse its association with right ventricular diastolic dysfunction (RVDD) at rest and after exercise – stress-induced RVDD.

Methods: The study was conducted in 104 COPD patients. Pulmonary function tests, blood gas analysis, incremental, symptom-limited cardio-pulmonary test (CPET) protocol and detailed echocardiographic examinations before and 2-3 minutes after peak CPET were applied. The cut-offvalues for stress-induced RVDD were E/e’ > 6.0.

Results: Patients were divided into two groups: patients with stress-induced RVDD (82/104 – 78%) and those without stress-RVDD (22/104 – 22%). RAVI was significantly higher in the group with stress-induced RVDD (23,04 ± 2,67 ml/m2 vs 18,02 ± 2,69 ml/m2) in comparison to those without it. Correlation analysis showed that RAVI was associated with stress-induced RVDD (E/e’) and the distance from the 6 minute walk test (6-MWT), but was not an independent predictor for any of them.

Conclusions: RAVI correlates with stress-induced RVDD parameters (E/e’) in non-severe COPD patients without pulmonary arterial hypertension at rest. It corresponds to the diminished distance from the 6-MWT, but was not an independent factor of reduced physical activity.

eISSN:
0324-1750
Language:
English
Publication timeframe:
4 times per year
Journal Subjects:
Medicine, Basic Medical Science, Immunology, Clinical Medicine, other