Cardiovascular medicine
Effect of verapamil on systolic and diastolic coronary blood flow
velocity in asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic patients with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
P Petkow Dimitrowa, M Krzanowskib, R Ni
ankowskib, A Szczeklikb, J S Dubiela
a Second Department of
Cardiology, Jagiellonian University School of Medicine, ul Kopernika
17, 31-501 Krakow, Poland, b Department of Medicine, Jagiellonian University
School of Medicine, Krakow
Correspondence to: Dr Petkow Dimitrow
Accepted 22 October
1999
OBJECTIVE
To assess non-invasively the effect of
verapamil treatment on coronary blood flow velocity in asymptomatic and
mildly symptomatic patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
DESIGN
High frequency transthoracic Doppler
echocardiography was used to compare resting phasic coronary blood flow
velocity before and after a one month period of verapamil treatment in
17 patients (14 men and three women) with non-obstructive hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy. Eighteen healthy subjects formed an age and sex matched
control group. Systolic and diastolic coronary blood flow velocity was measured in the distal portion of left anterior descending coronary artery using high frequency transthoracic Doppler echocardiography. Blood flow velocity before and after verapamil was compared in the
patients with cardiomyopathy and with the results in the control group.
RESULTS
Compared with the controls, patients with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy had increased diastolic coronary blood flow
velocity (41.8 (8.1) v 59.9 (21.9) cm/s,
p < 0.01) and a lower mean systolic coronary blood flow velocity
(18.7 (10.8) v
11.2 (27.5) cm/s, p < 0.01) before verapamil treatment. A backward pattern of systolic flow, manifested by negative values of coronary blood flow velocity, was recorded in eight of the patients, while no negative values were
found in the controls. After verapamil treatment the retrograde systolic blood flow was restored to an anterograde pattern in only one
patient. The mean value of systolic coronary blood flow velocity did
not change significantly and remained lower than the systolic forward
flow velocity in the controls (
3.6 (31.8) v
18.7 (10.8) cm/s, p < 0.05). However, diastolic coronary blood flow
velocity decreased significantly after verapamil (59.9 (21.9) v 50.7 (19.5) cm/s p < 0.05), reaching a
level comparable with that in the controls (50.7 (19.5)
v 41.8 (8.1) cm/s, p > 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
In contrast to healthy subjects, in
non-obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy the systolic pattern of
coronary blood flow was heterogeneous (both retrograde and
anterograde), and diastolic coronary blood flow velocity was abnormally
increased, despite a lack of significant symptoms. Verapamil treatment
did not restore the forward pattern of systolic blood flow but
decreased diastolic blood flow velocity to a level comparable with that
in healthy subjects.
Keywords: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; verapamil; coronary blood flow velocity
© 2000 by Heart
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[Abstract] [Full Text]
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