Heart reduction surgery: An analysis of the impact on cardiac function,☆☆,,★★,,♢♢

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-5223(97)70288-5Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open archive

Abstract

Objectives: Reports of improved ejection fraction, coupled with decreased filling pressures, have prompted a number of centers to begin evaluating the efficacy of heart reduction surgery to ameliorate symptoms of heart failure. However, the impact of this operation on cardiac mechanics is unknown. We applied a multiple compartment elastance model to simulate the effects of excising cardiac mass on heart function. Methods: The left ventricle was divided into two functional compartments to simulate excision of part of the wall. At multiple increments of mass reduction, the resulting end-systolic elastance, ejection fraction, stroke volume, end-diastolic pressure and volume, and diastolic stiffness were determined. Results: Changes in systolic function were accompanied by offsetting changes in diastolic function; consequently, overall pump function (the Frank-Starling Relationship) was found to be depressed. The geometric rearrangement associated with this operation leads to a reduction in wall stress for a given level of pressure generation, thus implying an increase in the efficiency with which wall stress is transduced into intraventricular pressure. Conclusions: Overall pump function is depressed in the short run after heart reduction surgery. However, on the basis of theoretic arguments, heart reduction surgery may have long-term beneficial implications. Importantly, this analysis revealed that changes in parameters of ventricular function have different implications during heart reduction surgery than when such changes are observed with inotropism caused by acute pharmacologic therapy. (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1997;113:1032-40)

Cited by (0)

Address for reprints: Marc L. Dickstein, MD, Department of Anesthesiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, 630 West 168th St., New York, NY 10032.

☆☆

*Department of Anesthesiology.

**George H. Humphreys Professor of Surgery.

★★

***Valentine Mott–Johnson & Johnson Professor of Surgery.

****Division of Circulatory Physiology.

♢♢

12/1/80776