Relation between major indices of prognosis in patients with chronic congestive heart failure: studies of maximal exercise oxygen consumption, neurohormones and ventricular function.
No Thumbnail Available
Date
1992-07-01
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Peak exercise capacity (Peak VO2), neurohormonal changes, ventricular enlargement and ejection fraction are among the most important determinants of prognosis in congestive heart failure. However, the inter-relation between these parameters is unknown. We, therefore, correlated these indices in patients with hemodynamically severe congestive heart failure (NYHA class II, pulmonary artery wedge pressure 25 +/- 2 mm Hg, cardiac index 2.5 +/- 0.2 l/min/m2, ejection fraction 43 +/- 2% and fractional shortening 19 +/- 1%). Peak VO2 measured directly during exercise by breath to breath expiratory gas analysis using a metabolic cart was 23 ml/min/kg. Plasma epinephrine (E) and norepinephrine (NE) were measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and plasma renin activity (PRA), aldosterone (Aldo), cortisol, prolactin, growth hormone, anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) and antinatriuretic peptide (ANP) by radioimmunoassay. Ejection fraction was measured by echocardiography. There was no relation between peak VO2 and any of the neurohormones E: r = -0.43, NE: r = -0.43, ANP: r = -0.49, Cortisol: r = -0.37, ADH: r = -0.07, Aldo: r = -0.45, 2 tail critical value 0.55. PRA showed a modest correlation (r = -0.61). Similarly, there was no relation between ejection fraction or degree of ventricular enlargement and any of the other indices (r = -0.05). We conclude that although peak VO2, neurohormonal profile and ventricular function are important individual prognostic determinants, there seems to be no direct relation between them.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Chandrashekhar Y, Anand IS. Relation between major indices of prognosis in patients with chronic congestive heart failure: studies of maximal exercise oxygen consumption, neurohormones and ventricular function. Indian Heart Journal. 1992 Jul-Aug; 44(4): 213-6