ETD Collection

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    Noncompaction of the ventricular myocardium: factors associated with the compaction ratio in congenital and acquired paediatric cardiac disease
    (2009-11-17T11:49:08Z) Hunter, Vivienne Isla
    Left ventricular (LV) noncompaction is characterized by the presence of an extensive trabecular myocardial layer within the luminal aspect of the compact myocardium of the ventricular wall. The trabeculae are both excessive in number and more prominent than normal. Noncompaction may occur in isolation usually with clinical features of dilated cardiomyopathy, or it may be associated with congenital or acquired heart diseases. Echocardiography is the reference standard for diagnosis, where a ratio of thickness of trabecular-to-compact myocardium (compaction ratio) of >2 is a major diagnostic criterion. Noncompaction is usually considered to result from persistence of the highly trabeculated myocardium found in early cardiogenesis of the human embryo. If persistence of excess trabeculae is the only determinant of the compaction ratio it would be expected that it would remain a consistent measurement in postnatal life. However, temporal changes in the degree of noncompaction in individual case reports have raised the question as to whether the compaction ratio might be sensitive to haemodynamic or other factors. In the present dissertation, I assessed echocardiographically whether the compaction ratio is associated with increases in indices of LV volume preload in 100 children or adolescents with ventricular septal defects (VSD), and 36 with chronic rheumatic heart disease (RHD). Compared to 79 normal controls (compaction ratio=1.4±0.07), patients with VSDs (compaction ratio=2.0±0.2, p<0.0001) and RHD (compaction ratio = 2.0±0.3, p< 0.0001) had a marked increase in the compaction ratio. A compaction ratio>2 was found in 42% of patients with VSDs and 47% with RHD. In VSDs, independent of age and gender, the compaction ratio was positively associated with LV mass index (LVMI) (partial r=0.44, p<0.0001), VSD size (partial r=0.4, p<0.0001), LV end diastolic diameter indexed (LVEDD) (partial r=0.24, p= 0.01), and the presence of additional shunts (partial r=0.21, p=0.02). In RHD, independent of age and gender, the compaction ratio was positively associated with LVEDD (partial r=0.62, p=0.0001), and LVMI (partial r=0.48, p=0.005), and negatively with LV ejection fraction (partial r=0.31, p=0.03). The strong association of indices of LV volume load and the compaction ratio would suggest that haemodynamic influences are contributing to the compaction ratio both in congenital and acquired cardiac disease in childhood. Thus an increased compaction ratio may be the consequence of an increased volume preload, and therefore may not necessarily occur only as a result of persistence of embryonic patterns.