Reintroducing Heart Sounds for Early Detection of Acute Myocardial Ischemia in a Porcine Model – Correlation of Acoustic Cardiography With Gold Standard of Pressure-Volume Analysis


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Date

2019

Publication Type

Journal Article, Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

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Abstract

Background: Acoustic cardiography is a hybrid technique that couples heart sounds recording with ECG providing insights into electrical-mechanical activity of the heart in an unsupervised, non-invasive and inexpensive manner. During myocardial ischemia hemodynamic abnormalities appear in the first minutes and we hypothesize a putative diagnostic role of acoustic cardiography for prompt detection of cardiac dysfunction for future patient management improvement. Methods and Results: Ten female Swiss large white pigs underwent permanent distal coronary occlusion as a model of acute myocardial ischemia. Acoustic cardiography analyses were performed prior, during and after coronary occlusion. Pressure-volume analysis was conducted in parallel as an invasive method of hemodynamic assessment for comparison. Similar systolic and diastolic intervals obtained with the two techniques were significantly correlated [Q to min dP/dt vs. Q to second heart sound (r2 = 0.9583, p < 0.0001), PV diastolic filling time vs. AC perfusion time (r2 = 0.9686, p < 0.0001)]. Indexes of systolic and diastolic impairment correlated with quantifiable features of heart sounds [Tau vs. fourth heart sound Display Value (r2 = 0.2721, p < 0.0001) cardiac output vs. third heart sound Display Value (r2 = 0.0791 p = 0.0023)]. Additionally, acoustic cardiography diastolic time (AUC 0.675, p = 0.008), perfusion time (AUC 0.649, p = 0.024) and third heart sound Display Value (AUC 0.654, p = 0.019) emerged as possible indicators of coronary occlusion. Finally, these three parameters, when joined with heart rate into a composite joint-index, represent the best model in our experience for ischemia detection (AUC 0.770, p < 0.001). Conclusion: In the rapidly evolving setting of acute myocardial ischemia, acoustic cardiography provided meaningful insights of mechanical dysfunction in a prompt and non-invasive manner. These findings should propel interest in resurrecting this technique for future translational studies as well as reconsidering its reintroduction in the clinical setting.

Publication status

published

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Volume

10

Pages / Article No.

1090

Publisher

Frontiers Media

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Subject

Acute coronary syndrome; Acute myocardial ischemia; Heart sound; Hemodynamics; Animal model

Organisational unit

09667 - Falk, Volkmar (ehemalig) / Falk, Volkmar (former) check_circle

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