Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Characterizing cardiac dysfunction in fetuses with left congenital diaphragmatic hernia.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate cardiac function by conventional echocardiography and tissue Doppler imaging in fetuses with left congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH).

METHODS: Conventional echocardiography (myocardial performance index, ventricular filling velocities, and E/A ratios) and tissue Doppler imaging (annular myocardial peak velocities, E/E' and E'/A' ratios) in mitral, septal, and tricuspid annulus were evaluated in a cohort of 31 left-sided CDH fetuses and compared with 75 controls matched for gestational age 2:1.

RESULTS: In comparison to controls, CDH fetuses had prolonged isovolumetric time periods (isovolumetric contraction time 35 ms vs 28 ms, P < .001), with higher myocardial performance index (0.49 vs 0.42, P < .001) and tricuspid E/A ratios (0.77 vs 0.72, P = .033). Longitudinal function assessed by tissue Doppler showed signs of impaired relaxation (mitral lateral A' 8.0 vs 10.1 cm/s, P < .001 and an increased mitral lateral E'/A' ratio 0.93 vs 0.78, P < .001) in the CDH fetuses as compared with controls, with preserved systolic function.

CONCLUSION: Left CDH fetuses show echocardiographic signs of diastolic dysfunction, probably secondary to fetal heart compression, maintaining a preserved systolic function.

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