Aims: To study online left ventricular (LV) dynamic effects of transmural ischaemia and reperfusion during consecutive balloon coronary occlusions in the setting of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
Methods and results: In 10 consecutive unselected patients with stable angina (seven males, mean age 62 ± 3 years) who underwent elective PCI, LV dynamics were continuously recorded using a pressure-conductance catheter to simultaneously measure pressure and volume (PV-loop). The effects of a prolonged balloon coronary occlusion (148 ± 19 s) and a second occlusion on various LV function parameters were studied, as well as recovery of these parameters after reperfusion. Ischaemia caused an immediate (<5 s) decrease in diastolic function, followed by a decrease in contractile function, indicated by a rightward shift of the PV-loop, and a decreased dP/dtmax and ejection fraction. All parameters recovered within two minutes after reperfusion. The second occlusion caused a more rapid and more pronounced decrease in systolic and global LV function, while the 12-lead ECG showed less ST-segment deviation.
Conclusions: Online LV pressure-volume measurements during elective PCI show that prolonged balloon coronary occlusion causes a phased ischaemic response of diastolic dysfunction, and then systolic dysfunction with more pronounced deterioration during a consecutive ischaemic period, paradoxical to the ischaemic electrocardiographic signs.