“…It is largely on account of the problems introduced by afterload changes that power and work measurements have not proved to be popular indices of cardiac performance, and attempts have been made to discover other indicators. Such indices range from hemodynamic and geometric descriptors, such as cardiac output (Braunwald, 1971), end-diastolic pressure (Braunwald and Ross, 1963), ventricular volume or mass (Dodge and Baxley, 1969), and ejection fraction (Krayenbuhl et al, 1968), to mechanical descriptors most of which have been justified as applying the principles of muscle mechanics to the intact heart. This latter group covers three phases: first, the pre-ejection phase which includes various forms containing the first time derivative of left ventricular pressure (dp/dt) (Mason et al, 1971), often with corrections for possible influences of preload or afterload changes (Mahler et al, 1975), and has been extended to include V max , the extrapolated velocity of shortening at zero load (Sonnenblick, 1962); second, the ejection phase, which is based on variables such as the velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (Benzing et al, 1974) or on more detailed representations involving tension-velocity-length relations (Peterson et al, 1973); and third, the diastolic phase, in which stiffness, compliance, and various elasticity moduli and constants may be defined (Mirsky, 1976;Brutsaert et al, 1980).…”