SUMMARY The aim of the study was to determine if the end-systolic stress-end-systolic volume relation of the left ventricle (i.e., its tension-length relation) could be estimated from the analysis of a single yentriculogram. For that purpose, the left ventricular (LV) wall stress and volume were computed frame by frame in 35 patients (15 controls, 11 patients with valvular disease, six with coronary artery disease and three with congestive cardiomyopathy). In all patients, a linear relation was observed between LV wall stress and volume during approximately the last two-thirds of ejection. Under basal conditions, the duration of this linear relation ranged from 100-260 msec (mean 155 msec; mean r = 0.97) with a positive slope (range 3.0-9.3 kdyn/cm'/m' in controls) and a negative volume intercept. During a positive inotropic intervention (atrial pacing at 120 beats/min) that increased peak positive dP/dt by 24% (p < 0.0002), the
Material and Methods PatientsThirty-five patients, mean age 45 years (range 18-59 years), were included in this study. All were in sinus rhythm and underwent diagnostic cardiac catheterization. Clinical and angiographic data are listed in table 1. Fifteen patients who had atypical chest pain and completely normal ventriculograms and coronary arteries were considered as normal control subjects. The other patients included 11 with valvular diseases, six with coronary artery disease (stenosis of 75% or greater in at least one coronary vessel) and three with congestive cardiomyopathy. All cardioactive drugs were discontinued at least 48 hours, in most cases 6-7 days, before the procedure. Each patient gave informed consent and no complication occurred as a result of this study.