Copyright
©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Cardiol. Mar 26, 2016; 8(3): 258-266
Published online Mar 26, 2016. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v8.i3.258
Published online Mar 26, 2016. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v8.i3.258
Ref. | No. of patients | NYHA class, LVEF | Prevalence of PB | Clinical and prognostic significance of EOV | Significant mortality predictors |
Corrà et al[10], (2002) | 323 | NYHA 2.2 ± 0.9 LVEF 24 ± 8 | 12% | EOV present in 28% of nonsurvivors vs 9% survivors, follow-up period 22 ± 11 mo | NYHA class, LVEF, peak VO2 |
Leite et al[15], (2003) | 84 | NYHA 2-4 LVEF 35 ± 7 | 30% | EOV independently increased the risk of death by 2.97 fold, median follow-up period of 11.3 mo | Peak VO2, NYHA class, VE/VCO2 slope |
Corrà et al[13], (2006) | 133 | NYHA 2.3 ± 0.7 LVEF 23 ± 7 | 21% | 42% mortality in EOV patients vs 15% in non EOV, follow-up period 39 ± 11 mo | NYHA class, peak VO2, VE/VCO2 slope, AHI, LVEF, lower rate of beta blocker use, peak HR |
Guazzi et al[9], (2007) | 156 | NYHA 1-4 LVEF 35 ± 11 | 33% | EOV was the strongest predictor of overall and SCD mortality. EOV present in 100% arrhythmic and 47% nonarrhythmic deaths, follow-up period 28 ± 25 mo | LV mass, LVESV. VE/VCO2 slope maintained a predictive value as to overall cardiac mortality and pump failure death outperforming EOV as predictor of pump failure mortality |
Guazzi et al[18], (2008) | 556 (405 HFrEF, 151 HFpEF) | NYHA 2.4 ± 0.8 in HFrEF, 2.0 ± 0.9 in HFpEF | 35% in HFrEF, 31% in HFpEF | EOV was strongest predictor of mortality in HFpEF compared to HFrEF in multivariate models; EOV was similar predictor of mortality in both HFrEF and HFpEF without LVAD or transplant | VE/VCO2 slope in multivariate model, peak VO2 in univariate model |
Arena et al[16], (2008) | 154 | NYHA 2.2 LVEF 30 ± 14 | 36% | Event (death, transplant or LVAD) free survival 55% in EOV vs 82% in non EOV patients, follow-up period 3 yr | VE/VCO2 slope, LVEF |
Bard et al[17], (2008) | 44 | LVEF 19 ± 7 | 13% | Death or transplant rate 68% in patients with PB vs 52% without PB | Resting ventilatory variation more powerful predictor of mortality than peak VO2 and VE/VCO2 slope |
Olson et al[29], (2008) | 47 | NYHA 2.6 ± 0.8 LVEF 37 ± 17 | 7% | EOV associated with higher VE/VCO2 slope, VD/VT, lower PETCO2, higher NYHA class | |
Ingle et al[28], (2009) | 240 | LVEF 34 ± 6 | 31% by Leite and 25% by Corrá Criteria | 50% of patients diagnosed with EOV by Corrá criteria and 58% diagnosed by Leite criteria died within 1 yr | |
Sun et al[24], (2010) | 580 | NYHA 2-4 LVEF 26 ± 7 | 51% | EOV combined with elevated VE/VCO2 (≥155% predicted) resulted in an OR of 39 for 6 mo mortality | Peak VO2, AT, peak oxygen pulse significantly worse in nonsurvivors |
Ueshima et al[68], (2010) | 50 | NYHA 1-3 | 28% | EOV associated with lower peak VO2 and higher VD/VT | |
Murphy et al[8], (2011) | 56 | NYHA 2-4 LVEF 30 ± 6 | 45% | EOV related to ↓exercise cardiac output and ↑cardiac filling pressures | |
Scardovi et al[31], (2012) | 370 | NYHA 1-3 LVEF 41% (range 34%-50%) | 58% | EOV, VE/VCO2 slope and its ratio to peak VO2 predicted all-cause mortality independent of LVEF | Hemoglobin level, creatinine, BMI, HF admissions in the previous year |
Matsuki et al[30], 2013 | 46 | NYHA 3 LVEF 41 ± 16 | 44% | EOV patients had ↑cardiac filling pressures, higher NT-proBNP value, ↑VE/VCO2 slope, low PETCO2 and greater Borg dyspnea score | |
Nathan et al[27], (2015) | 253 | NYHA 1-3 | 38% | 5 yr rate of death or transplant 14.1% in Fontan patients with EOV vs 4.1% of those without EOV | NYHA class, peak HR |
- Citation: Dhakal BP, Lewis GD. Exercise oscillatory ventilation: Mechanisms and prognostic significance. World J Cardiol 2016; 8(3): 258-266
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8462/full/v8/i3/258.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4330/wjc.v8.i3.258