Publication | Open Access
Assessment of Passive Elastic Stiffness for Isolated Heart Muscle and the Intact Heart
399
Citations
24
References
1973
Year
Cardiac MuscleHeart FailureInappropriate HypertrophyStiffness ConstantDiastolic FunctionElastic StiffnessPassive Elastic StiffnessKinesiologyMuscle InjuryIntact HeartBiomechanicsApplied PhysiologyCardiologyCardiac MechanicHealth SciencesMechanobiologyCardiomyopathyIsolated Heart MuscleCardiovascular DiseaseCardiac PhysiologyPhysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicineAnesthesiology
A sensitive method was developed for detecting stiffness changes in the left ventricle. Stress-strain relationships (σ--ε) were obtained in the form dσ/dε = kσ + c from published studies on eight normal canine hearts, five infarcted canine hearts, and seven isolated cat papillary muscles. Utilizing pressure-volume relationships, the elastic stiffness (dσ/dε) and the stiffness constant ( k ) were also evaluated in patients with normal ventricles, inappropriate hypertrophy, and congestive cardiomyopathy. The k values were 35.0 ± 1.7 (isolated muscle, 30°C), 37.3 ± 1.9 (normal canine, 23°C), and 23.9 (infarcted). For the patient groups, k and the passive elastic stiffness were 15.8 ± 0.3 and 249 ± 22.4 g/cm 2 for 13 normal patients, 26.4 ± 1.7 and 286 ± 32.0 g/cm 2 for 7 patients with inappropriate hypertrophy, and 20.1 ± 1.2 and 1360 ± 209 g/cm 2 for 6 patients with congestive cardiomyopathy. The results indicate that (1) k is sensitive to stiffness changes due to infarction, (2) hypertrophy causes an increase in the value of k although elastic stiffness remains within normal limits, and (3) k for the intact human heart is lower than it is for isolated muscle.
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