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Research Article | Volume 13 Issue:4 (, 2023) | Pages 1446 - 1454
Study of Prognostic Significance of Global Longitudinal Strain and E/e’ Verses Ejection Fraction of Left Ventricle by Echocardiography in Predicting Morbidity and all-Cause Mortality in Kidney Disease Patients
1
Cardiology Fellow, Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College, New Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Under a Creative Commons license
Open Access
Received
Nov. 7, 2023
Revised
Nov. 23, 2023
Accepted
Dec. 6, 2023
Published
Dec. 23, 2023
Abstract

This study was conducted to evaluate the prognostic significance of global longitudinal strain and e/e’ versus ejection fraction of the left ventricle by echocardiography in predicting morbidity and all-cause mortality in kidney disease patients. Methods: This was a hospital-based study conducted among 56 consecutive patients suffering from renal disease in the Department of Cardiology and Nephrology at DYP Hospital, over a period of 12 months, from September 2022 to August 2023, after obtaining clearance from the institutional ethics committee and written informed consent from the study participants. Results: In patient death analysis for LVEF and in patient death analysis for GLS, the difference was statistically significant. All cases that died had an abnormal E/e ratio, which is greater than those that survived and is statistically significant. There were 28 patients with LVEF < 50%, and their mean LVEF was 35.14%, out of which 8 patients died during the study period. There was a 12% reduction in LVEF at the end of the one-year study; this reading was statistically significant. There were 28 patients with LVEF >50%, and their mean LVEF was 56.42%. During the study, 2 patients died and survived, and 26 patients had a mean LVEF of 52.05%. There was a 7% reduction in LVEF at the end of the study; as compared to LVEF <50%, there is minimal change in the reduction of LVEF; the findings are statistically significant. There were 45 patients with abnormal GLS whose mean GLS was -10.5%, out of which 10 patients died during the study; the follow-up mean GLS reading of the survived patient was -9.75%; it has deteriorated by 7%; this finding is statistically significant; and those who have normal GLS had a mean of -16.11% and a follow-up mean of 15.71%; there was a 7% deterrence of GLS in one year of study; the findings were statistically significant. Conclusion: Abnormal GLS is a good prognostic marker of morbidity and mortality in chronic kidney disease patients. The study indicates that global longitudinal strain is a superior guide to estimating LV function than LVEF for detecting myocardial dysfunction in CKD. Larger-scale CKD population studies are needed to verify if GLS offers patients an additional prognostic value when compared to LVEF.

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