How is the LV pressure-volume loop affected in aortic stenosis?

  • As the valve area narrows it poses significant obstruction to blood flow from the left ventricle:
    • Normal valve area is 2.6– 3.5 cm2 in adults
    • Haemodynamically significant obstruction occurs as the valve area approaches 1.0 cm2
  • A greater systolic pressure must be generated by the left ventricle to maintain blood flow across the valve:
    • The left ventricle compensates with hypertrophy of the muscle
    • Maintains the pressure gradient without decreased cardiac output
  • As hypertrophy increases it becomes detrimental:
    • Increasingly stiff with reduced lusitropy leading to diastolic dysfunction:
    • Ventricular filling becomes dependent upon atrial contraction (contributes 40% rather than usual 20%) –
      • Results in atrial hypertrophy to maintain filling –
      • Maintenance of sinus rhythm becomes important to maintain cardiac output
    • Worsening oxygen demand / delivery mismatch:
      • Increased muscle mass requires greater oxygen supply
      • Exacerbated by relatively low aortic pressures and increased ventricular wall pressures
      • Results in subendocardial hypoperfusion and angina