Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5610060 Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
Interest in diastolic function in children has increased recently. However, the strengths and limitations of published pediatric nomograms for echocardiographic diastolic parameters have not been critically evaluated, especially in the neonatal population. A literature search was performed within the National Library of Medicine using the keywords normal/reference values, power Doppler/tissue Doppler velocities, and children/neonates. The search was further refined by adding the keywords diastolic function, myocardial, mitral/tricuspid inflow, pulmonary vein, and Tei index. Thirty-three published studies evaluating diastolic function in normal children were included in this review. In many studies, sample sizes were limited, particularly in terms of neonates. There was heterogeneity in the methodologies to perform and normalize measurements and to express normalized data (Z scores, percentiles, and mean values). Although most studies adjusted measurements for age, classification by specific age subgroups varied, and few addressed the relationships of measurements to body size and heart rate (especially with higher neonatal heart rates). Although reference values were reproducible in older children, they varied significantly in neonates and infants. Pediatric diastolic nomograms are limited by small sample sizes and inconsistent methodologies for the performance and normalization of measurements, with few data on neonates. Some studies do reveal reproducible patterns in diastolic function in older children. A comprehensive pediatric nomogram of diastolic function involving a large population of normal infants and older children and using standardized methodology is warranted and would have tremendous impact in the care of children with acquired and congenital heart disease.
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