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Pulsus paradoxus priory.com | Pulsus Group Inc, The Medical Peer Review Publisher, Canada pulsus.com | Coastal Carolina Cardiology - Greenville, NC - T-Wave Alternans (TWA) coastalcarolinacardiology... | CIMIT Forum: Repolarization Alternans: From the Patient to the Bench and... cimit.org |
Pulsus alternans is a physical finding with arterial pulse waveform showing alternating strong and weak beats.[1] It is almost always indicative of left ventricular systolic impairment, and carries a poor prognosis. [edit] PathophysiologyIn left ventricular dysfunction, the ejection fraction will decrease significantly, causing reduction in stroke volume, hence causing an increase in end-diastolic volume. There may initially be a tachycardia as a compensatory mechanism to try and keep the cardiac output constant. As a result, during the next cycle of systolic phase, the myocardial muscle will be stretched more than usual and as a result cause an increase in myocardial contraction, related to the Frank-Starling physiology of the heart. This results, in turn, in a stronger systolic pulse . [edit] In LiteratureD.H. Lawrence, in his famous novel, "Sons and Lovers" elegantly describes pulsus alternans: "Then he felt her pulse. There was a strong stroke and a weak one, like a sound and its echo. That was supposed to betoken the end." [edit] References
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