What the study found: Left ventricular (LV) myocardial work detected subclinical LV dysfunction in pregnant women with autoimmune disease. Apical-CW showed a consistent reduction in AD-P.
Why the authors say this matters: The findings indicate that myocardial work, especially apical CW, provides incremental value over global longitudinal strain (GLS) in autoimmune pregnancies.
What the researchers tested: The study examined LV myocardial work in pregnant women with autoimmune diseases and compared it with global longitudinal strain (GLS), a measure of heart muscle shortening.
What worked and what didn't: LV myocardial work detected subclinical LV dysfunction. Apical-CW showed a consistent reduction in AD-P, and the abstract states that myocardial work, especially apical CW, provided incremental value over GLS.
What to keep in mind: The abstract does not describe study size, specific autoimmune diseases, detailed methods, or any limitations.
Key points
- Left ventricular myocardial work detected subclinical LV dysfunction in pregnant women with autoimmune disease.
- Apical-CW showed a consistent reduction in AD-P.
- The authors say myocardial work, especially apical CW, adds value beyond global longitudinal strain (GLS).
- The study focused on pregnant women with autoimmune diseases.
- No study size, detailed methods, or limitations are described in the abstract.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Myocardial work detected subclinical LV dysfunction in autoimmune pregnancies
- Authors:
- Lu Zhang, Yilu Shi, Yaxi Wang, Xiaoshan Zhang, Shasha Duan
- Institutions:
- Second Affiliated Hospital of Inner Mongolia Medical University, Inner Mongolia Medical University
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-06
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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