Myocardial pump function and the Performance of the entire cardiovascular System are
determined by preload, afterload and contractility. The best clinical measure of preload
is the end-diastolic volume of the heart, which can be assessed by ventriculography,
echocardiography or by indicator dilution techniques. Afterload is basically the wall
tension during the ejection phase. For clinical purposes afterload can be reasonably
monitored by arterial blood pressure. The most difficult parameter to assess under
clinical conditions is contractility, since exact measurement of contractility requires
instantaneous measurements of left-ventricular pressure-volume loops and an artificial
afterload or preload challenge. However, most recent theoretical analysis of ventricular-arterial
coupling by various modeis revealed that the ejection fraction seems to be an appropriate
parameter to evaluate, whether the prevailing contractility matches preload and afterload
conditions. An ejection fraction of approximately 60% under almost any clinical circumstances
is associated with an optimal Performance of the heart in terms of myocardial oxygen
utilisation.
Stroke volume physiology - Ventricular function