The mitral valve filling pattern characterized by a long deceleration time and a reduced E/A ratio (less than 1, such as 0.6) is consistent with impaired relaxation. This pattern is typically seen in early diastolic dysfunction, where there is slowed ventricular relaxation, resulting in reduced early diastolic filling (E wave) and a compensatory increase in atrial contraction contribution (A wave).
Impaired relaxation pattern shows:
E/A ratio < 1 (e.g., 0.6)
Prolonged deceleration time (>200 ms)
Prolonged isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT)
This pattern differs from restrictive filling, which has a high E/A ratio (>2), shortened deceleration time (<150 ms), and elevated left atrial pressures. Pseudonormal filling has a normal or near-normal E/A ratio but elevated filling pressures that mask underlying dysfunction and requires further evaluation with tissue Doppler or pulmonary venous flow for diagnosis. Normal filling has a typical E/A ratio around 1 to 1.5 with normal deceleration times.
The textbook details that impaired relaxation is the earliest sign of diastolic dysfunction and describes the prolongation of the deceleration time and reduced E/A ratio as hallmark findings of this stage.