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1.
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is higher in elderly patients with hypertension than in normotensive patients. The factors relationed herewith are not well known. The first purpose was to analyse the relationship between the levels of blood pressure (BP) recorded by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and the left ventricular mass index (LVMI) in a group of untreated patients older than 55 years with essential hypertension. Our second purpose was to observe the relationship between the concentration of several circulating hormones and the left ventricular mass index. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The study included 31 untreated patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension and 37 healthy normotensives. Both groups were of similar age, sex and body mass index. We determined for both groups the casual arterial pressure (CAP), ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) throughout 24 h, daytime (07.00-23.00 h), nighttime (23.00-07.00 h), left ventricular mass index (LVMI) (following Devereux's formula) and circulating levels of endothelin-1, aldosterone, renine, free adrenaline and noradrenaline. RESULTS: The ILVM in hypertensive patients was 139.6 +/- 35.9 g/m2 and in 124.0 +/- 31.8 g/m2 in normotensive (p < 0.05). The percentage of patients with LVH was 63 and 43%, respectively (p < 0.05). The LVMI in hypertensive patients was correlated with the diastolic CAP (97 +/- 7 mmHg) (r = 0.41; p < 0.05), unlike with the systolic CAP (164 +/- 18 mmHg). The ILVM in normotense patients was not associated neither with the systolic CAP (126 +/- 10 mmHg) nor with the diastolic (79 +/- 6 mmHg). In hypertensive patients we found a slight association between the LVMI and the systolic ABPM (130 +/- 14 mmHg) during nighttime (r = 0.41; p < 0.05). The rest of average ambulatory BP and the hormonal values at study did not show a correlation with the LVMI in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: A slight correlation exists between BP (casual and determined with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring throughout 24 hours) and the left ventricular mass index in mild to moderate untrated hypertensive patients older than 55 years. We did not observe correlations between the circulating levels of endothelin-1, renin, aldosterone, free adrenaline and noradrenaline and the left ventricular mass. The average ventricular mass and the number of subjects with ventricular hypertrophy was significantly increased in hypertensives than in normotensives.  相似文献   

2.
It has been suggested that the deletion polymorphism of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) genotype may be important in the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). In order to test this hypothesis we investigated the interaction between blood pressure (BP), LVH and ACE genotype in 86 previously untreated hypertensive patients. Each underwent two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography and ACE genotyping. There were no significant differences in BP, the parameters of left ventricular structure (including left ventricular mass index) or diastolic function between the three genotype groups. Additionally, there were no significant differences in the relationship between systolic BP and left ventricular mass index among the three genotype groups (II genotype, r = 0.46, P = 0.02; ID genotype, r = 0.42, P = 0.01; DD genotype, r = 0.34, P = 0.10; F = 0.38). In contrast to some previous studies, we have found in this group of previously untreated hypertensive subjects no evidence to suggest that the deletion polymorphism of the ACE genotype is important in the development of LVH.  相似文献   

3.
There is a strong relation of carotid atherosclerosis to coronary artery disease and left ventricular hypertrophy. In addition, abnormalities of carotid structure are strongly associated with abnormal left ventricular geometry and structure. However, little is known regarding the relation of exercise-induced ST depression to carotid atherosclerosis, carotid, or left ventricular structure in the absence of apparent coronary disease. The relationship of exercise ECG myocardial ischemia to the presence of carotid atherosclerosis and to carotid and left ventricular structure was assessed in 204 asymptomatic subjects free of clinical evidence of cardiovascular disease. Myocardial ischemia on the exercise ECG, defined by a chronotropically adjusted ST/HR slope of >3.47 microV/bpm, was associated with a nearly threefold greater likelihood of discrete carotid atherosclerosis (50% [6 of 12] versus 17% [29 of 192], P=.007) and with older age, male sex, higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures, greater left ventricular mass and mass index, and greater common carotid artery intimal-medial thickness and cross-sectional area index. Stepwise logistic regression analyses, including standard risk factors, revealed that only carotid artery cross-sectional area index (P=.0007) and systolic blood pressure (P=.005) independently predicted an abnormal chronotropically adjusted ST/heart rate slope. Moreover, among 132 subjects with > or = 10 microV of ST-segment depression, only left ventricular mass index and carotid artery cross-sectional area index were significant predictors of the chronotropically adjusted ST/heart rate slope response. Subendocardial ischemia on the exercise ECG is strongly associated with the presence of carotid atherosclerosis and is related to systolic blood pressure, carotid artery cross-sectional area index, and left ventricular mass index, independent of age, sex, and other cardiac risk factors. These findings provide additional insights into the relation between coronary and carotid atherosclerosis and suggest that an association among ischemia and left ventricular and carotid structural abnormalities may contribute to the pathogenesis of coronary events.  相似文献   

4.
We examined the relationship between left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and renal and retinal damage in 174 untreated patients with essential hypertension. As an index of renal and retinal damage, we examined proteinuria and retinal vascular change. LVH was diagnosed according to left ventricular mass obtained from echocardiography. Of the hypertensive patients, 111 patients (64%) had LVH. The incidences of proteinuria and advanced retinal vascular change were higher in patients with LVH than in those without LVH. In a multiple regression model, there was a significant positive correlation between left ventricular mass and proteinuria, as well as diastolic blood pressure, sex, age and body mass index. In conclusion, proteinuria is related to elevated left ventricular mass in patients with essential hypertension.  相似文献   

5.
Reversal of left ventricular hypertrophy has been shown to improve left ventricular diastolic function in elderly patients with hypertension, but little is known about whether this affects physical performance. Left ventricular mass, cardiac function at rest and during submaximal exercise, and physical performance were assessed in 38 elderly patients with hypertension with left ventricular hypertrophy and normal systolic function before and after 8 and 14 months of therapy with amlodipine or hydrochlorothiazide or both. Blood pressure control was achieved with amlodipine in 18 patients, with hydrochlorothiazide in seven, and with the combination of these drugs in 13. Left ventricular mass index was similarly reduced from approximately 150 to approximately 100 g/m2 at 14 months' in each treatment group. Systolic function was maintained with the three treatment regimens, whereas similar decreases in time to peak filling rate and increases in first-third filling fraction occurred both at rest and during submaximal exercise after 8 months and further after 14 months of therapy. Exercise capacity did not significantly change in the group as a whole, but individual changes in peak oxygen uptake at the end of treatment correlated significantly with the decrease in time to peak filling rate during submaximal exercise (r = -0.49; p < 0.01). It is concluded that long-term blood pressure control with amlodipine or hydrochlorothiazide or both is associated with significant reductions in left ventricular mass and improved diastolic function in elderly patients with hypertension with left ventricular hypertrophy. Despite this reduction in left ventricular mass, left ventricular systolic function and physical performance are well preserved during submaximal exercise.  相似文献   

6.
In the past few years in Western countries, there has been an increasing proportion of elderly patients beginning renal replacement therapy. Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is associated with an increased mortality rate due to cardiovascular disease, the main cause of death in patients on chronic hemodialysis. In this study, we evaluated 67 chronic hemodialysis patients older than 65 years (33 women and 34 men; mean age, 72.6 years; mean time on chronic hemodialysis, 51.3 months). Several biological and laboratory data were analyzed. The left ventricular mass was calculated using the Penn convention criteria. LVH was observed in 49 patients (73%). These 49 patients were divided into two groups (group 1, concentric hypertrophy, n = 22; and group 2, eccentric hypertrophy, n = 27) and compared with a control group (patients without LVH, n = 18). Group 1 (P = 0.06) and group 2 (P = 0.055) showed higher systolic blood pressures and group 2 showed a lower hematocrit (P = 0.024). The echocardiographic parameters were expectedly different: group 1 had higher posterior left ventricular wall thickness (P = 0.0001), interventricular septum thickness (P = 0.0001), and left ventricular wall relative thickness (P = 0.002), and group 2 had higher left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (P = 0.0001), interventricular septum thickness (P = 0.01), and posterior left ventricular wall thickness (P = 0.023). Using the left ventricular mass index as the dependent variable and the evaluated biological and laboratory data as the independent variables, we found in a stepwise multiple regression model that only systolic blood pressure (t = 3.430; P = 0.0011), age (t = 2.059; P = 0.044), interdialytic weight gain (t = 2.236; P = 0.029), and hematocrit (t = -1.961; P = 0.054) independently influenced the left ventricular mass index (R2 = 0.313; P = 0.0001). Further studies are needed to determine whether reduction of the left ventricular mass index, through control of blood pressure and correction of anemia, will decrease the cardiovascular events in this particular population.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is one of the physiopathological effects of hypertension and one of the main risk factors for sudden death, myocardial infarction and congestive heart failure. Drugs to treat hypertension must not only reduce blood pressure, but also modify the facts which lead to ventricular hypertrophy. This study has been designed to assess the effect of amlodipine, a calcium-antagonist, on LVH in hypertensive patients. METHODS: 20 hypertensive patients (mild to moderate, both sexes, mean age 45.0 yr) were included in a single-blind study. After an initial, four weeks placebo period, active treatment was given (amlodipine 5 mg a day). Dose titration was made after 4-8 weeks to 10 mg a day if necessary and continued until the end of the study. Systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), as well as pulse rate (PR) and adverse events were recorded at every visit. Blood and urine analysis, catecholamine, plasmatic renin activity and Mode M echocardiography were made at the beginning and the end of the study. RESULTS: Only one patient was excluded. SBP and DBP showed a significantly fall (p < 0.001). In 80% of patients DBP fell under 90 mm Hg. Every echocardiographic parameter, but left ventricular diastolic dimension, showed significantly reductions at the end of the study: septum thickness (p = 0.001), posterior wall thickness (p = 0.001), left ventricular systolic dimension (p = 0.014), wall relative thickness (p = 0.015), shortening fraction (p = 0.009), left ventricular mass (p = 0.001) and corrected left ventricular mass (p = 0.001). Blood parameters did not modify. CONCLUSIONS: Amlodipine has a beneficial effect on LVH and also is an effective and safe drug to treat mild to moderate hypertension.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is both common and an important predictor of risk of death in end-stage renal failure (ESRF). In mild to moderate chronic renal failure (CRF), the timing of onset of LVH and the factors involved in its initial development have not been fully elucidated. The present study was undertaken to examine the prevalence and potential determinants of echocardiographically determined LVH in this connection, and to compare 24-h ambulatory blood pressure (BP) recordings with BP measured at a previous clinic visit. METHODS: From a cohort of 120 non-diabetic patients who had been attending a nephrology clinic, 118 agreed to participate in the study. Of these we selected for analysis 85 stable patients (37 male). Patients with known cardiovascular disease, those with a history of poor compliance with antihypertensive medication, and those in whom such medication had been changed in the previous 3 months were excluded. Clinic BP, 24-h ambulatory BP, echocardiography, body mass index (BMI), serum creatinine (SCr), creatinine clearance (CrCl), haemoglobin (Hb), fasting cholesterol (CHOL), triglyceride TRIGL), plasma glucose, calcium (Ca), phosphate (PO4), alkaline phosphatase (ALK PHOS), parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentrations, and 24-h urinary protein were assessed in all patients. Seventy-seven per cent were on antihypertensive medication. RESULTS: LVH was detected in 16% of patients with CrCL > 30 ml/min, and 38% of patients with CrCl < 30 ml/min. By stepwise regression analysis, ambulatory systolic BP (P < 0.0001), male gender (P < 0.0001), BMI (P < 0.0002), and Hb concentration (P < 0.002) were the only independent determinants of left ventricular (LV) mass. Nocturnal systolic BP (P < 0.02) was the main determinant of LVH in the group of patients with advanced CRF. The correlation between left ventricular mass index (LVMI) and mean 24-h ambulatory systolic BP (r = 0.52, 95% confidence interval 0.50-0.54) was statistically significantly stronger than with outpatient systolic BP (r = 0.25, 95% confidence interval 0.23-0.27). The same was true for the correlation between LVMI and mean 24-h ambulatory diastolic BP (r = 0.42, 95% confidence interval 0.40-0.44), and outpatient diastolic BP (r = 0.22, 95% confidence interval 0.20-0.24). CONCLUSIONS: Twenty-four hour ambulatory BP recording and echocardiography are required for accurate diagnosis of inadequate BP control and early LVH in patients with chronic renal impairment, independent determinants of which are hypertension, male sex, BMI, and anaemia.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: To assess the relation between white coat hypertension and alterations of left ventricular structure and function. DESIGN: Cross sectional survey. SETTING: Augsburg, Germany. SUBJECTS: 1677 subjects, aged 25 to 74 years, who participated in an echocardiographic substudy of the monitoring of trends and determinants in cardiovascular disease Augsburg study during 1994-5. OUTCOME MEASURES: Blood pressure measurements and M mode, two dimensional, and Doppler echocardiography. After at least 30 minutes' rest blood pressure was measured three times by a technician, and once by a physician after echocardiography. Subjects were classified as normotensive (technician <140/90 mm Hg, physician <160/95 mm Hg; n=849), white coat hypertensive (technician <140/90 mm Hg, physician >=160/95 mm Hg; n=160), mildly hypertensive (technician >=140/90 mm Hg, physician <160/95 mm Hg; n=129), and sustained hypertensive (taking antihypertensive drugs or blood pressure measured by a technician >=140/90 mm Hg, and physician >=160/95 mm Hg; n=538). RESULTS: White coat hypertension was more common in men than women (10.9% versus 8.2% respectively) and positively related to age and body mass index. After adjustment for these variables, white coat hypertension was associated with an increase in left ventricular mass and an increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (odds ratio 1.9, 95% confidence interval 1.2 to 3.2; P=0.009) compared with normotensive patients. The increase in left ventricular mass was secondary to significantly increased septal and posterior wall thicknesses whereas end diastolic diameters were similar in both groups with white coat hypertension or normotension. Additionally, the systolic white coat effect (difference between blood pressures recorded by a technician and physician) was associated with increased left ventricular mass and increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (P<0.05 each). Values for systolic left ventricular function (M mode fractional shortening) were above normal in subjects with white coat hypertension whereas diastolic filling and left atrial size were similar to those in normotension. CONCLUSION: About 10% of the general population show exaggerated inotropic and blood pressure responses when mildly stressed. This is associated with an increased risk of left ventricular hypertrophy.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) has been identified as a main target organ change resulting from hypertension, also being a long-term predictor of myocardial infarction, stroke and cardiovascular death. However, very few longitudinal studies exist following the development of LVH in the hypertensive process. METHODS: The present longitudinal study investigated a population based group of borderline hypertensive men (BHT, n = 66, diastolic blood pressure (BP) 85-94 mm Hg). M-mode echocardiography was performed at baseline and after 3 years, and anthropometrical data recorded. RESULTS: There was no increase in LVH indices over the 3-year period, while there was a statistically significant increase in aortic root dimension (P < 0.001), left atrial diameter in diastole (LADD, P < 0.001), left ventricular diameter in diastole (LVDD, P < 0.001) and peak systolic wall stress (PSWS, P < 0.01) and a significant decrease in left ventricular ejection time (LVET, P < 0.01). Baseline BP levels correlated to PSWS (P < 0.05) but not to LVH indices, whereas body mass index (BMI) correlated significantly to wall thickness (P < 0.05) and LV mass (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: LVH indices did not increase over a 3-year period. However, there was a significant increase in aortic root dimension, LADD, LVDD and PSWS, and a significantly shortened LVET, suggesting that these changes precede any increase in LVH. Finally, BMI showed stronger correlation to LVH indices than did BP levels.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVES: We tested the hypothesis that nitric oxide (NO) cyclic guanosine 5'-monophosphate (GMP) signaling is deficient in pressure overload hypertrophy due to ascending aortic stenosis, and that long-term L-arginine treatment will increase cardiac cyclic GMP production and modify left ventricular (LV) pressure overload hypertrophy and beta-adrenergic contractile response. BACKGROUND: Nitric oxide cyclic GMP signaling is postulated to depress vascular growth, but its effects on cardiac hypertrophic growth are controversial. METHODS: Forty control rats and 40 rats with aortic stenosis left ventricular hypertrophy ([LVH] group) were randomized to receive either L-arginine (0.40 g/kg/day) or no drug for 6 weeks. RESULTS: The dose of L-arginine did not alter systemic blood pressure. Animals with LVH had similar LV constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS) mRNA and protein levels, and LV cyclic GMP levels as compared with age-matched controls. In rats with LVH L-arginine treatment led to a 35% increase in cNOS protein levels (p = 0.09 vs untreated animals with LVH) and a 1.7-fold increase in LV cyclic GMP levels (p < 0.05 vs untreated animals with LVH). However, L-arginine treatment did not suppress LVH in the animals with aortic stenosis. In contrast, in vivo LV systolic pressure was depressed in L-arginine treated versus untreated rats with LVH (163 +/- 16 vs 198 +/- 10 mm Hg, p < 0.05). In addition, the contractile response to isoproterenol was blunted in both isolated intact hearts and isolated myocytes from L-arginine treated rats with LVH compared with untreated rats with LVH. This effect was mediated by a blunted increase in peak systolic intracellular calcium in response to beta-adrenergic stimulation. CONCLUSIONS: Left ventricular hypertrophy due to chronic mechanical systolic pressure overload is not characterized by a deficiency of LV cNOS and cyclic GMP levels. In rats with aortic stenosis, L-arginine treatment increased cardiac levels of cyclic GMP, but it did not modify cardiac mass in rats with aortic stenosis. However, long-term stimulation of NO-cyclic GMP signaling depressed in vivo LV systolic function in LVH rats and markedly blunted the contractile response to beta-adrenergic stimulation.  相似文献   

12.
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is associated with decreased contractile response to inotropic stimulation in animal models, but this has not been documented in humans. To determine whether LVH is associated with decreased myocardial contractile reserve, we measured left ventricular mass, heart rate-corrected velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (Vcfc), end-systolic stress, and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) in patients with LVH and increased end-systolic stress (n = 6) and in patients without LVH (n = 7) who had a normal response to dobutamine stress echocardiography (increased LVEF and no wall motion abnormalities). The afterload-dependent indexes of left ventricular systolic performance were normal at baseline and showed significant increases at peak dobutamine dose (LVH group: Vcfc 0.91 +/- 0.11 to 1.76 +/- 0.59, p = 0.006; LVEF 49 +/- 5 to 65 +/- 6, p = 0.001; group without LVH: Vcfc 1.16 +/- 0.24 to 1.99 +/- 0.36, p = 0.001; LVEF 61 +/- 6 to 68 +/- 6, p = 0.05). The Vcfc/ end-systolic stress relation, a load-independent index of myocardial contractility, rose in a dose-dependent fashion in both groups, but the increment was significantly less for patients with LVH (p < 0.02), suggesting a blunted myocardial contractile reserve to inotropic stimulation. The change in heart rate-corrected velocity of circumferential fiber shortening per unit of change in end-systolic stress in each patient at each dobutamine dose showed a linear and inverse relationship. The increment in heart rate-corrected velocity of circumferential fiber shortening for a given reduction in end-systolic stress was larger in patients without LVH than in patients with LVH (p = 0.01). These results suggest that in patients with LVH and increased end-systolic stress, ventricular performance is maintained at the expense of limited myocardial contractile reserve, and that inotropic stimulation unmasks this abnormality, despite a normal response in LVEF and velocity of circumferential fiber shortening. This approach may identify patients with LVH at risk of developing systolic dysfunction and heart failure.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVES: We tested the hypothesis that age-related arterial stiffening is matched by ventricular systolic stiffening, and that both enhance systolic pressure sensitivity to altered cardiac preload. BACKGROUND: Arterial rigidity with age likely enhances blood pressure sensitivity to ventricular filling volume shifts. Tandem increases in ventricular systolic stiffness may also occur and could potentially enhance this sensitivity. METHODS: Invasive left ventricular pressure-volume relations were measured by conductance catheter in 57 adults aged 19 to 93 years. Patients had normal heart function and no cardiac hypertrophy and were referred for catheterization to evaluate chest pain. Twenty-eight subjects had normal coronary angiography and hemodynamics, and the remaining had either systolic hypertension or coronary artery disease without infarction. Data recorded at rest and during transient preload reduction by inferior vena caval obstruction yielded systolic and diastolic left ventricular chamber and effective arterial stiffness and pulse pressure. RESULTS: Left ventricular volumes, ejection fraction and heart rate were unaltered by age, whereas vascular load and stiffening increased (p < 0.008). Arterial stiffening (Ea) was matched by increased ventricular systolic stiffness (Ees): Ees=0.91 x Ea + 0.53, (r=0.50, p < 0.0001), maintaining arterial-heart interaction (Ea/Ees ratio) age-independent. Ventricular systolic and diastolic stiffnesses correlated (r=0.51, p < 0.0001) and increased with age (p < 0.03). Both ventricular and vascular stiffening significantly increased systolic pressure sensitivity to cardiac preload (p < 0.006). CONCLUSIONS: Arterial stiffening with age is matched by ventricular systolic stiffening even without hypertrophy. The two effects contribute to elevating systolic pressure sensitivity to altered chamber filling. In addition to recognized baroreflex and autonomic dysfunction with age, combined stiffening could further enhance pressure lability with diuretics and postural shifts in the elderly.  相似文献   

14.
Previous studies have shown regression of left ventricular hypertrophy after pharmacologic treatment of hypertensive patients; however, the impact of regression of left ventricular hypertrophy on systolic function and on left and right ventricular diastolic function remains controversial and is difficult to assess because previous studies have not included concurrently studied age-matched control groups. Left ventricular mass, systolic function, and left and right ventricular diastolic function were assessed in 27 hypertensive patients, aged 43 +/- 6 years, by echocardiographic and Doppler studies before and 1, 3, 5, and 7 months after treatment. Left ventricular mass and ventricular function were concurrently evaluated in 27 age-matched normotensive subjects. Treatment with antihypertensive agents resulted in a significant (p < 0.001) reduction in diastolic blood pressure of 15 mmHg, measured at 1 month and sustained throughout the study. In response to hemodynamic unloading, left ventricular mass index decreased from 129 +/- 30 gm/m2 at baseline to 105 +/- 26 (p < 0.05) and 88 +/- 14 gm/m2 (p < 0.05) at 1 and 3 months of treatment, respectively, and remained unchanged over the subsequent 4 months. After 3 months of treatment, left ventricular mass index was similar in treated hypertensive and control subjects. Systolic function, assessed in terms of the relationship between shortening fraction and end-systolic wall stress, was unchanged throughout the treatment period and was no different from that in control subjects. However, patients with an initially depressed shortening fraction experienced a greater increase in shortening fraction during treatment compared to those with an initially normal shortening fraction (11% +/- 4% vs 5% +/- 5%, p < 0.01) and showed an improvement in the relationship between shortening fraction and end-systolic wall stress during treatment. Ventricular filling dynamics improved during the first 3 months of treatment, after which they were unchanged. Ventricular filling dynamics were similar in treated hypertensive patients and control subjects. In conclusion, sustained hemodynamic unloading of the left ventricle results in normalization of left ventricular mass, systolic function, and left and right ventricular diastolic filling dynamics, compared to those in age-matched control subjects.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Prolonged antihypertensive therapy might be less effective in reversing the left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in uremics bearing the deleted (DD) allele of the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) gene than in patients with the inserted (II) allele or in those heterozygous (ID) for the gene. METHODS: Thirteen DD and 17 II + ID hemodialyzed uremics were followed-up with yearly echocardiography and 24-hour blood pressure (BP) monitoring over five years while on an antihypertensive therapy that included ACE inhibitors as first line drugs. RESULTS: In the II + ID group there were significant decreases of the left ventricular mass index (LVMi) and of both systolic and diastolic BPs. These changes were less pronounced in the DD group, but the difference was not statistically significant given the wide overlap between the two groups. Further analysis of the data revealed that the only factor associated to a decreased LVMi was the decrease of the systolic BP irrespective of the ACE gene genotype of each individual patient. CONCLUSIONS: The ACE-gene genotype does not necessarily predict the extent to which LVMi will be lowered by ACE-inhibitors therapy. The LVH of hypertensive uremics is amenable by long-term antihypertensive therapy provided that it results in significantly decreased systolic blood pressure.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the ability of various antihypertensive agents to reduce left ventricular hypertrophy, a strong, blood pressure-independent cardiovascular risk factor, in persons with essential hypertension. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, DIMDI, RINGDOC, ADES, EMBASE, and review articles through July 1995 (English-language and full articles only). STUDY SELECTION: Meta-analysis of all published articles including only double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical studies with parallel-group design. DATA EXTRACTION: Intensive literature search and data extraction according to a prefixed scheme performed independently by 2 investigators. Reduction of left ventricular mass index after antihypertensive therapy with placebos, diuretics, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, or angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors was the principal parameter. DATA SYNTHESIS: Of 471 identified references describing the effects of antihypertensive drugs on left ventricular hypertrophy, only 39 clinical trials fulfilled the inclusion criteria of our study. We found that the decrease in left ventricular mass index was more marked the greater was the decline in blood pressure (systolic r=0.46, P<.001; diastolic r=0.21, P=.08) and the longer was the duration of therapy (r=0.38, P<.01). After adjustment for different durations of treatment (mean duration of treatment, 25 weeks), left ventricular mass decreased 13% with ACE inhibitors, 9% with calcium channel blockers, 6% with beta-blockers, and 7% with diuretics. There was a significant difference between drug classes (P<.01): ACE inhibitors reduced left ventricular mass more than beta-blockers (significant, P<.05) and diuretics (tendency, P=.08). Similar differences between drug classes were found with regard to effect on left ventricular wall thickness (P<.05). CONCLUSIONS: The database of articles published through July 1995 is small and incomplete, and most of the articles are of poor scientific quality. In this first meta-analysis including only double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical studies, decline in blood pressure, duration of drug treatment, and drug class determined the reductions in left ventricular mass index. The ACE inhibitors seemed to be more potent than beta-blockers and diuretics in the reduction of left ventricular mass index; calcium channel blockers were somewhat in the intermediate range. The ACE inhibitors and, to a lesser extent, calcium channel blockers emerged as first-line candidates to reduce the risk associated with left ventricular hypertrophy.  相似文献   

17.
Increased sympathetic nervous activity has been proposed as one of the causes of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) associated with hypertension. However, the precise relationship is not fully understood. METHODS: To elucidate the relationship between myocardial sympathetic nervous activity and LVH in patients with essential hypertension EHT), we performed 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) myocardial scintigraphy in 49 patients with EHT and 17 normotensive control subjects. Sympathetic innervation of the left ventricle was evaluated using SPECT, and the whole heart uptake of the tracer was quantitatively assessed as the heart-to-mediastinum uptake ratio on both the early (15-min) and delayed (5-hr) images. Myocardial washout rate (MWR) of the tracer from 15 min to 5 hr after the isotope administration was also calculated. The left ventricular mass index (LVMI) was determined echocardiographically. RESULTS: In 49 hypertensive patients, there was a negative correlation between LVMI and heart-to-mediastinum uptake ratio on both the early and delayed images (r=-0.55, p < 0.0001; r=-0.63, p < 0.0001, respectively). In addition, there was a positive correlation between the LVMI and MWR of 123I-MIBG in these hypertensive patients (r=0.59, p < 0.0001). As for the regional uptake of the tracer, there was no significant difference between control subjects and hypertensive patients without cardiac hypertrophy, but a significant decrease of the uptake in the inferior and lateral regions was observed in hypertensive patients with cardiac hypertrophy. CONCLUSION: Patients with EHT had decreased accumulation and increased MWR of 123I-MIBG in proportion to the degree of LVH. Hypertensive patients with cardiac hypertrophy had impaired sympathetic innervation in the inferior and lateral regions of the left ventricle.  相似文献   

18.
To evaluate left ventricular diastolic filling properties in elderly hypertensive case with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), we investigated the influence of postural change from a supine to sitting position on transmitral flow velocity profile as assessed by pulsed Doppler echocardiography in 12 normotensives (N group) and 24 hypertensives, aged 65 to 80 years. Hypertensive subjects were divided into two groups on the basis of left ventricular mass index (LVMI): 12 hypertensives without LVH (H1 group; LVMI < 130 g/m2); 12 hypertensives with LVH (H2 group; LVMI > 130 g/m2). Peak early filling velocity (E), peak atrial filling velocity (A) and the E/A ratio were similar in the three groups in the supine position. The postural change decreased E and A in N and H1 groups. On the other hand, the change decreased E, but not A in the H2 group. The E/A ratio was decreased in the H2 group compared with both the N and H1 group in the sitting position. As a result, the sitting position increased atrial contribution to diastolic filling in the H2 group. These observations indicate that a reduction in preload changes the transmitral flow velocity profile in elderly hypertensives with left ventricular hypertrophy. The Doppler alterations may be related to impaired left ventricular diastolic function.  相似文献   

19.
Transthoracic Doppler color flow and spectral velocity patterns of normal coronary arteries in children have not been well studied. We designed this study to evaluate coronary artery flow velocity characteristics in normal and hypertrophied hearts. Sixty-eight children with optimal two-dimensional echocardiographic images of the left coronary artery (LCA) and right coronary artery (RCA) were prospectively studied. The heart was normal in 45 children, and 23 had left and/or right ventricular hypertrophy assessed by echocardiography (mean age 5.8 versus 5.2 years, p = NS). Color flow signals were detected in the LCA in 63(92%) of the 68 children studied, and pulsed Doppler spectral waveforms were recorded in 47 (69%). The latter were recorded in 26 (58%) of 45 normal children and in 21 (91%) of 23 children with left ventricular hypertrophy. Diastolic RCA flow signals were detected mostly in those with right ventricular hypertrophy (10 of 10). Higher levels of LCA maximum diastolic velocity (42 +/- 23 versus 24 +/- 6 cm/sec, p = 0.0004), increased diastolic flow (16 +/- 15 versus 6 +/- 4 ml/min, p = 0.01), and delayed time to peak diastolic velocity expressed as a percentage of diastolic spectral duration (38% +/- 14% versus 20% +/- 8%, p = 0.0001) were observed in children with left ventricular hypertrophy than in those in normal children. A strong correlation was present between Doppler-derived LCA flow and left ventricular mass/m2 (r = 0.7, p = 0.001). In normal hearts, LCA spectral velocity pattern did not change with increasing age, but the time velocity integral became progressively larger, resulting in a strong correlation with weight (p < 0.001, r = 0.78). This study demonstrates (1) LCA flow signals can be detected and quantitated in the majority of children with and those without left ventricular hypertrophy. (2) Left ventricular hypertrophy is associated with increased LCA flow, higher diastolic velocity, and delayed peak diastolic velocity. (3) RCA flow signals are mostly detected when there is right ventricular hypertrophy. Studies on larger groups of patients are needed to further confirm our observations and to enhance understanding of coronary artery flow reserve.  相似文献   

20.
Hemodynamic and non-hemodynamic factors contribute to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). The presence of LVH is an important independent risk factor for total mortality and for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Direct cardiac effects of LVH include an increased risk of developing of congestive heart failure, an increased risk of arrhythmic events, and a reduced coronary flow reserve, promoting myocardial ischemic episodes. In addition, hypertension may promote the development of coronary artery atherosclerosis. The prognostic implications of LVH underscore the importance of diagnostic procedures. The electrocardiogram has a high specificity to identify patients with LVH but the sensitivity is fairly low. Echocardiography provides higher sensitivity and also gives important information, such as the pattern of left ventricular geometry, which is of prognostic importance, and the presence of diastolic dysfunction, which is an early abnormality in the evolution of hypertensive LVH. Reversal of LVH appears to improve prognosis. Reduction of blood pressure is one important component in the regression of LVH. Important quantitative differences exist between drug classes in the reversal of cardiac hypertrophy despite similar antihypertensive effects, suggesting other factors to be of importance in the regression of left ventricular mass. LVH is reduced more by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors than by other antihypertensive drug classes, suggesting an effect on structural myocardial changes beyond that provided by the reduction of blood pressure. Recent data suggest that angiotensin II receptor antagonists (AIIRAs) have quantitatively similar effects on left ventricular mass as do angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. A comparative trial of the AIIRA irbesartan and the beta-blocker atenolol demonstrated that despite similar reductions in blood pressure, the reductions attained in left ventricular mass with irbesartan were progressive and numerically greater than those attained with atenolol. Taken together, these findings provide circumstantial evidence for an important role of angiotensin II acting on angiotensin type 1 (AT1) receptors in the development or maintenance of cardiac hypertrophy. Confirmation of the favorable effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and AIIRAs on left ventricular mass in larger trials, including those assessing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, will be of major importance in the future treatment of hypertension.  相似文献   

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