Literature DB >> 15103312

Impact of age on left ventricular hypertrophy regression during antihypertensive treatment with losartan or atenolol (the LIFE study).

E Gerdts1, M J Roman, V Palmieri, K Wachtell, G Smith, M S Nieminen, B Dahlöf, R B Devereux.   

Abstract

To assess the influence of age on changes in left ventricular (LV) mass and geometry during antihypertensive treatment, we related age to clinical and echocardiographic findings before and after 4 years of antihypertensive treatment in a subset of 560 hypertensive patients without known concurrent disease in the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint reduction in hypertension (LIFE) study, which randomized patients to blinded losartan- or atenolol-based treatment. Patients >/=65 years (older group) included more women and patients with isolated systolic hypertension or albuminuria (all P<0.05). Compared to patients <65 years, older patients had higher pulse pressure, LV mass, and prevalence of concentric hypertrophy at baseline (78 vs 69 mmHg, 234 vs 224 g, and 28 vs 16%, respectively, all P<0.01), while the mean blood pressure did not differ. Over 4 years, reductions in LV mass and the mean blood pressure were similar in both groups, but older patients more often had residual hypertrophy (31 vs 15%, P<0.001) with a preponderance of eccentric geometry. In multivariate analysis of 4-year change in LV mass controlling for baseline mass, larger hypertrophy reduction was associated with losartan treatment, while age, gender, body mass index, and 4-year change in pulse pressure and albuminuria did not enter (Multiple R (2)=0.40, P<0.001). Thus, in up-to-80-year-old hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy, age did not significantly attenuate hypertrophy reduction during antihypertensive treatment, although residual hypertrophy was more prevalent in older patients as a consequence of higher initial LV mass.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15103312     DOI: 10.1038/sj.jhh.1001718

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hum Hypertens        ISSN: 0950-9240            Impact factor:   3.012


  2 in total

1.  Age and the effectiveness of anti-hypertensive therapy on improvement in diastolic function.

Authors:  Susan Cheng; Carolyn Lam; Amil Shah; Brian Claggett; Akshay Desai; Robert J Hilkert; Joseph Izzo; Suzanne Oparil; Bertram Pitt; Scott D Solomon
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 4.844

2.  Increased relative wall thickness is a marker of subclinical cardiac target-organ damage in African diabetic patients.

Authors:  Pilly Chillo; Johnson Lwakatare; Janet Lutale; Eva Gerdts
Journal:  Cardiovasc J Afr       Date:  2012-03-20       Impact factor: 1.167

  2 in total

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