| Literature DB >> 35164856 |
Jin Kyung Oh1, Jae-Hyeong Park2.
Abstract
Hypertension is a well-recognized risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease, and the early detection of cardiac changes from hypertension can allow reversing these. Hypertensive heart diseases (HHD) refer to the complex and diverse change of the cardiac structure and function secondary to hypertension. Although conventional echocardiography is the most common imaging modality in detecting HHD, it cannot detect subtle changes of cardiac structure in subclinical states. Because strain echocardiography is another echocardiographic modality can detect subclinical myocardial dysfunction by measuring intrinsic myocardial deformation, it became more and more popular in clinical and research fields. In this review article, we described the basic concept of strain echocardiography and summarized several clinical studies showing its clinical utilities in the detection of HHD.Entities:
Keywords: Echocardiography; Hypertension; Hypertrophy; Left ventricular; Strain echocardiography
Year: 2022 PMID: 35164856 PMCID: PMC8845306 DOI: 10.1186/s40885-021-00186-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Hypertens ISSN: 2056-5909
Fig. 1Overview of the structural and functional alterations present in hypertensive heart disease. LA, left atrium; LV, left ventricular; RA, right atrium; RV, right ventricular
Fig. 2Myocardial strain and strain rate. Simple diagram showing the principle of strain and strain rate. Strain is expressed as a fractional length change, where shortening is a negative value and lengthening a positive value. Strain is calculated as the difference (ΔL) of the initial (L) and the final distance (L) between two points divided by the initial distance. Strain rate is the deformation per unit time (Δt), and derives from the ratio between the velocity variation and the initial distance between two points
Fig. 3Demonstration of a longitudinal strain and strain rate analysis in the left ventricle using 2-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography. Example of a strain curve (A) and a strain rate curve (B) for one heart cycle
Fig. 4Demonstration of a 2-dimensional strain analysis with GE EchoPAC PC software. After tracing of the endocardial border, the software provides global and regional myocardial strain values automatically in apical 4 chamber (A), apical 2 chamber (B), and apical 3 chamber views (C). The GE EchoPAC algorithm can provide bull’s eye maps of regional longitudinal strain values (D)
Fig. 5Demonstration of LA and RV strain analysis using 2-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography (A). LA strain and illustration of the 3 phases of LA function with an R-R gating analysis. RV longitudinal strain calculated as the average of the six-segment model (B). ECG, electrocardiography; LA, left atrium; PACS, peak atrial contraction strain; PALS, peak atrial longitudinal strain; RV, right ventricular
Fig. 6Schematic illustration showing clinical indications of the speckle-tracking echocardiography. Speckle-tracking strain is an increasingly used echocardiographic technology that can provide additional clinical utility. LA, left atrium; LV, left ventricular; RV, right ventricular
Summary of clinical studies on STE in patients with hypertension
| Reference | Study subject | Method | Parameter | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Imbalzano et al. [ | 51 patients with hypertension (mean age 56.5 ± 14 years, 65% males) and 51 controls | 2D-STE | LV longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain and twist | LV systolic longitudinal strain was impaired in hypertension patients, including those without LVH. In the patients with LVH, radial strain was reduced, and circumferential strain and twist were increased |
| Kang et al. [ | 56 patients with hypertension (mean age 48 ± 11 years, 61% males) and 20 age-matched controls | 2D-STE | LV longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain and strain rate, and basal-to-apical torsion | Longitudinal strain was significantly decreased, and basal-to-apical torsion was increased in patient with hypertension and normal EF. Longitudinal and basal-to-apical torsion independently correlated with the serum TIMP-1 level |
| Mizuguchi et al. [ | 98 patients with hypertension (25% concentric LVH, 43% eccentric LVH) and 22 age-matched controls | 2D-STE | LV longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain and strain rate | The systolic LV myocardial deformation was impaired in all the longitudinal, circumferential, and radial directions in patients with hypertension and concentric LVH. The mean peak systolic circumferential strain was an independent predictor related to LVEF |
| Saito et al. [ | 388 patients with hypertension and abnormal LV geometry (31% concentric LVH, 22% eccentric LVH, 47% concentric remodeling) | 2D-STE | LVGLS and GCS | GLS and its deterioration (> 16%) are related with MACE in asymptomatic hypertensive heart disease, and was very useful for predicting risk of MACE |
| Lee et al. [ | 95 patients with hypertension (mean age 65.5 ± 12.0 years, 60% males) | 2D-STE | LVGLS of subendocardium, subepicardium | Longitudinal strain of the subepicardial myocardium (> 17.6%) was the only independent prognostic factor in regularly treated hypertensive patients |
| Mu et.al [ | 75 patients with hypertension and normal LV geometry (mean age 48 ± 11 years, 61% males) and 50 controls | 2D-STE | LV longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain rate, and torsion rate | Reduced longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain rate, increased rotation rate, and extension of untwisting half-time are the sensitive indicators to diagnosis hypertensive patients with early LV diastolic dysfunction |
| Soufi Taleb Bendiab et al. [ | 200 patients with hypertension and normal LVEF (mean age 61.7 ± 9.7 years, 68% LVH) | 2D-STE | LVGLS | Reduced GLS (> − 17.6%) is associated with long-lasting, uncontrolled hypertension, overweight, diabetes, related metabolic changes, and is more pronounced in patients with LVH |
| Mizuguchi et al. [ | 70 patients with normal EF and cardiovascular risk factors and 30 age-matched controls | 2D-STE | LV longitudinal, circumferential, radial strain and strain rate, and torsion | The mean peak systolic and early diastolic longitudinal strain and strain rate were lower in the E/A < 1 group. LV myocardial contraction and relaxation were first impaired in the longitudinal direction |
| Salas Pacheco et al. [ | 50 patients with hypertension and 80 healthy volunteers | 2D-STE | LA reservoir, contraction, conduit strain, and LVGLS | LA strain of pump and reservoir phases, and LA independent strain were lower in hypertensive patients. LA independent strain only correlated with minimum LA volume, and can identify atrial myocyte contractile dysfunction |
| Pedrinelli et al. [ | 89 patients with office BP varying from the optimal to mildly hypertensive range | 2D-STE | RV longitudinal peak strain and strain rate | RV peak systolic strain and early diastolic strain rate reduced in the mid-tertile of BP distribution. RV systolic and diastolic strain indices correlated inversely with increasing septal thickness. |
| Tumuklu et al. [ | 35 patients with hypertension and 30 age-and sex-matched controls | 2D-STE | RV longitudinal peak strain and strain rate | RV peak systolic strain was significantly lower in hypertension patients with and without LVH in comparison with normotensive controls |
| Tadic et al. [ | 59 untreated hypertension patients, 62 well-controlled hypertension, 58 treated but uncontrolled hypertension patients, and 55 age-and sex-matched controls | 2D-STE | RVGLS and strain rate | RVGLS was significantly decreased in untreated and uncontrolled hypertension patients comparing with controls and well controlled participants. RVGLS and 3D RV stroke volume were independently associated with peak oxygen uptake. |
BP blood pressure, EF ejection fraction, GCS global circumferential strain, GLS Global longitudinal strain, LA left atrium, LV left ventricle, LVH left ventricular hypertrophy, MACE major adverse cardiac events, RV right ventricle, RVGLS right ventricle global longitudinal strain, STE Speckle-tracking echocardiography