| Literature DB >> 35204632 |
Yilin Chen1,2,3,4,5, Tingyan Xu1,2,3,4,5, Jianzhong Xu1,2,3, Limin Zhu1,2,3, Dian Wang1,2,3, Yan Li1,2,3,4,5, Jiguang Wang1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Speckle tracking echocardiography is a novel technique to quantify cardiac function and deformation. It has been applied in a series of cardiovascular diseases for the evaluation of early cardiac impairment. We recently used this technique to investigate cardiac structure and function in patients with primary aldosteronism. Cardiac damage usually occurs earlier in patients with primary aldosteronism than those with primary hypertension, probably because aldosterone hypersecretion is more commonly observed in the former than the latter patients. In this article, we will review the imaging studies, especially with speckle tracking echocardiography, for the detection of early cardiac dysfunction in primary aldosteronism as a disease model.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac dysfunction; primary aldosteronism; speckle tracking echocardiography
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204632 PMCID: PMC8871189 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12020543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Left ventricular longitudinal (upper) and circumferential (middle) layer strain analyses and left atrial strain (lower) analyses in patients with primary hypertension (red bars), idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (white bars) and aldosterone producing adenoma (blue bars). Symbols represent mean and vertical lines denote standard deviation. Ss—left atrial strain during reservoir period; Se—left atrial strain during conduit period; Sa—left atrial strain during contractile period. The number of patients among the three groups are given. Reproduced with permission from Wang D, et al. [39,50].
Figure 2Correlation analyses of right ventricular four-chamber longitudinal strain (RV4CLS, left) and right ventricular free wall longitudinal strain (RVFWLS, right) with plasma aldosterone concentration (upper) and 24 h urinary aldosterone excretion (lower) in patients with primary aldosteronism (triangle) and those with primary hypertension (circle). The correlation coefficients and corresponding p values are given for all patients. Reproduced with permission from Chen YL, et al. [66].
Figure 3Myocardial work analysis in a control subject (upper left), primary hypertensive patient (upper middle) and primary aldosteronism patient (upper right) and the correlation analysis between global work efficiency with plasma aldosterone concentration (lower left) and urinary aldosterone excretion (lower right). The correlation coefficients and corresponding p values are given for all subjects. Reproduced from Chen YL, et al. [79].
Figure 4Main echocardiographic findings in primary hypertension and primary aldosteronism. Two representative cases of different echocardiographic parameters in a patient with primary hypertension (left panels) and in another with primary aldosteronism (right panels) with similar blood pressure. CS—circumferential strain; GLS—global longitudinal strain; LS—longitudinal strain. Values in the figure are expressed as below. Blood pressure: 149/69 in the primary hypertensive patient vs. 150/83 mmHg in the primary aldosteronism patient; left ventricular mass index: 97 vs. 145 g/m2, respectively; E/A: 1.4 vs. 0.88, respectively; E/e’: 10.4 vs. 18.9, respectively; CSendo (basal short-axis view): −42.8 vs. −39.2%, respectively; CSmid: −26.3 vs. −21.5%, respectively; CSepi: −13.6 vs. −10.4%, respectively; LSendo (four-chamber view): −21.4 vs. −19.9%, respectively; LSmid: −19.0 vs. −16.4%, respectively; LSepi: −16.8 vs. −13.3%, respectively; LASs (left atrial strain, four-chamber view): 27.8 vs. 20.4%, respectively; LASe: 17.6 vs. 10.7%, respectively; LASa: 10.3 vs. 9.8%, respectively; right ventricular four-chamber longitudinal strain: −24.6 vs. −17.3%, respectively; GLS: −18.5 vs. −16.2%, respectively; global myocardial work index: 2201 vs. 2196 mmHg%, respectively; global constructive work: 2336 mmHg% vs. 2322 mmHg%, respectively; global wasted work: 174 vs. 234 mmHg%, respectively; global work efficiency: 93 vs. 90%, respectively.
Summary of main imaging studies with conventional echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance on primary aldosteronism.
| First Author | Year | Study Design | Participants | No. of Participants | Age (y) | Sex (Male) | Outcome Measures | Results | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rossi GP [ | 1996 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 34 vs. 34 | 51 ± 13 vs. 49 ± 12 | 18 vs. 18 | LVMI | 112 ± 5 vs. 98 ± 4 g/m2 | Significantly greater LVMI and higher prevalence of LVH in PA than PH |
| Matsumura K [ | 2006 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. Renovascular hypertension | 25 vs. 29 | 47 ± 2 vs. 45 ± 4 | 13 vs. 10 | LVMI | 154 ± 7 vs. 135 ± 9 g/m2 | Higher prevalence of LVH in PA than renovascular hypertension |
| Muiesan ML [ | 2008 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 125 vs. 125 | 50 ± 11 vs. 51 ± 11 | 71 vs. 71 | LVMI | 50 ± 17 vs. 40 ± 11 g/m2.7 | Significantly higher prevalence of inappropriate LVMI in the absence of traditionally defined LVH in PA than PH |
| Yang Y [ | 2017 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 100 vs. 100 | 50 ± 12 vs. 50 ± 12 | 58 vs. 58 | LAVI&E/e’ | LAVI: 23 ± 6 vs. 21 ± 6 mL/m2 | Significantly lower e’ and higher E/e’ in PA than PH, in addition to left atrial enlargement |
| Catena C [ | 2007 | Prospective longitudinal | PA | Surgery 24 vs. Drug treatments 30 | 53 ± 12 in PA patients | 38 inPA patients | LVMI | 53 ± 11 vs. 52 ± 11 g/m2.7 at baseline | Earlier response of LVM regression in surgery than drug treatment but later comparable in the two groups during an average of 6.4 years follow-up |
| Lin YH [ | 2011 | Prospective longitudinal | PA | Surgery 11 | 47 ± 8 | 5 | LVMI | 153 ± 31 at baseline vs. 116 ± 12 g/m2 at 1 year | Significant regression in LVMI at 1 year |
| Ori Y [ | 2013 | Retrospective | PA | Drug treatment 48 | 61 ± 10 | 28 | LVMI | 142 ± 28 at baseline, 121 ± 21 at 1 year and 112 ± 24 g/m2 at 3 years | Significant decrease in LVMI at 1 year and normalized at 3 years |
| Rossi GP [ | 2013 | Prospective longitudinal | PA | Surgery 110 vs. Drug treatment 70 | 51 ± 12 in PA patients | 57 in PA patients | LVMI | 53 ± 13 vs. 50 ± 11 g/m2.7 at baseline | Significant regression in LVMI in surgery but with slight decrease in drug treatment at a median of 36 months follow-up |
| Indra T [ | 2015 | Prospective longitudinal | PA | Surgery 15 vs. Drug treatment 16 | 49 ± 11 vs. 51 ± 7 | 9 vs. 11 | LVMI&E/e’ | LVMI: 50 ± 12 vs. 53 ± 12 g/m2.7 at baseline | Significant decrease in E/e’ in both surgery and drug treatment groups, with regression of LVMI only in surgery group |
| Freel EM [ | 2012 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 27 vs. 53 | 54 ± 11 vs. 55 ± 9 | 21 vs. 42 | LGE | 70% vs. 13% | 4.3 times higher prevalence of non-infarct related replacement fibrosis in PA than PH |
| Su MY [ | 2012 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. Controls | 25 vs. 12 | 50 ± 13 vs. 49 ± 14 | 6 vs. 7 | EV | 0.43 ± 0.05 vs. 0.36 ± 0.07 | Significantly increased diffuse fibrosis in PA compared with controls |
Values are expressed as mean ± SD or percentage of patients. E—the peak early filling velocity of transmitral flow; E’—the average peak early filling velocity of septal and lateral mitral annulus; EV—enhancement value; LGE—late gadolinium enhancement; LAVI—left atrial volume index; LVH—left ventricular hypertrophy; LVMI—left ventricular mass index; PA—primary aldosteronism; PH—primary hypertension.
Figure 5Mean (± SD) values of systolic (upper left lines) and diastolic blood pressure (lower left lines) and global longitudinal strain (upper right) and global work efficiency (lower right) of the left ventricle at baseline and during follow-up in patients treated with surgery (circles with solid lines) and drugs (triangles with dashed lines). * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01 vs. baseline. Reproduced from Chen YL, et al. [116].
Summary of main imaging studies with speckle tracking echocardiography on primary aldosteronism.
| First Author | Year | Study Design | Participants | No. of Participants | Age (y) | Sex (Male) | Outcome Measures | Results | Summary of Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen ZW [ | 2018 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 36 vs. 31 | 49 ± 11 vs. 53 ± 12 | 15 vs. 16 | GLS | −17.8 ± 2.4 vs. −20.3 ± 2.3% | Significantly lower GLS in PA than PH |
| Wang D [ | 2019 | Cross-sectional | APA, IHAand PH | 33, 29 and 30 | 49 ± 10, 52 ± 8 and 51 ± 20 | 20, 22 and 18 | LS&CS | LSendo: −20.2 ± 2.3, −22.1 ± 1.9 and −24.1 ± 2.1% | Lowest CS and LS in endocardium (endo), midmyocardium (mid) and epicardium (epi) in APA, intermediate in IHA, and highest in PH |
| Wang D [ | 2019 | Cross-sectional | APA, IHA and PH | 52, 55 and 50 | 52 ± 11, 51 ± 10 and 50 ± 17 | 35, 34 and 33 | LAS&LASR | LASs: 30.1 ± 6.2, 34.5 ± 7.9 and 37.7 ± 9.5% | Significantly lower LAS and LASR during atrial reservoir (s), conduit (e) and contractile (a) phases in APA than IHA and PH |
| Chen YL [ | 2020 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 51 vs. 50 | 51 ± 11 vs. 53 ± 11 | 34 vs. 30 | RV4CLS & RVFWLS | RV4CLS: −18.1 ± 2.5 vs.−23.3 ± 3.4% | Significantdecrease in both RV4CLS and RVFWLS in PA than PH |
| Chen YL [ | 2021 | Cross-sectional | PA vs. PH | 50 vs. 50 | 51 ± 10 vs. 55 ± 11 | 32 vs. 33 | Strain (GLS) and myocardial work indices (GWI, GCW, GWW, & GWE) | GLS: −18.0 ± 2.1 vs. −19.2 ± 2.0% | Significant decrease in GLS and GWE and increase in GWW in PA than PH, with similar GWI and GCW in the two groups |
| Chen YL [ | 2021 | Prospective longitudinal | PA | Surgery 39 vs. Drug treatment 28 | 49 ± 10 vs. 49 ± 12 | 26 vs. 22 | Strain (GLS) and myocardial work indices (GWI, GCW, GWW, & GWE) | GLS: −18.3 ± 2.7 vs. −18.4 ± 2.3% at baseline | Significant improvement in GLS and GWE in surgery but not drug group at 6-month follow-up |
Values are expressed as mean ± SD. APA—aldosterone-producing adenoma; CS—circumferential strain; GCW—global constructive work; GLS—global longitudinal strain; GWE—global work efficiency; GWI—global work index; GWW—global wasted work; IHA—idiopathic hyperaldosteronism; LAS—left atrial strain; LASR—left atrial strain rate; LS—longitudinal strain; PA—primary aldosteronism; PH—primary hypertension; RV4CLS—right ventricular four-chamber longitudinal strain; RVFWLS—right ventricular free wall longitudinal strain.