Literature DB >> 8548897

Midwall left ventricular mechanics. An independent predictor of cardiovascular risk in arterial hypertension.

G de Simone1, R B Devereux, M J Koren, G A Mensah, P N Casale, J H Laragh.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An appreciable proportion of asymptomatic hypertensive patients have depressed left ventricular (LV) performance that is identified by midwall shortening/endsystolic stress relations but not by indexes that use endocardial shortening. It has not been established, however, whether depressed midwall ventricular performance has prognostic implications. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Echocardiographic endocardial and midwall LV fractional shortening/circumferential end-systolic stress relations in 294 hypertensive patients were analyzed as predictors of the occurrence of cardiovascular morbid events that occurred in 50 patients (including 14 deaths) during a 10-year mean follow-up. Patients with initially lower midwall but not endocardial shortening, either in absolute terms or as a percentage of predicted from observed end-systolic stress, were more likely to suffer morbid events than those with initially normal values (P < .004). Cardiovascular events occurred in 29 of 100 patients (29%) and death in 10 of 100 patients (10%) among those who were in both the two highest quartiles of LV mass index and the two lowest quartiles of midwall shortening, as opposed to 21 of 194 (11%) and 4 of 194 (2.1%) of the remaining patients (odds ratio, 3.4; 95% CI, 1.8 to 6.3; P < .0001; and odds ratio, 5.3; 95% CI, 1.6 to 17.3; P < .006, respectively). In logistic analysis, increasing age, high LV mass, high systolic blood pressure, and low values for an interaction term between LV mass index and midwall shortening independently predicted cardiovascular events (.04 < P < .001); increasing age, low midwall LV shortening as a percentage of predicted, and high value of the interaction term predicted the occurrence of cardiac death (.004 < P < .0002). Survival analysis controlling for age confirmed that low midwall shortening independently predicted cardiac morbidity or death, especially in the subgroup of patients with LV hypertrophy.
CONCLUSIONS: Depressed midwall shortening is a predictor of adverse outcome in arterial hypertension; the combination of higher LV mass and lower midwall shortening identifies individuals at markedly increased risk.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8548897     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.93.2.259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  49 in total

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8.  Inappropriate left ventricular mass in children and young adults with chronic renal insufficiency.

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9.  Normal ranges and physiological changes of midwall fractional shortening in healthy korean population.

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10.  Contractility and ventricular systolic stiffening in hypertensive heart disease insights into the pathogenesis of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.

Authors:  Barry A Borlaug; Carolyn S P Lam; Véronique L Roger; Richard J Rodeheffer; Margaret M Redfield
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2009-07-28       Impact factor: 24.094

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