19 research outputs found
Lack of Reduction of Left Ventricular Mass in Treated Hypertension: The Strong Heart Study
BACKGROUND: Hypertensive left ventricular mass (LVM) is expected to decrease during antihypertensive therapy, based on results of clinical trials. METHODS AND RESULTS: We assessed 4âyear change of echocardiographic LVM in 851 hypertensive freeâliving participants of the Strong Heart Study (57% women, 81% treated). Variations of 5% or more of the initial systolic blood pressure (SBP) and LVM were categorized for analysis. At baseline, 23% of men and 36% of women exhibited LV hypertrophy (LVH, P<0.0001). At the followâup, 3% of men and 10% of women had regression of LVH (P<0.0001 between genders); 14% of men and 15% of women, free of baseline LVH, developed LVH. There was an increase in LVM over time, more in men than in women (P<0.001). Participants whose LVM did not decrease had similar baseline SBP and diastolic BP, but higher body mass index (BMI), waist/hip ratio, heart rate (all P<0.008), and urinary albumin/creatinine excretion (P<0.001) than those whose LVM decreased. After adjusting for field center, initial LVM index, target BP, and kinship degree, lack of decrease in LVM was predicted by higher baseline BMI and urinary albumin/creatinine excretion, independently of classes of antihypertensive medications, and significant effects of older age, male gender, and percentage increase in BP over time. Similar findings were obtained in the subpopulation (n=526) with normal BP at followâup. CONCLUSIONS: In a freeâliving population, higher BMI is associated with less reduction of hypertensive LVH; lack of reduction of LVM is independent of BP control and of types of antihypertensive treatment, but is associated with renal damage
Preclinical systolic dysfunction in patients with stage 3 chronic kidney disease
I pazienti con insufficienza renale cronica giĂ nello stadio 3 presentano danni del miocardio come ridotta frazione di ejezione del ventricolo sinistro e ridotto accorciamento centroparietale che possono essere responsabili del loro elevato rischio cardiovascolar