23 research outputs found

    Pulse pressure and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction in hypertensive patients

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    Background: Impaired left ventricular diastolic function is a common finding in essential hypertension. Methods: In order to investigate possible relationships between flow velocity through the mitral valve (E/A; index of left ventricular diastolic function) and 24-hour blood pressure and heart rate variations, 198 patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension were studied by Doppler echocardiography and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. They were divided according to age into group 1 (n = 88, age 40-54 years) and group 2 ( n = 110, age 55-79 years). Each group was divided into subgroups with (1a, 2a) or without (1b, 2b) left ventricular hypertrophy according to the end-diastolic posterior wall thickness and/or the interventricular septum thickness. Results: In a multivariate stepwise regression analysis, age (beta = -0.25, p < 0.0001), posterior wall thickness (beta = -0.31, p < 0.0057) and mean heart rate during the day (beta = -0.34, p < 0.0284) were the independent predictors of E/A in the pooled population. In group 1a ( young subjects with left ventricular hypertrophy), mean systolic blood pressure during the night (beta = -0.33, p < 0.041) was the only independent predictor of E/A. In the elderly group without left ventricular hypertrophy (group 2b), the mean heart rate during the day (beta = -0.44, p < 0.0000) and mean pulse pressure during the night (beta = -0.60, p < 0.0007) were the independent predictors of E/A. Conclusions: The new finding provided by this study is that in elderly hypertensive patients without left ventricular hypertrophy, a large pulse pressure at night may serve as an independent predictor of abnormal left ventricular diastolic filling. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Impact of cardiac transplantation in 24 hours circadian blood pressure and heart rate profile

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    Objective. The aim of the present study was to evaluate 24 hours blood pressure (BP) and heart rate changes as well as 24-hour circadian BP rhythm of cardiac transplant recipients. Methods. Twenty-five transplant recipients and twenty-five healthy volunteers underwent 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring. Parameters of 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (24-h/daytime/nightime systolic, diastolic BP, pulse pressure, and heart rate) were determined in all patients. Results. Clinic systolic/diastolic BP, mean 24-h systolic/diastolic BP, mean daytime systolic/diastolic BP, mean nighttime systolic/diastolic BP, and mean 24-h/daytime/nighttime heart rate were significantly higher in transplant recipients than in control group subjects. Standard deviations of 24-h/daytime/nighttime heart rates were significantly lower in transplant recipients. Dippers were 48% of the control and only 12% of the transplantation group. Conclusions. Cardiac transplant recipients had increased ambulatory BP. They also had increased 24-h/daytime/nighttime heart rate and decreased heart rate variability. Also, diminished nocturnal decrease of BP was found in transplant recipients

    THE CIRCADIAN PROFILE OF EXTRASYSTOLIC ARRHYTHMIA - ITS RELATIONSHIP TO HEART-RATE AND BLOOD-PRESSURE

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    This paper aims at examining whether there is an association between the circadian patterns of systolic blood pressure, heart rate and the incidence of ventricular ectopic beats, as well as to confirm that reducing the blood pressure by a diuretic may also reduce the ectopic frequency. Thirty-four ambulatory patients with ventricular ectopic beats and a systolic blood pressure of 131.33 +/- 17.46 mmHg had a 24-hour Holter electrocardiographic and blood pressure monitoring following 1 week off any antiarrhythmic and antihypertensive treatment. Then they received for one week a standard diuretic combination (amiloride 5 mg + hydrochlorothiazide 50 mg) at a dose depending on their systolic pressure value and their monitoring was repeated. The mean hourly values of systolic blood pressure, heart rate and ventricular ectopic beats were “normalized”, i.e. expressed as (x-x)/SD, taking each patient’s 24-hour average as zero and his own standard deviation as the unit of measurement. As a group, there was an independent positive correlation between blood pressure and ectopic beats, while the heart rate was a nonsignificant negative factor for ectopic beats. On an individual level, however, an independent positive significant correlation between blood pressure and ectopic beats was found in only 8 cases, with a negative one in 4 cases. While the blood pressure of the group ranged symmetrically around its daily average value, the corresponding ectopic beat curve was highly asymmetric, with a very high incidence (up to 2.56 +/- 0.52 SD) for a rather short time (only 9.41 +/- 3.56 hours above average) and a low incidence (up to 1.26 +/- 0.49 SD) for the remaining 14.59 hours below average. Sudden rises in ectopic beat (> 1 SD/hour) occurred 1 to 6 times per day in each individual, significantly (P < 0.01) more often (20.31%) with a high (> 1 SD) blood pressure than with a low (< -1 SD) one (8.99%) with intermediate frequencies at intermediate pressures. After treatment with the diuretic, the systolic blood pressure was reduced, the heart rate increased and the ventricular ectopic beat incidence reduced (significant changes). The mean change in systolic pressure in 25 patients with a reduction in ectopy was a significant (P < 0.01) decrease (-5.21 +/- 8.70 mmHg) while in the remaining 9 cases there was a non significant increase (+1.68 +/- 7.63 MmHg). The heart rate was higher in both subgroups. It is concluded that spontaneous diurnal elevations in blood pressure may be associated with sudden rises in the incidence of ventricular ectopic beats that once started tend to be self perpetuating inspite of pressure lowering. Antihypertensive treatment may reduce the ectopic beat incidence

    Carotid artery intima-media thickness could predict the presence of coronary artery lesions

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    The purpose of the present study was to examine whether intima-media thickness (IMT) predicts the presence of the coronary artery lesions independent of other risk factors including clinic blood pressure (BP), parameters of 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring, body mass index, serum cholesterol. and glucose levels. The study population consisted of 390 consecutive subjects who had recently under-one coronary arteriography; 51 subjects with no measurable lesions in their coronary arteries (control group) and 339 subjects with coronary artery lesions (coronary artery disease [CAD] group). Mean IMT of the common carotid artery (MCCA) and internal carotid artery (MICA) were significantly higher in subjects with CAD compare control subjects (P <.0001). Carotid IMT could predict the presence of coronary artery lesions independently of clinic or ambulatory BP values, BMI, serum cholesterol, and glucose levels (P <.01). Carotid IMT predicted the presence of significant coronary artery lesions with cutoff values 0.85 and 0.80 for MICA and MCCA, respectively. The IMT Could be a clinical useful test for the presence of significant coronary artery lesions. (c) 2005 American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd

    EFFECT OF ACUTE VENTRICULAR PRESSURE CHANGES ON QRS DURATION

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    The effect of acute changes in ventricular pressure is examined on the QRS duration to clarify the mechanism of ventricular pressure-related arrhythmogenesis. Ventricular pressure was changed acutely by arterial transfusion-bleeding into an open-air ventricular pressure reservoir that was either off or on a metaraminol intravenous drip. While maintaining ventricular pressure at several levels, the QRS duration was measured at 200 mm/s paper speed. The QRS duration correlated significantly with the left ventricular pressure in all 14 dogs examined. An average change in ventricular by 100 mmHg was associated with a change of about 18% in the QRS duration. An acute ventricular pressure elevation impairs the ventricular conduction, which may contribute to ventricular pressure-related arrhythmogenicity

    ATRIAL PRESSURE AND EXPERIMENTAL ATRIAL-FIBRILLATION

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    A possible profibrillatory effect on the atria of an elevated atrial pressure and the site of atrial stimulation was examined. In 15 anesthetized dogs, right or left atrial or biatrial pacing was applied at a high rate (300-600/min) for 5 seconds at double threshold intensity under a wide range of atrial pressures achieved by venous or arterial transfusion or bleeding. Induction of atrial fibrillation in 236 of 1,971 pacing runs was associated with a significantly higher (P < 0.001) atrial pressure (21.6 +/- 12.2 mmHg, mean +/- SD) than maintenance of sinus rhythm (16.8 +/- 11.1 mmHg in 1,735 of 1,971 pacing runs). Stimulation of the right atrium resulted in atrial fibrillation more frequently than left atrial or biatrial stimulation, with biatrial stimulation less frequent than right or left atrial stimulation. The induction of atrial fibrillation was related to the atrial pressure and to the site of stimulation but not to the pacing rate or the prepacing heart rate. The prepacing heart rate, associated with failure to induce sustained atrial fibrillation, was higher than that associated with atrial fibrillation in 12 of 15 experiments (significantly in 6) and not significantly lower in 3 of 15. Atrial fibrillation lasting 1 minute or more was more frequently associated with simultaneous stimulation of both atria than of either atrium alone. Thus, an elevated atrial pressure may facilitate the induction of atrial fibrillation. The site of stimulation also plays an important role for both the induction and maintenance of atrial fibrillation in this model
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