Coronary Vasodilator Capacity and Hypertension-Induced Increase in Left Ventricular Mass
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 41 (2) , 224-229
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.0000049623.25854.b7
Abstract
An increase in left ventricular mass represents a compensatory response of hypertensive heart to augmented loading conditions. The concept of inappropriate mass has been proposed to define an increase in left ventricular mass higher than needed to compensate for increased workload. To assess whether inappropriate left ventricular mass is associated with more severe impairment of coronary vasodilator capacity, 64 untreated middle-aged hypertensive patients without significant coronary artery stenosis and 14 normotensive volunteers comparable for age and gender were studied by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography to evaluate left ventricular mass, geometry, and coronary flow velocity response to adenosine. Thirty-three patients had appropriate and 31 had inappropriate increase in left ventricular mass, whereas all normotensive control subjects had appropriate left ventricular mass. Compared with control subjects, minimum coronary resistance (0.87±0.18 mm Hg per second/centimeter) was increased in both hypertensive subgroups, more in those with inappropriate left ventricular mass (1.34±0.23 versus 1.19±0.23 mm Hg per second/centimeter, P r =+0.33 and +0.35, both P r =−0.32 and −0.31, both P <0.02). Thus, in the hypertensive heart, a deviation of left ventricular mass from values compensatory for increased cardiac workload is associated with lower coronary vasodilator capacity, depressed left ventricular wall mechanics, and abnormal left ventricular diastolic filling pattern.Keywords
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