European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy, 2020
Aortic valve stenosis (AS) is the third most common cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of bot... more Aortic valve stenosis (AS) is the third most common cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of both AS and arterial hypertension increases with age, and the conditions therefore often co-exist. Co-existence of AS and arterial hypertension is associated with higher global left ventricular (LV) pressure overload, more abnormal LV geometry and function, and more adverse cardiovascular outcome. Arterial hypertension may also influence grading of AS, leading to underestimation of the true AS severity. Current guidelines suggest re-assessing patients once arterial hypertension is controlled. Management of arterial hypertension in AS has historically been associated with prudence and concerns, mainly related to potential adverse consequences of drug-induced peripheral vasodilatation combined with reduced stroke volume due to the fixed LV outflow obstruction. Current evidence suggests that patients should be treated with antihypertensive drugs blocking the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone syste...
Lower myocardial mechanic-energetic efficiency (MEEi), expressed as stroke volume/heart rate rati... more Lower myocardial mechanic-energetic efficiency (MEEi), expressed as stroke volume/heart rate ratio (SV/HR) in mL/s/g of the left ventricular (LV) mass, is associated with the incidence of heart failure in subjects with cardiometabolic disorders. We explored the association of MEEi with LV systolic circumferential and longitudinal myocardial function in 480 subjects with increased body mass index (BMI) without known cardiovascular disease (mean age 47 ± 9 years, 61% women, 63% obese, 74% with hypertension) participating in the fat-associated cardiovascular dysfunction (FATCOR) study. Insulin resistance was assessed by the homeostasis model assessment insulin-resistance index (HOMA-IR). SV was calculated by Doppler echocardiography. The LV systolic circumferential myocardial function was evaluated by midwall fractional shortening (MFS) and longitudinal function by global longitudinal strain (GLS). Patients were grouped into MEEi quartiles. The lowest MEEi quartile (<0.41 mL/s per g...
Aim of study was to examine experimentally the adult female hypertensive heart in order to determ... more Aim of study was to examine experimentally the adult female hypertensive heart in order to determine the role of ovary function in the response of the heart to salt-dependent hypertension. Dahl salt-sensitive rats, age 12 weeks, with/without ovariectomy were fed a standard (0.3% NaCl) or high-salt diet (8%) for 16 weeks. Mean arterial blood pressure monitored noninvasively in conscious state increased significantly by high salt. Echocardiography was performed at baseline and endpoint. Heart function and molecular changes were evaluated at endpoint by left ventricle catheterization, by sirius red staining for collagen and by gene expression using quantitative RT-PCR for selected genes. At endpoint, significant concentric hypertrophy was present with high salt. Increase in relative wall thickening with high salt compared to normal diet was more pronounced with intact ovaries (0.33 ± 0.02 and 0.57 ± 0.04 vs. 0.29 ± 0.00 and 0.46 ± 0.03) as was the reduction in midwall fractional shorte...
European heart journal cardiovascular Imaging, Jan 3, 2016
In aortic valve stenosis (AS), having a small aortic root may influence both the assessment of AS... more In aortic valve stenosis (AS), having a small aortic root may influence both the assessment of AS severity and the treatment strategy. The aim was to test the prognostic implications of having a small aortic root in AS within a large prospective study. We used data from 4.3-year follow-up of 1560 patients with asymptomatic, initially mostly moderate AS enrolled in the Simvastatin and Ezetimibe in Aortic Stenosis study. A small aortic root was defined as inner aortic sinotubular junction diameter indexed for body height <1.4 cm/m in women and <1.5 cm/m in men. A small aortic root was found in 270 patients (17.3%) at baseline. Having a small aortic root was associated with larger aortic root wall thickness, higher pressure recovery, lower systemic arterial compliance, left ventricular mass index, and female sex in a multivariable logistic regression analysis (all P < 0.05). In the Cox regression analysis, having a small aortic root at baseline was associated with higher hazar...
In the Losartan Intervention for End Point Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study, 4.8 years'... more In the Losartan Intervention for End Point Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study, 4.8 years' losartan- versus atenolol-based antihypertensive treatment reduced left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiovascular end points, including cardiovascular death and stroke. However, there was no difference in myocardial infarction (MI), possibly related to greater reduction in myocardial oxygen demand by atenolol-based treatment. Myocardial oxygen demand was assessed indirectly by the left ventricular mass×wall stress×heart rate (triple product) in 905 LIFE participants. The triple product was included as time-varying covariate in Cox models assessing predictors of the LIFE primary composite end point (cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke), its individual components, and all-cause mortality. At baseline, the triple product in both treatment groups was, compared with normal adults, elevated in 70% of patients. During randomized treatment, the triple product was reduced more by atenolol, with...
Increased left ventricular (LV) wall thickness/internal diameter ratio (relative wall thickness) ... more Increased left ventricular (LV) wall thickness/internal diameter ratio (relative wall thickness) was recently reported in RA patients. The aim of this study was to assess the association between LV relative wall thickness and RA disease activity. Clinical and echocardiographic data from 129 RA patients without established cardiovascular disease and 102 controls were used. RA disease activity was assessed by different composite scores and active RA defined by the Simplified Disease Activity Index (SDAI) level exceeding the cut-off for remission (SDAI >3.3). The RA patients were on average 61.3 years old, 77% were women and 67% had active RA (SDAI >3.3). Patients with active RA had greater LV relative wall thickness and included more patients with treated hypertension (all P < 0.05), but had LV mass index and blood pressure comparable to patients in remission. Having active RA by the SDAI score (β = 0.20, P = 0.008) was also independently associated with greater LV relative w...
Background and Aims: In patients with chronic pressure overload due to hypertension or aortic val... more Background and Aims: In patients with chronic pressure overload due to hypertension or aortic valve stenosis (AS), higher left atrial systolic force (LASF) is associated with a high‐risk cardiovascular (CV) phenotype. We tested LASF as prognostic marker in patients with AS. Methods: We used baseline and outcome data from 1,566 patients recruited in the Simvastatin and Ezetimibe in AS (SEAS) study evaluating the effect of placebo‐controlled simvastatin and ezetimibe treatment on CV events. The primary outcome was a composite of major CV events, including CV death, aortic valve replacement, nonfatal myocardial infarction, hospitalization for unstable angina, heart failure caused by progression of AS, coronary artery bypass grafting, percutaneous coronary intervention, and nonhemorrhagic stroke. LASF was calculated by Manning's method. High LASF was defined as >95th percentile (50 Kdynes/cm2) of the distribution within the study population. Results: During 4.3 years of follow‐up...
Background— The ECG strain pattern of ST depression and T-wave inversion is strongly associated w... more Background— The ECG strain pattern of ST depression and T-wave inversion is strongly associated with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) independently of coronary heart disease and with an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in hypertensive patients. However, whether ECG strain is an independent predictor of new-onset congestive heart failure (CHF) in the setting of aggressive antihypertensive therapy in unclear. Methods and Results— The relationship of ECG strain at study baseline to the development of CHF was examined in 8696 patients with no history of CHF who were enrolled in the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study. All patients had ECG LVH by Cornell product and/or Sokolow-Lyon voltage criteria on a screening ECG, were treated in a blinded manner with atenolol- or losartan-based regimens, and were followed up for a mean of 4.7±1.1 years. Strain was defined as a downsloping convex ST segment with inverted asymmetrical T-w...
Background— An echocardiographic substudy of the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in ... more Background— An echocardiographic substudy of the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) trial was designed to test the ability of losartan to reduce left ventricular (LV) mass more than atenolol. Methods and Results— A total of 960 patients with essential hypertension and LV hypertrophy (LVH) on screening ECG were enrolled at centers in 7 countries and studied by echocardiography at baseline and after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years’ randomized therapy. Clinical examination and blinded readings of echocardiograms in 457 losartan-treated and 459 atenolol-treated participants with ≥1 follow-up measurement of LV mass index (LVMI) were used in an intention-to-treat analysis. Losartan-based therapy induced greater reduction in LVMI from baseline to the last available study than atenolol with adjustment for baseline LVMI and blood pressure and in-treatment pressure (−21.7±21.8 versus −17.7±19.6 g/m 2 ; P =0.021). Greater LVMI reduction with losartan was observed in wo...
To assess the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and concentric r... more To assess the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and concentric remodeling in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic (ECG)-LVH and to estimate the cost-effectiveness of echocardiography and ECG for detection of LVH. Echocardiographic LV measurements and the prevalence of abnormal LV geometric patterns were compared between 964 hypertensive patients with ECG-LVH (Cornell voltage-duration product &amp;amp;gt; 2440 and/or SV1 +/- RV5-6 &amp;amp;gt; 38 mm) participating in the LIFE trial and groups of 282 employed hypertensives and 366 apparently normal adults. Among both women and men, stepwise increases from reference subjects to employed hypertensives to LIFE patients were observed for LV wall thicknesses, chamber size and mass. Mean LV mass/body surface area (BSA) and LV mass/height(2.7) were substantially larger in LIFE patients than normal adults among women (113 vs 69 g/m2 and 55 vs 32 g/m(2.7), p &amp;amp;lt;0.001) and men (127 vs 83 g/m2 and 55 vs 36 g/m(2.7), p &amp;amp;lt; 0.001), with intermediate values in employed hypertensives. Compared to the latter group, LIFE patients had higher prevalences of concentric LVH (25-29% vs 3-4%) and eccentric LVH (45-51% vs 13-17%) but not concentric LV remodeling (8-11% vs 12-14%). LVH was present in 70% of LIFE patients by LV mass/BSA criteria and 76% by LV mass/height(2.7) criteria (odds ratios = 11.4 and 13.5 vs employed hypertensives). The ECG criteria used in LIFE identify hypertensive patients with a &amp;amp;gt;70% prevalence of anatomic LVH, allowing accurate identification of high-risk status by this commonly used technique.
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy, 2020
Aortic valve stenosis (AS) is the third most common cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of bot... more Aortic valve stenosis (AS) is the third most common cardiovascular disease. The prevalence of both AS and arterial hypertension increases with age, and the conditions therefore often co-exist. Co-existence of AS and arterial hypertension is associated with higher global left ventricular (LV) pressure overload, more abnormal LV geometry and function, and more adverse cardiovascular outcome. Arterial hypertension may also influence grading of AS, leading to underestimation of the true AS severity. Current guidelines suggest re-assessing patients once arterial hypertension is controlled. Management of arterial hypertension in AS has historically been associated with prudence and concerns, mainly related to potential adverse consequences of drug-induced peripheral vasodilatation combined with reduced stroke volume due to the fixed LV outflow obstruction. Current evidence suggests that patients should be treated with antihypertensive drugs blocking the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone syste...
Lower myocardial mechanic-energetic efficiency (MEEi), expressed as stroke volume/heart rate rati... more Lower myocardial mechanic-energetic efficiency (MEEi), expressed as stroke volume/heart rate ratio (SV/HR) in mL/s/g of the left ventricular (LV) mass, is associated with the incidence of heart failure in subjects with cardiometabolic disorders. We explored the association of MEEi with LV systolic circumferential and longitudinal myocardial function in 480 subjects with increased body mass index (BMI) without known cardiovascular disease (mean age 47 ± 9 years, 61% women, 63% obese, 74% with hypertension) participating in the fat-associated cardiovascular dysfunction (FATCOR) study. Insulin resistance was assessed by the homeostasis model assessment insulin-resistance index (HOMA-IR). SV was calculated by Doppler echocardiography. The LV systolic circumferential myocardial function was evaluated by midwall fractional shortening (MFS) and longitudinal function by global longitudinal strain (GLS). Patients were grouped into MEEi quartiles. The lowest MEEi quartile (<0.41 mL/s per g...
Aim of study was to examine experimentally the adult female hypertensive heart in order to determ... more Aim of study was to examine experimentally the adult female hypertensive heart in order to determine the role of ovary function in the response of the heart to salt-dependent hypertension. Dahl salt-sensitive rats, age 12 weeks, with/without ovariectomy were fed a standard (0.3% NaCl) or high-salt diet (8%) for 16 weeks. Mean arterial blood pressure monitored noninvasively in conscious state increased significantly by high salt. Echocardiography was performed at baseline and endpoint. Heart function and molecular changes were evaluated at endpoint by left ventricle catheterization, by sirius red staining for collagen and by gene expression using quantitative RT-PCR for selected genes. At endpoint, significant concentric hypertrophy was present with high salt. Increase in relative wall thickening with high salt compared to normal diet was more pronounced with intact ovaries (0.33 ± 0.02 and 0.57 ± 0.04 vs. 0.29 ± 0.00 and 0.46 ± 0.03) as was the reduction in midwall fractional shorte...
European heart journal cardiovascular Imaging, Jan 3, 2016
In aortic valve stenosis (AS), having a small aortic root may influence both the assessment of AS... more In aortic valve stenosis (AS), having a small aortic root may influence both the assessment of AS severity and the treatment strategy. The aim was to test the prognostic implications of having a small aortic root in AS within a large prospective study. We used data from 4.3-year follow-up of 1560 patients with asymptomatic, initially mostly moderate AS enrolled in the Simvastatin and Ezetimibe in Aortic Stenosis study. A small aortic root was defined as inner aortic sinotubular junction diameter indexed for body height <1.4 cm/m in women and <1.5 cm/m in men. A small aortic root was found in 270 patients (17.3%) at baseline. Having a small aortic root was associated with larger aortic root wall thickness, higher pressure recovery, lower systemic arterial compliance, left ventricular mass index, and female sex in a multivariable logistic regression analysis (all P < 0.05). In the Cox regression analysis, having a small aortic root at baseline was associated with higher hazar...
In the Losartan Intervention for End Point Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study, 4.8 years'... more In the Losartan Intervention for End Point Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study, 4.8 years' losartan- versus atenolol-based antihypertensive treatment reduced left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiovascular end points, including cardiovascular death and stroke. However, there was no difference in myocardial infarction (MI), possibly related to greater reduction in myocardial oxygen demand by atenolol-based treatment. Myocardial oxygen demand was assessed indirectly by the left ventricular mass×wall stress×heart rate (triple product) in 905 LIFE participants. The triple product was included as time-varying covariate in Cox models assessing predictors of the LIFE primary composite end point (cardiovascular death, MI, or stroke), its individual components, and all-cause mortality. At baseline, the triple product in both treatment groups was, compared with normal adults, elevated in 70% of patients. During randomized treatment, the triple product was reduced more by atenolol, with...
Increased left ventricular (LV) wall thickness/internal diameter ratio (relative wall thickness) ... more Increased left ventricular (LV) wall thickness/internal diameter ratio (relative wall thickness) was recently reported in RA patients. The aim of this study was to assess the association between LV relative wall thickness and RA disease activity. Clinical and echocardiographic data from 129 RA patients without established cardiovascular disease and 102 controls were used. RA disease activity was assessed by different composite scores and active RA defined by the Simplified Disease Activity Index (SDAI) level exceeding the cut-off for remission (SDAI >3.3). The RA patients were on average 61.3 years old, 77% were women and 67% had active RA (SDAI >3.3). Patients with active RA had greater LV relative wall thickness and included more patients with treated hypertension (all P < 0.05), but had LV mass index and blood pressure comparable to patients in remission. Having active RA by the SDAI score (β = 0.20, P = 0.008) was also independently associated with greater LV relative w...
Background and Aims: In patients with chronic pressure overload due to hypertension or aortic val... more Background and Aims: In patients with chronic pressure overload due to hypertension or aortic valve stenosis (AS), higher left atrial systolic force (LASF) is associated with a high‐risk cardiovascular (CV) phenotype. We tested LASF as prognostic marker in patients with AS. Methods: We used baseline and outcome data from 1,566 patients recruited in the Simvastatin and Ezetimibe in AS (SEAS) study evaluating the effect of placebo‐controlled simvastatin and ezetimibe treatment on CV events. The primary outcome was a composite of major CV events, including CV death, aortic valve replacement, nonfatal myocardial infarction, hospitalization for unstable angina, heart failure caused by progression of AS, coronary artery bypass grafting, percutaneous coronary intervention, and nonhemorrhagic stroke. LASF was calculated by Manning's method. High LASF was defined as >95th percentile (50 Kdynes/cm2) of the distribution within the study population. Results: During 4.3 years of follow‐up...
Background— The ECG strain pattern of ST depression and T-wave inversion is strongly associated w... more Background— The ECG strain pattern of ST depression and T-wave inversion is strongly associated with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) independently of coronary heart disease and with an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in hypertensive patients. However, whether ECG strain is an independent predictor of new-onset congestive heart failure (CHF) in the setting of aggressive antihypertensive therapy in unclear. Methods and Results— The relationship of ECG strain at study baseline to the development of CHF was examined in 8696 patients with no history of CHF who were enrolled in the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) study. All patients had ECG LVH by Cornell product and/or Sokolow-Lyon voltage criteria on a screening ECG, were treated in a blinded manner with atenolol- or losartan-based regimens, and were followed up for a mean of 4.7±1.1 years. Strain was defined as a downsloping convex ST segment with inverted asymmetrical T-w...
Background— An echocardiographic substudy of the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in ... more Background— An echocardiographic substudy of the Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) trial was designed to test the ability of losartan to reduce left ventricular (LV) mass more than atenolol. Methods and Results— A total of 960 patients with essential hypertension and LV hypertrophy (LVH) on screening ECG were enrolled at centers in 7 countries and studied by echocardiography at baseline and after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years’ randomized therapy. Clinical examination and blinded readings of echocardiograms in 457 losartan-treated and 459 atenolol-treated participants with ≥1 follow-up measurement of LV mass index (LVMI) were used in an intention-to-treat analysis. Losartan-based therapy induced greater reduction in LVMI from baseline to the last available study than atenolol with adjustment for baseline LVMI and blood pressure and in-treatment pressure (−21.7±21.8 versus −17.7±19.6 g/m 2 ; P =0.021). Greater LVMI reduction with losartan was observed in wo...
To assess the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and concentric r... more To assess the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and concentric remodeling in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic (ECG)-LVH and to estimate the cost-effectiveness of echocardiography and ECG for detection of LVH. Echocardiographic LV measurements and the prevalence of abnormal LV geometric patterns were compared between 964 hypertensive patients with ECG-LVH (Cornell voltage-duration product &amp;amp;gt; 2440 and/or SV1 +/- RV5-6 &amp;amp;gt; 38 mm) participating in the LIFE trial and groups of 282 employed hypertensives and 366 apparently normal adults. Among both women and men, stepwise increases from reference subjects to employed hypertensives to LIFE patients were observed for LV wall thicknesses, chamber size and mass. Mean LV mass/body surface area (BSA) and LV mass/height(2.7) were substantially larger in LIFE patients than normal adults among women (113 vs 69 g/m2 and 55 vs 32 g/m(2.7), p &amp;amp;lt;0.001) and men (127 vs 83 g/m2 and 55 vs 36 g/m(2.7), p &amp;amp;lt; 0.001), with intermediate values in employed hypertensives. Compared to the latter group, LIFE patients had higher prevalences of concentric LVH (25-29% vs 3-4%) and eccentric LVH (45-51% vs 13-17%) but not concentric LV remodeling (8-11% vs 12-14%). LVH was present in 70% of LIFE patients by LV mass/BSA criteria and 76% by LV mass/height(2.7) criteria (odds ratios = 11.4 and 13.5 vs employed hypertensives). The ECG criteria used in LIFE identify hypertensive patients with a &amp;amp;gt;70% prevalence of anatomic LVH, allowing accurate identification of high-risk status by this commonly used technique.
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