Influence of obesity on left ventricular midwall mechanics in arterial hypertension

被引:46
|
作者
deSimone, G
Devereux, RB
Mureddu, GF
Roman, MJ
Ganau, A
Alderman, MH
Contaldo, F
Laragh, JH
机构
[1] FEDERICO UNIV HOSP II,DEPT CLIN & EXPT MED,NAPLES,ITALY
[2] UNIV SASSARI,INST CLIN MED,I-07100 SASSARI,ITALY
关键词
obesity; ventricular function; hypertension; arterial; blood pressure; body mass index; echocardiography;
D O I
10.1161/01.HYP.28.2.276
中图分类号
R6 [外科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100210 ;
摘要
The evaluation of the effect of obesity on left ventricular systolic performance may differ in relation to the method used to measure left ventricular function and to the type of study population. Whether obesity worsens left ventricular midwall mechanics in arterial hypertension has never been investigated. Accordingly, we assessed echocardiographic left ventricular midwall shortening-circumferential end-systolic stress relations in 156 normotensive and normal-weight (reference) adults, 94 normotensive and overweight (1985 National Institutes of Health partition values) to obese (body mass index > 30 kg/m(2)) adults, 263 hypertensive and normal-weight adults, and 224 hypertensive and overweight-to-obese adults. There was an inverse relation of midwall shortening to circumferential end-systolic stress in all groups (all P < .005). Left ventricular performance as a ratio of observed to predicted midwall shortening fell below the fifth percentile in 4 of 94 (4%) of overweight-to-obese normotensive individuals. Eighty-eight of 487 hypertensive subjects (18.1%) exhibited depressed midwall shortening as a percentage of the value predicted from wall stress, with no difference between normal-weight (50 of 263 [19%]) and overweight (38 of 224 [17%]) subjects. Sixty-one normotensive and 131 hypertensive subjects were frankly obese. After adjustment for sex and age, midwall shortening, as either absolute values or a percentage of predicted, was not statistically different among obese, overweight, and normal-weight subjects in both normotensive and hypertensive groups. For each quartile of observed-to-predicted midwall shortening ratio, obese subjects had greater left ventricular end-diastolic volume than normal-weight subjects among both normotensive and, more evidently, hypertensive subjects. A predicted midwall shortening was generated from both wall stress and left ventricular volume with the use of multiple regression analysis. High body mass index, mean blood pressure, aging, and male sex independently predicted low afterload and left ventricular volume-independent midwall left ventricular performance (multiple R = .31, P < .0001). Thus, (1) midwall left ventricular systolic performance in asymptomatic overweight or frankly obese individuals is comparable to that in normal-weight individuals in both the presence and absence of arterial hypertension; (2) however, maintenance of normal left ventricular performance in obese individuals is associated with the use of Starling reserve; and (3) this compensatory mechanism is especially evident when arterial hypertension and obesity coexist.
引用
收藏
页码:276 / 283
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Midwall left ventricular mechanics - An independent predictor of cardiovascular risk in arterial hypertension
    deSimone, G
    Devereux, RB
    Koren, MJ
    Mensah, GA
    Casale, PN
    Laragh, JH
    CIRCULATION, 1996, 93 (02) : 259 - 265
  • [2] Relation between left ventricular midwall function and coronary vasodilator capacity in arterial hypertension
    Kozàkovà, M
    Ferrannini, E
    Palombo, C
    HYPERTENSION, 2003, 42 (04) : 528 - 533
  • [3] Midwall left ventricular mechanics and myocardial ultrasonic textural parameters in the arterial hypertension.
    Di Bello, V
    Pedrinelli, R
    Giorgi, D
    Bertini, A
    Talini, E
    Dell'Omo, G
    Valenti, G
    Cioppi, A
    Giusti, C
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 1999, 12 (04) : 191A - 191A
  • [4] Left ventricular filling in arterial hypertension - Influence of obesity and hemodynamic and structural confounders
    Mureddu, GF
    deSimone, G
    Greco, R
    Rosato, GF
    Contaldo, F
    HYPERTENSION, 1997, 29 (02) : 544 - 550
  • [5] Improvement in midwall myocardial shortening with regression of left ventricular hypertrophy
    Mayet, J
    Ariff, B
    Wasan, B
    Chapman, N
    Shahi, M
    Poulter, NR
    Sever, PS
    Foale, RA
    Thom, SAM
    HYPERTENSION, 2000, 36 (05) : 755 - 759
  • [6] Influence of obesity on left ventricular morphology
    Díaz, MP
    Massó, FJT
    Martínez, AMH
    Gómez, FP
    Vera, TV
    Arcos, FS
    Figal, DP
    Chavarri, MV
    MEDICINA CLINICA, 1999, 113 (19): : 721 - 725
  • [7] The relation between left ventricular geometric patterns and left ventricular midwall mechanics in hypertensive patients
    Jiang, YN
    Qu, P
    Ding, YC
    Xia, DZ
    Wang, HY
    Tian, XH
    HYPERTENSION RESEARCH, 2002, 25 (02) : 191 - 195
  • [8] Analysis of left ventricular systolic function by midwall mechanics in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea
    Cioffi, Giovanni
    Russo, Tiziano Edoardo
    Selmi, Alessandro
    Stefenelli, Carlo
    Furlanello, Francesco
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, 2011, 12 (01): : 61 - 68
  • [9] The influence of sex on left ventricular remodeling in arterial hypertension
    Tadic, Marijana
    Cuspidi, Cesare
    Grassi, Guido
    HEART FAILURE REVIEWS, 2019, 24 (06) : 905 - 914
  • [10] Impaired Left Ventricular Mechanics in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Identification of a Cohort at High Risk
    Hardegree, Evan L.
    Sachdev, Arun
    Fenstad, Eric R.
    Villarraga, Hector R.
    Frantz, Robert P.
    McGoon, Michael D.
    Oh, Jae K.
    Ammash, Naser M.
    Connolly, Heidi M.
    Eidem, Benjamin W.
    Pellikka, Patricia A.
    Kane, Garvan C.
    CIRCULATION-HEART FAILURE, 2013, 6 (04) : 748 - 755