The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective...

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The Heart in The Heart in Hypertension Hypertension Jamil Mayet

Transcript of The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective...

Page 1: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

The Heart in HypertensionThe Heart in Hypertension

Jamil Mayet

Page 2: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Left Ventricular Hypertrophy- a historical perspective

• Association between renal disease and LVH– Richard Bright 1836

• Hypertrophy of large and small vessels related to LVH in kidney disease– George Johnson 1852

• Vascular changes and LVH without renal disease– Gull and Sutton 1872

• BP measured in life correlated with post-mortem heart weight– Evans 1921

Page 3: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Definition of LVH Healthy cohort of subjects No high BP, diabetes, CV disease, obesity LVH defined as LVMI > mean + 2SD

Framingham Study

LVMI > 131g/m2 males; > 100g/m2 females Cornell, New York

LVMI > 134g/m2 males; > 110g/m2 females

Levy et al. Am J Cardiol 1987;59:956-60. Devereux et al. JACC 1984;4:1222-30.

Page 4: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Risk factors for LVH Blood pressure

Age Gender Race Genetic factors Obesity Physical activity

Page 5: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Pathophysiology of LVH

High BP LV wall stress Wall stress 1/ wall thickness LV wall thickening wall stress Myocyte hypertrophy and collagen matrix Mediators:

Mechanical: preload & afterload Neurohormonal: angiotensin II, sympathetic NS

Page 6: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Clinic versus mean 24 hour systolic BP and LVMI

24 hour mean SBP v. LVMI (r=0.48, p<0.01)

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 100 200 300

LVMI (gm2)2

4 h

our

SB

P (

mm

Hg)

Relationship between mean 24 hour SBP and LVMI

Linear (Relationship between mean 24 hour SBP and LVMI)Linear (Relationship between mean 24 hour SBP and LVMI)Clinic SBP v. LVMI: (r=0.28,

p<0.05)

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 100 200 300LVMI (g/m2)

Clin

ic S

BP

(m

mH

g)

Mayet al et. J Cardiovasc Risk 1995;2:255-61.

Page 7: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Methods of detecting LVH

Clinical examination Chest radiography Electrocardiography Echocardiography (CT, MRI)

Page 8: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Sensitivity and specificity of ECG criteria for LVH

Sensitivity Specificity

Sokolow-Lyon 15-30 73-100

Cornell voltage 7-45 93-100

Romhilt-Estes point score 6-50 85-99

Minnesota code 3-1 3-15 88-99

Framingham criteria 3-17 98-100

Devereux et al 1983, Murphy et al 1985, Levy et al 1990, Lee et al 1992, Devereux et al 1993,Schillaci et al 1994, Crow et al 1995, Norman et al 1995, Chapman et al (in press)

Page 9: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Cardiothoracic ratio and CHD mortality:Whitehall study

Cardiothoracic ratio Hazard ratio for CHD*

<0.4 1.0

0.4-0.439 1.02 (0.61-1.73)

0.44-0.449 1.02 (0.60-1.74)

0.45-0.469 1.33 (0.81-2.20)

0.47- 1.65 (1.01-2.70)

*Adjusted for age, BP, HR, cholesterol, smoking, angina and ECG ischaemia

Hemingway et al. BMJ 1998; 316: 1353-4.

Page 10: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Cardiovascular risk in subjects with ECG-LVH: Framingham

Cardiovascular outcome

Men Women

Coronary heart disease 3.0* 4.6* Stroke 5.8* 6.2* Peripheral arterial disaese 2.7 5.3* Cardiac failure 15.0* 12.8*

Age-adjusted risk-ratio

*P<0.0001 Kannel. Eur Heart J 1992; 13 (suppl D): 82-88

Page 11: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Risks of X-ray and ECG LVH:Framingham

No X-ray enlargement X-ray enlargement

No ECG-LVH 171 253

ECG-LVH 669 1072

Data include men and women, aged 35-94

Age-adjusted biennial rate per 1000

Kannel. Eur Heart J 1992; 13 (suppl D): 82-88

Page 12: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Penn convention for M-mode measurements

Peak of QRS Endocardium excluded from SWT

and PWT Endocardium included in LVID

LV mass = 1.04[(SWT+LVID+PWT)3 - (LVID)3 - 14g

Divide by body surface area to get LV mass index

LV cavity (LVID)

Septum (SWT)

Posterior wall (PWT)

Devereux & Reichek Circulation 1977;55:613-8

Page 13: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

ASE guidelines for M-mode measurements

Start of QRS Endocardium included in SWT and

PWT Endocardium excluded from LVID

LVM = 0.8{1.04[ (SWT+LVID+PWT)3 - (LVID)3]} + 0.6 g

Divide by body surface area to get LV mass index

LV cavity (LVID)

Septum (SWT)

Posterior wall (PWT)

Devereux et al. Am J Cardiol 1986;57:450-8

Page 14: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Area-length method for calculation of LV mass

LVmass=1.05[5/6(A1xL1)-5/6(A2xL2)]

Divide by body surface area to get LV mass index

Reichek et al. Circulation 1983;67:348-52

Page 15: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

4-year age-adjusted incidence of cardiovascular disease according to LVMI

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

<75 75-94 95-116 117-

Males

Females

LVMI (g/m2)

Ag

e-a

dju

ste

d i n

c id

enc

e/ 1

00 s

ub

ject

s

Redrawn from Levy et al; NEJM 1990; 322: 1561-6.

Page 16: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Incidence of cardiovascular mortality according to presence or absence of LVH

00.5

11.5

22.5

33.5

44.5

5

Men Women

No LVH

LVH

4-y

ea

r ag

e-a

dju

ste

dca

rdio

vasc

ula

r m

ort

ality

P<0.001 P=ns

Redrawn from Levy et al, NEJM 1990; 322: 1561-6.

Page 17: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Risks associated with LVM and geometry

0

10

20

30

40

>125 <125 >125 <125

<0.45

>0.45

LVMI (g/m2) LVMI (g/m2)

RWT

Total mortality* Cardiovascular events†

% p

atie

nts

Koren et al. Ann Int Med 1991; 114: 345-352.*P<0.001, †P=0.03

Page 18: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Regression of LVH by drug treatment:meta-analysis of RCTs

-14

-12

-10

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

Diuretics B-blockers CCB's ACE-I

Schmieder et al. JAMA 1996; 275: 1507-1513

Mea

n %

in

LV

MI

Between treatment P<0.01

Page 19: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Prognostic significance of Echo LVM regression

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

All LVH

Regressors Non-regressors

Eve

nts/

100

pat

ient

yea

rs

Verdecchia et al. Circulation 1998; 97: 48-54

*

*P=0.04, †P=0.0004 after adjustment for age.

Page 20: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Prognostic significance of ECG voltage

changes: Framingham

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

Decreased voltage Increased voltage

Males FemalesOR

for

CV

eve

nts

(2 y

ears

)

*

*

*P<0.05Levy et al. Circulation 1994; 90: 1786-1793

Page 21: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Age-adjusted risk of congestive heart failure by hypertensive status

0

20

40

60

80

100

Ann

ual i

ncid

ence

/ 10

,000

Women Men

NormotensiveBorderlineHypertensive <140/90

>160/90

Kannel WB.Framingham

Page 22: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

The progression from hypertension to congestive heart failure

• 5143 subjects in Framingham study• 392 new cases of clinical CCF after mean

follow up of 20 years • In 91% hypertension antedated CCF• MI present in 52% of hypertensive men and

34% of hypertensive women with CCF• Median survival after CCF diagnosis in ht

1.37 years in men and 2.48 in women

Levy et al. JAMA 1996;275:1557-62

Page 23: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Age-adjusted BP parameters and CHF risk

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

SBP (mmHg) DBP (mmHg) PP (mmHg)<120 120-

139140-159>159 <70 70-7980-89>89 <54 54-

67>67

Hazard

Ratio

Chae et al. JAMA199;281:634-9

Page 24: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Arterial stiffening in hypertension

• Increased PW velocity with early wave reflection

• Increased central systolic pressure and lower diastolic pressure

• Discrepancy between central and peripheral pressures lessened

• Therefore peripheral BP underestimates central effects

Page 25: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Reducing arterial stiffness as a therapeutic goal

• Later wave reflection reduces peak central pressure which is caused by summation of systolic wave and reflected wave

• In periphery peak pressure is not a summation wave and so there is less of a decrease

• Reducing stiffness causes preferential decrease in central compared with peripheral pressures

Page 26: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.
Page 27: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Non-pharmacological approaches to reducing arterial stiffness

• Increased arterial stiffness in obese subjects with improvement following weight reduction

• Moderate aerobic exercise increases arterial compliance

• Subjects with high salt intake have better arterial distensibility than those with low intake.

• Improvement following salt restriction

Page 28: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Stiffnessimpact

LVregression

Outcomedata

-blockers ?+ + No

ACE-inhibitors +++ +++ No

-blockers + + Yes

-blockers ‘extra’ ++ ?? No

Ca++ antagonists +++ ++ Yes

thiazides + +/++ Yes +

Relation between vascular and LV impacts of antihypertensives

Page 29: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Diastolic heart failure

• Symptoms/signs of heart failure with normal or mildly impaired LV systolic function

• Prevalence depends on clinical definition of heart failure

• May be up to 30% of cases with heart failure

• Diastolic dysfunction in hypertensives is very common, particularly in those with LVH

Page 30: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Pathophysiology of diastolic dysfunction

• Impaired relaxation– Energy dependent and sensitive to ischaemia

• Coronary artery disease• Microvascular ischaemia (arteriolar rarefaction,

arteriole wall thickening, perivascular fibrosis, endothelial dysfunction, relative myocyte hypertrophy)

• Decreased compliance– Increase in myocardial collagen

Page 31: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Echocardiographic assessment

• 2D echo to assess systolic function

• Doppler echo– Transmitral flow

• E/A wave ratio• E wave deceleration time

– IVRT

Page 32: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Doppler patterns of diastolic dysfunction

• Impaired relaxation– Reduced E/A ratio– Increased EDT– Increased IVRT

• Restriction– LA pressure increases due to myocardial stiffness– High peak E wave velocity– Short EDT– Very short IVRT

Page 33: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.
Page 34: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.
Page 35: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Treatment of diastolic heart failure

• Treat underlying cause eg ischaemia

• Impaired relaxation– Theoretically rate-limiting agents effective

• Beta-blockers, verapamil• Reduce HR and prolong diastole• Reduce myocardial oxygen demand• Lower BP and reduce LVH

Page 36: The Heart in Hypertension Jamil Mayet. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy - a historical perspective Association between renal disease and LVH –Richard Bright.

Treatment of diastolic heart failure

• Restriction– Drugs which reduce fibrosis and lower LA

pressure theoretically should be effective• ACEI• AII blockers• Diuretics

– If LA pressure lowered too much cardiac output significantly worsened

• Can cause significant morbidity