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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertension
is regarded as the most common cause of heart failure in Nigeria and other Black African countries. A few reports suggest that heart failure due to
hypertension
hardly occurs without the presence of an extra burden on the heart from the presence of other cardiac risk factors. This study assesses the occurrence of other potential causes of heart failure in 55 consecutive admitted cases of hypertensive heart failure. All but six cases (88%) were associated with the presence of one or other significant cardiac risk factors while 56.2% were associated with multiple heart failure risk factors. Five of the six were poor drug compliers. Of the six, only one was completely free of cardiac risk factors and he was unaware of his
hypertension
and so had never had therapy. The others either consumed alcohol moderately, had mild renal impairment or were grossly obese. The factors found were anaemia, renal dysfunction, abnormal glucose tolerance, alcoholic ingestion and co-existing
valvular heart disease
. The finding shows that among Nigerian patients hospitalised for hypertensive heart failure, heart failure was rare in those hypertensive patients who had no extra cardiac burden, and therefore control of these factors will help prevent the development of heart failure in
hypertension
with its dismal prognosis.
...
PMID:How common is heart failure due to systemic hypertension alone in hospitalised Nigerians? 914 Jul 85
Left ventricular (LV) mass, as estimated from M-mode echocardiography (echo), has previously been shown to be an independent predictor of incident cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality. We evaluated the relationship at baseline of echo LV mass to relevant cardiovascular disease risk factors and other potential covariates in the Cardiovascular Health Study, multicenter study sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of 5201 men and women aged 65 years or older (mean, 73). Two-dimensionally directed M-mode echo LV mass measurements could be obtained in 1357 men and 2053 women (66% of this elderly cohort). Stepwise linear regression analyses of the relationship of echo LV mass to demographic and risk factor, physical activity, electrocardiographic, and prevalent disease variables resulted in a model that explained 37% of the variance for the entire cohort. In order of decreasing importance, factors positively associated with echo LV mass were body weight, male sex, systolic pressure, presence of congestive heart failure, present smoking, major and minor electrocardiographic abnormalities, treatment for
hypertension
,
valvular heart disease
, aortic regurgitation by color Doppler, and mitral regurgitation by color Doppler (in men) whereas diastolic pressure, bioresistance (a measure of adiposity), and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were inversely related to echo LV mass. Although height and weight were both related to LV mass, height added nothing once weight was entered in multiple linear regression analyses. Furthermore, in the multiple regression models, diastolic pressure was inversely and systolic BP positively related to LV mass, with similar magnitudes for their coefficients. In consonance with these findings, pulse pressure was positively related to LV mass in bivariate analyses. Multiple linear regression analyses explained less of the variance for ventricular septal thickness (R2 = .13) and LV posterior wall thickness (R2 = .14) than for LV mass (R2 = .37) and LV diastolic dimension (R2 = .27). Intriguing findings in the elderly Cardiovascular Health Study cohort included the presence of pulse pressure as a positive correlate, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol as an inverse correlate, of LV mass. Longitudinal studies in the Cardiovascular Health Study cohort will help to clarify the importance of demographic, risk factor, and other variables, and changes in these variables, in predicting changes in echo LV mass and its components as well as the prognostic significance of LV mass in the elderly.
Hypertension
1997 May
PMID:Left ventricular mass in the elderly. The Cardiovascular Health Study. 914 72
The aim of the study was to determine the relations of 24-h blood pressure (BP) and its different phases with left atrial size. A total of 130 subjects (mean age 46 years) not taking cardiac drugs were studied by M-mode and Doppler echocardiography and ambulatory BP recording. Subjects (excluding those with coronary artery or
valvular heart disease
, heart failure, or diabetes) were classified into two groups: 25 normotensives and 105 hypertensives (history of antihypertensive treatment and office diastolic BP > 90 mm Hg). The two groups were comparable in terms of sex, age, and heart rate, whereas body mass index, (P < .01), office BP, average 24-h BP, and average daytime and nighttime BP (all P < .00001) were higher in hypertensives. Hypertensives also had increased left atrial dimension, left atrial dimension/aortic root ratio (both P < .001), and left ventricular mass (LV) indexed for height (P < .0001). Positive correlations of left atrial dimension were found with office BP, average 24-h, average daytime and nighttime systolic and diastolic BP, LV mass index, and Doppler-derived E/A ratio. In a multivariate model that included potentially confounding factors, only body mass index (standardized beta coefficient = 0.41, P < .00001), average nighttime diastolic BP (beta = 0.33, P < .00001), and male sex (beta = 0.18, P < .01) were independent predictors of left atrial size in the pooled population. In conclusion, left atrial size is more closely related to ambulatory, rather than office, BP measurements, and high average nighttime BP is a powerful marker of left atrial enlargement in arterial
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Influence of nighttime blood pressure on left atrial size in uncomplicated arterial systemic hypertension. 927 77
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is in most patients (approximately 70%) associated with organic heart disease including
valvular heart disease
, coronary artery disease,
hypertension
, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, and congenital heart disease, mostly atrial septal defect in adults. In many chronic conditions, determining whether AF is the result or is unrelated to the underlying heart disease, remains unclear. The list of possible etiologies also include cardiac amyloidosis, hemochromatosis and endomyocardial fibrosis. Other heart diseases, such as mitral valve prolapse (without mitral regurgitation), calcifications of the mitral annulus, atrial myxoma, pheochomocytoma, and idiopathic dilated right atrium may present with AF. Atrial fibrillation may occur in the absence of detectable organic heart disease, the so-called "lone AF", in about 30% of cases. The term "idiopathic AF" implies the absence of any detectable etiology including hyperthyroidism, chronic obstructive lung disease, overt sinus node dysfunction, and overt or concealed preexcitation (Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome), only to mention a few of other uncommon causes of AF. The autonomous nervous system may contribute to the occurrence of AF in some patients. AF occurs commonly. In patients with
valvular heart disease
, AF is common, particularly when the mitral valve is involved. The occurrence of AF is unrelated to the severity of mitral stenosis or mitral regurgitation but is more common in patients with enlarged left atrium and congestive heart failure. In patients with coronary artery disease, AF occurs predominantly in older patients, males, and patients with left ventricular dysfunction, Important predictive factors of AF include
hypertension
, left ventricular hypertrophy and diabetes. The risk of the development of AF, in an individual patient, is often difficult to assess. Increasing age, presence of
valvular heart disease
, and congestive heart failure increase the risk of atrial fibrillation.
...
PMID:Factors predisposing to the development of atrial fibrillation. 935 13
Left ventricular hypertrophy is associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular disease. The known determinants of left ventricular hypertrophy only partially explain its variability. The purpose of this study was to estimate heritability of left ventricular mass. The study sample included adults in the original Framingham Heart Study and the Framingham Offspring Study who were not receiving antihypertensive medications and who were free of coronary heart disease, congestive heart failure, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency,
valvular heart disease
, and severe left ventricular hypertrophy. Intraclass correlations for left ventricular mass among first-degree relatives, second-degree relatives, and unrelated spouse pairs were calculated to determine the contribution of heredity to the variability in left ventricular mass. After adjustments for age, height, weight, and systolic blood pressure, the intraclass correlations between first-degree relatives were .15 (parent-child, P<.001) to .16 (siblings, P<.001), between second-degree relatives the correlation was .06 (P=NS), and between spouses it was .05 (P=NS). The estimated heritability of adjusted left ventricular mass was between .24 and .32. The proportion of the variance in sex-specific left ventricular mass explained by age, height, weight, and systolic blood pressure was .26 in men and .34 in women. On the basis of intraclass correlations for left ventricular mass, incorporation of adjusted left ventricular mass of a parent or sibling would increase the explained variance by an additional .02 to .03. Heredity explains a small, but discernible proportion of the variance in left ventricular mass. Studies are currently under way to identify genetic markers that predict an individual's predisposition to left ventricular hypertrophy. This knowledge may lead to advances in the prevention of left ventricular hypertrophy, which is strongly associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
Hypertension
1997 Nov
PMID:Heritability of left ventricular mass: the Framingham Heart Study. 936 50
Improvements in the identification and control of
hypertension
have helped define populations at risk for
hypertension
and delineated the role of
hypertension
as a risk factor in ischemic heart disease and heart failure. Epidemiologic data document the high prevalence of
hypertension
among the elderly and black populations. Beginning in the 1970s, a new perspective on the identification and treatment of
hypertension
began to emerge with greater emphasis on blood pressure control, particularly among these high-risk groups. By the early 1990s, most hypertensive individuals were being treated and blood pressure was under control in 55% of hypertensive persons overall. Although the importance of elevated diastolic pressure has traditionally been emphasized, in recent years the clinical implications of isolated systolic hypertension and the benefit of treating elevated systolic pressure have been recognized. Coronary heart disease is associated with definite
hypertension
(> or =160/95); however, the presence of other risk factors such as elevated plasma levels of cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, cigarette smoking, and diabetes mellitus create a synergy with even mild
hypertension
(140-159/90-94 mm Hg) to increase coronary risk. A different situation is present for cardiac failure. Data from the Framingham Heart Study demonstrate that
hypertension
, myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, diabetes mellitus, left ventricular hypertrophy, and
valvular heart disease
were associated with an increased relative risk for cardiac failure. The relative risk for cardiac failure was greatest for persons with a previous myocardial infarction, and
hypertension
and previously diagnosed coronary heart disease were important precursors of cardiac failure.
...
PMID:An epidemiologic perspective of systemic hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and heart failure. 937 42
In the evaluation of coronary artery disease, conventional exercise testing remains the most important modality. Its diagnostic accuracy is reportedly around 70%. Which additional non-invasive examination should be chosen if the result of exercise testing is non-diagnostic? In myocardial ischemia, regional wall motion abnormalities occur before ECG-changes and angina. These regional wall motion abnormalities can be diagnosed and assessed echocardiographically at rest and after a physical or pharmacological exercise. Myocardial ischemia causes worsening of the wall motion if you compare stress with resting images. Stress echocardiography has a diagnostic accuracy of 85% in the assessment of coronary artery disease. When should we order stress echocardiography? If the resting ECG is normal and if the patient takes no digoxin, then conventional exercise testing is the preferred first line test. However, if the resting ECG is abnormal, if there is left ventricular hypertrophy, if there are ST/T-abnormalities, a Wolff-Parkinson White syndrome, a complete left bundle branch blockage or in patients who are unable to exercise adequately, stress echocardiography offers an excellent, accurate, cost-effective alternative with a lot of additional information regarding left ventricular muscle mass, pulmonary artery pressures or
valvular heart disease
. In very obese patients or patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, echocardiographic image quality is reduced and nuclear perfusion imaging is definitely preferable. In most patients (95%), however, echocardiographic image quality is adequate for stress echocardiography. In patients with arterial
hypertension
, mitral valve prolapse, or in the need for additional information, stress echocardiography is preferable to nuclear imaging. In patients who are able to exercise, stress echocardiography in combination with bicycle or treadmill exercise should be chosen, only in patients who are unable to exercise adequately, pharmacological stress echocardiography--mainly dobutamine stress echocardiography--should be chosen. Hence, stress echocardiography has increasingly gained wide-spread use as an important and accurate diagnostic means in non-invasive cardiology. It is safe, not very costly, accurate and offers the unique opportunity of on-line assessment of the left ventricle. Indications for stress echocardiography include diagnosis and functional assessment of coronary artery disease, preoperative risk assessment before major vascular surgery, prognostic evaluation after myocardial infarction and viability assessment. In the next years, stress echocardiography will be used even more frequently and will become one of the most often used non-invasive methods in cardiology besides exercise testing.
...
PMID:[Stress echocardiography--principles, methodology, results and indications]. 964 32
The fibrinogen level is an independent risk factor for coronary events and stroke, but no detailed data are available concerning fibrinogen and atherosclerotic disease of the thoracic aorta. This prospective study using multiplane transesophageal echocardiography examined the relation between atherosclerotic thoracic aortic plaque and fibrinogen level. One-hundred forty-eight patients (65 +/- 11 years) with
valvular heart disease
underwent multiplane transesophageal echocardiography and coronary angiography. We measured plasma fibrinogen level for each patient and recorded the following cardiovascular risk factors: age, sex,
systemic hypertension
, history of smoking, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, body mass index, and family history of coronary artery disease (CAD). Patients with thoracic aortic plaque had a higher level of plasma fibrinogen (p = 0.0001), were older (p = 0.0001), and had significantly more risk factors: history of smoking (p = 0.009),
hypertension
(p = 0.008), hypercholesterolemia (p = 0.0001), diabetes mellitus (p = 0.01), and family history of CAD (p = 0.003). Multivariate logistic regression analysis of fibrinogen level and risk factors revealed 4 independent predictors of thoracic aortic plaque: fibrinogen, age, hypercholesterolemia, and history of smoking. Fibrinogen was also an independent predictor of CAD. There was a relation between fibrinogen levels and the severity of aortic atherosclerosis (r = 0.46; p = 0.0001) and the severity of CAD (r = 0.30; p = 0.0001). This prospective study indicates that fibrinogen is an independent marker for thoracic aortic plaque related to the severity of thoracic aortic atherosclerosis and confirms that fibrinogen constitutes an independent marker for CAD related to the severity of angiographically evaluated coronary atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Fibrinogen is an independent marker for thoracic aortic atherosclerosis. 946 75
Primary hyperparathyroidism, characterized by hypersecretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) leading to hypercalcemia and relative hypophosphatemia, is quite common in the elderly. Most patients with primary hyperparathyroidism have only mild hypercalcemia and are symptomless. But others experience various other organ diseases. Primary hyperparathyroidism is also associated with cardiovascular abnormalities, including QT interval shortening, heart block, cardiac arrhythmias,
hypertension
, myocardial hypertrophy, myocardial calcification and, though rarely, with
valvular heart disease
. We described a case of primary hyperparathyroidism associated with cardiac abnormalities. An 82-year-old male presented with the complaints of chest discomfort, fatigue, general weakness, nausea and vomiting over a period of months and was admitted in July 1996. Physical examination with heart auscultation showed a pansystolic murmur over the right sternal border and apex region, and a blowing diastolic murmur over the left sternal border. Biochemistry profiles revealed elevations of serum calcium (14.3 mg/dl) and chloride/phosphate ratio (> 33). Endocrinological studies showed elevations of serum PTH-C (4.8 ng/ml) and PTH-intact (705 pg/ml) concentrations. Kidney ultrasonography revealed a left renal stone. A spine X-ray revealed spondylosis and a compression fracture of the lumbar-spine with osteoporotic change. Thyroid ultrasonography and Thallium (Tl201)-technetium (Tc99m) subtraction scan showed parathyroid adenoma in the low pole of the right thyroid bed. Parathyroid aspiration cytology revealed few and discrete cells. Echocardiogram revealed moderate to severe aortic valvular calcification as well as stenosis with moderate aortic regurgitation, mitral regurgitation and myocardial calcification. The patient received parathyroidectomy one month later. During his postoperative days, he suffered from muscle twitching with positive Trousseau's sign and Chvostek's sign. The patient received calcium carbonate and vitamin D for hypocalcemia, diltiazem and capoten for his heart problems. A repeated echocardiogram two months after surgery showed no improvement of valvular calcification.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism with cardiac abnormalities: a case report. 950 84
Identification of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) using 12-lead ECG criteria based primarily on QRS amplitudes has been limited by poor sensitivity at acceptable levels of specificity. Because the product of QRS voltage and duration, as an approximation of the time-voltage area of the QRS complex, can improve accuracy of the 12-lead ECG for LVH, we examined the diagnostic value of true time-voltage area measurements of QRS complexes from the standard 12-lead ECG. Standard 12-lead ECGs and echocardiograms were obtained in 175 control subjects without LVH and in 74 patients with regurgitant
valvular heart disease
and LVH defined by echocardiographic criteria (indexed LV mass >110 g/m2 in women and >125 g/m2 in men). Standard voltage criteria, voltage-duration products (voltage multiplied by QRS duration), and true time-voltage areas of the QRS were calculated for Sokolow-Lyon criteria (SV1 +RV(5/6)) and the 12-lead sum of voltage criteria. Test sensitivities were compared using gender-specific partitions with matched specificity of 98% in the 175 subjects without LVH. Measurement of the time-voltage area significantly improved sensitivity for both criteria. The 76% sensitivity of the 12-lead sum area and 65% sensitivity of Sokolow-Lyon area were significantly greater than the 54% sensitivity of the approximation of QRS area provided by each voltage-duration product (P<.001 and P=.021) and than the 46% and 43% sensitivities of the respective simple voltage criteria (each P<.001). Comparison of receiver operating characteristic curves confirmed the superior overall performance of time-voltage area criteria compared with both voltage-duration products and simple voltage criteria. These results suggest that use of time-voltage areas can dramatically improve identification of LVH by 12-lead ECG. Further study of this approach is needed to identify optimal criteria for LVH based on the time-voltage area measurements from the 12-lead ECG.
Hypertension
1998 Apr
PMID:Time-voltage QRS area of the 12-lead electrocardiogram: detection of left ventricular hypertrophy. 953 18
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