Title of article :
Relation of Hemodynamic Volume Load to Arterial and Cardiac Size
Author/Authors :
Eric C. Jones MD، نويسنده , , Richard B. Devereux MD، نويسنده , , FACC، نويسنده , , Michael J. O’Grady BA، نويسنده , , Joseph E. Schwartz PhD، نويسنده , , Jennifer E. Liu MD، نويسنده , , Thomas G. Pickering MD، نويسنده , , PhD، نويسنده , , Mary J. Roman MD، نويسنده , , FACC، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Abstract :
Objectives. This study sought to assess the relation of Doppler stroke volume (SV) to cardiac and carotid artery size and to determine whether volume load accounts for the parallelism between the two.
Background. It has been suggested that altered hemodynamic volume load can modify the degree and pattern of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy from that predicted from blood pressure (BP) alone.
Methods. We related Doppler echocardiographic SV in 342 normotensive or unmedicated asymptomatic hypertensive adults to echocardiographic LV mass, LV internal dimension (LVID), wall thickness, carotid ultrasound arterial lumen diameter, intimal–medial thickness (IMT) and cross-sectional are (CSA).
Results. SV was positively related to LV mass (r = 0.42), LVID (r = 0.45), ventricular wall thickness (r = 0.20 to 0.29) and carotid diameter (r = 0.23, all p < 0.0001); CS (r = 0.17, p < 0.002); and IMT (r = 0.12, p = 0.03). In multivariate analyses controlling for awake ambulatory BP and the circumferential end-systolic stress/end-systolic volume index ratio, SV remained an independent predictor of LV mass and chamber size (both p < 0.0001) but not LV wall thickness. SV also predicted carotid diameter (p < 0.0002), CS (p = 0.001) and, to lesser degree, IMT (p = 0.02) after controlling for mean awake BP and age. In additional analyses, LV and carotid dimensions were significantly interrelated independent of SV.
Conclusions. SV measured by invasively validated Doppler echocardiography is associated with LV and carotid artery enlargement and eccentric hypertrophy, independent of arterial pressure, LV contractility, age and body size; however, SV and other variables do not account for the previously documented parallelism between cardiac and arterial structure.
Keywords :
BP , blood pressure , Left ventricular , PWT , CSA , Stroke volume , Cross-sectional area , LV , IMT , posterior wall thickness , RWT , relative wall thickness , SV , LVID , left ventricular internal dimension , cESS/ESVI , circumferential end-systolic stress/end-systolic volume index ratio , intimal–medial thickness , IVSWT , interventricular septal wall thickness
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)