Abstract

To characterize intact cardiac performance during the progression from moderate to severe left ventricular hypertrophy, peak pumping ability, maximal pressure-generating capacity and passive pressure-volume relations were determined in ether-anesthetized 6 and 18 month old female spontaneously hypertensive rats, in 18 month old male spontaneously hypertensive rats and in sex- and age-matched normotensive rats. Ejection phase indexes of young female hypertensive rats were comparable with those of age-matched normotensive rats. Both groups ejected the same peak stroke volumes from similar end-diastolic volumes so that their indexes of ejection fraction were identical. However, in old female and male hypertensive rats, these characteristics of ventricular performance were greatly diminished. A reduced peak stroke volume was ejected from a normal end-diastolic volume in old female hypertensive rats and from a significantly larger end-diastolic volume in old male hypertensive rats, so that ejection fraction indexes were moderately and substantially reduced, respectively. Maximal pressure developed during an aortic occlusion was always significantly greater in hypertensive rats. Despite elevated systemic arterial blood pressures, young female hypertensive rats ejected a normal stroke volume from a normal end-diastolic volume. Even though the severity of hypertension did not further progress with age, cardiac mass increased, yet systolic function decreased in old hypertensive rats. Therefore, hypertrophic growth of the left ventricle in the hypertensive rat is associated with both a compensated and a depressed phase of cardiac performance.

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