Abstract

In order to define cardiac hypertensive involvement a group of 25 consecutive elderly male hypertensive outpatients and 25 age-matched male normotensive controls underwent full non-invasive assessment of cardiac status by resting 12-lead electrocardiography, Doppler-echocardiographic examination and simultaneous ambulatory blood pressure and electrocardiographic monitorings. Elderly hypertensives showed a higher prevalence of electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy, an increased echocardiographic left ventricular mass, an impaired left ventricular filling pattern and more frequent ventricular arrhythmias when compared with normotensive controls. In elderly patients, left ventricular mass was found to be correlated with 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (r = 0.47, p < 0.01) and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure variability (r = 0.52, p < 0.01), while ventricular arrhythmias were correlated with left ventricular mass (r = 0.52, p < 0.01), the Doppler synthetic index of diastolic function E/A ratio (r = -0.56, p < 0.01) and both 24-hour systolic (r = 0.54, p < 0.01) and diastolic (r = 0.59, p < 0.01) ambulatory blood-pressure variabilities. These data suggest that hypertension induces in elderly patients an impairment of cardiac structure and function comparable with that already shown in younger hypertensives. Therefore, the assessment of hypertensive target-organ damage currently employed in younger subjects should be also considered in elderly hypertensives, at least when no other relevant medical disease is present.

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