Abstract
To investigate the effect of age on left ventricular structure and geometry in hypertensive patients, we studied the relationship between age and echocardiographic variables in patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. We divided 168 patients with hypertension into three groups according to age: young (<40 years), middle-aged (40-59 years) and an elderly group (> or = 60 years). They were further categorized according to relative wall thickness and the left ventricular mass index. We then evaluated the prevalence of left ventricular geometric patterns in these patients according to age. The left ventricular end-diastolic dimension decreased with age, both in normotensive control subjects and in hypertensive patients. The magnitude of this decrease was similar for both. The relative wall thickness and left ventricular mass index were greater in the hypertensive patients than in the normotensive control subjects, and these increased with age both in the controls and the hypertensives. The differences between normotensives and hypertensives in these variables remained unchanged with age. The prevalence of a normal left ventricle (normal relative wall thickness and left ventricular mass index) in the hypertensive patients decreased with age. Conversely, the prevalence of concentric remodeling (increased relative wall thickness with normal left ventricular mass index) and concentric hypertrophy (increased relative wall thickness and left ventricular mass index) increased with age. These results demonstrate that age significantly affects left ventricular structure both in normotensive control subjects and in hypertensive patients. Thus, the differences in left ventricular geometric patterns with age may have important implications in assessing left ventricular structure and geometric patterns in hypertensive patients.
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