Abstract

It is not well established if blood pressure control is associated with an improvement in diastolic function, whose impairment represents an early marker of cardiac involvement in systemic hypertension. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a prolonged treatment with an alpha 1-blocking agent can lead to a reversal of the abnormalities of left ventricular filling. Eleven never-treated patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension were examined before and after at least six months of treatment with prazosin. Cardiac function and left ventricular mass were measured by means of radionuclide ventriculography and echocardiography. Average blood pressure values significantly decreased during the treatment period: from 163.54 +/- 17.80 mm Hg to 146.81 +/- 13.14 mm Hg for systolic blood pressure and from 106.09 +/- 6.96 mm Hg to 92.90 +/- 8.93 mm Hg for diastolic blood pressure. All the indices of left ventricular mass showed a trend toward reduction, but the differences with respect to the baseline values did not reach statistical significance. Average value of ejection fraction was normal before treatment and did not change significantly after treatment. All indices of diastolic function were significantly lower than normal controls' values at the beginning of the study and tended to worsen at the end of the study. Our findings suggest that diastolic function is not consistently affected by the therapy with alpha 1-adrenoreceptor antagonists despite good blood pressure control.

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