Abstract

The objective of this study was to elucidate the relationship between left ventricular geometry and left ventricular (LV) function in patients with untreated essential hypertension. We evaluated LV systolic and diastolic functions by M-mode echocardiography in 24 normotensive control subjects (NC) and 129 patients with essential hypertension. Patients were divided into four groups according to the relative wall thickness and LV mass index: a normal left ventricle (n=57), a concentric remodeling (n=7), a concentric hypertrophy (n=31), and an eccentric hypertrophy (n=34) group. LV systolic function as measured by midwall fractional shortening (FS) was significantly decreased in both the concentric remodeling and concentric hypertrophy groups; no differences were observed for endocardial FS. LV diastolic function as measured by isovolumic relaxation time (IRT) was also decreased in both the concentric remodeling and concentric hypertrophy groups. In multivariate analysis, relative wall thickness (p<0.0001), end-systolic wall stress (p<0.0001), and systolic blood pressure (p=0.002) were independently associated (r2=0.72) with midwall FS in a model including age, LV mass index, body mass index, diastolic blood pressure and IRT. In addition, relative wall thickness (p=0.0008) and age (p<0.0001) were independently associated (r2=0.31) with IRT in a model including LV mass index, end-systolic wall stress, body mass index, systolic and diastolic blood pressures and midwall FS. We conclude that LV geometry as evaluated by relative wall thickness may provide a further independent stratification of LV systolic and diastolic functions in essential hypertension.

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