(Hypertension. 2001;37:1083.)
© 2001 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
Presented in part at the Fourteenth Scientific Meeting of the American Society of Hypertension, New York, NY, May 1999.
From the Department of Cardiology/Thoraxcenter (W.F.T., J.F.M., H.J.G.M.C.), the Department of Internal Medicine (A.J.S., P.A.d.G.), and the Department of General Practice (B.M.-d.J.), University Hospital Groningen; and Groningen Hypertension Service (J.F.M., A.J.S., P.A.d.G., F.H.S., B.M.-d.J.), Groningen, The Netherlands.
Correspondence to W.F. Terpstra, MD, Department of Cardiology/Thoraxcenter, University Hospital Groningen, Hanzeplein 1, PO Box 30.001, 9713 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands. E-mail w.f.terpstra{at}castel.nl
AbstractIn
hypertension, both reduced vascular supply and increased cardiac demand
contribute to the development of (silent) myocardial ischemia.
Our aim was to determine the prevalence of ST-segment depression and to
analyze contributing factors in asymptomatic,
previously untreated, older hypertensives. From a population survey, in
184 patients with mild hypertension (4 times systolic blood
pressure
160 mm Hg and/or diastolic blood pressure
95 mm Hg), 60 to 75 years of age,
cardiovascular end-organ damage was measured. Episodes
of ST-segment depression were measured by 48-hour ambulatory Holter
monitoring and were observed in 21 hypertensives (12%). They showed a
significantly higher combined far-wall intima-media thickness of
carotid and femoral arteries and more arterial plaques as
measured by B-mode ultrasound compared with hypertensives without ST
depression (0.00098±0.00021 versus 0.00088±0.00016 mm and
5.2±3.7 versus 3.7±2.8 plaques,
P<0.05, respectively), whereas
left ventricular mass index was not different (111±18
versus 104±24 g/m2;
P=0.18, respectively). In
hypertensives with transient ST-segment depression, a significant
relation was found between left ventricular mass and
ischemic burden
(r=0.51,
P=0.02). Approximately 1 of 8
unselected and previously untreated older hypertensives show
asymptomatic ST-segment depression, suggestive of silent
myocardial ischemia. These data suggest that vascular factors
mainly determine the occurrence of ischemic ST-segment
depression and cardiac factors determine the ischemic burden in
older hypertensives.
Key Words: ischemia hypertrophy, left ventricular ventricular function, left elderly hypertension, secondary
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D. Boon, J. van Goudoever, J. J. Piek, and G. A. van Montfrans ST Segment Depression Criteria and the Prevalence of Silent Cardiac Ischemia in Hypertensives Hypertension, March 1, 2003; 41(3): 476 - 481. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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