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Av. cardiol ; 29(2): 144-153, jun. 2009. graf, tab, ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-607884

ABSTRACT

El diseño experimental de los estudios prospectivos sobre el tratamiento de la hipertensión arterial esencial, ha ignorado un aspecto fundamental de la fisiopatología del paciente hipertenso: Los pacientes hipertensos no son homogéneos, en lo que respecta a los mecanismos responsables del aumento de la presión arterial. La adptación cardiovascular a la hipertensión arterial es anatómica y funcionalmente heterogénea. Investigaciones clínicas recientes indican que, esta heterogeneidad, puede ser minimizada con el uso de la eco-cardiografía. El análisis de los perfiles hemodinámicos y neurohormonales de los pacientes hipertensos permite distinguir la presencia de denominadores comunes: La hipertrofia ventricular concéntrica y la hipertrofia ventricular excéntrica representan los extremos opuestos de adaptación del corazón a la hipertensión arterial. El primero se caracteriza por tener una forma geométrica elíptica, con un perfil hemodinámico de gasto cardíaco normal y resistencias vasculares periféricas elevadas. Los niveles plasmáticos de renina y de los péptidos natriuréticos están elevados.


The experimental design of clinical studies, on the pharmacological treatment of essencial hypertension, has ignored a fundamental issue: Hypertensive patiens are not a homogenous population. The adaptation of the cardiovascular system to hypertension is structurally and funtionally heterogeneous. Recent clinical investigations suggest that this heterogeneity can be minimized by echocardiography. Thus, when the hemodynamic and neurohormonal profiles of untreated hypertensive patients are considered, in the particular context of the cardiac morphologic adaptation to high blood pressure, distinct common denominator emerge. Concentric Hypertrophy is characterized by an elliptic left ventricle, normal stroke volume and high peripheral vascular resistance. Its predominant neurohormonal profile includes elevated plasma renin and natriuretic peptide levels. Conversely, most patients with eccentric hypertrophy have a spheric left ventricle, increased stroke volume and low peripheral vascular resistance. Its corresponding neurohormonal profile shows low serum renin and anhanced sympathetic nervous activity. The therapeutic response, to angiotensin II antagonists and to beta-adrenergic blockers, of these two geometric patterns is also different. Concentric hypertrophy is substantially reversed by angiotensin II blockers, where as, eccentric hypertrophy is refractory to both, angiotensin II blockerds and atenol. These facts raise a relevant question: Should ventricular geometry be considered when deciding which antihypertensive drug is to be prescribed?.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Hypertension/diagnosis , Hypertension/physiopathology , Hypertension/therapy , Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular/physiopathology , Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular/therapy
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