Left ventricular hypertrophy in hypertension as a predictor of coronary events: relation to geometry.
Review
Overview
abstract
The present review examines epidemiological evidence for a relation of left ventricular hypertrophy with coronary heart disease, and mechanisms that may represent pathophysiological links between left ventricular hypertrophy and coronary events. Left ventricular hypertrophy has been demonstrated to be a powerful predictor of coronary heart disease, and when geometry is concentric the relation is even stronger. In addition to its association with risk factors for atherosclerosis and mechanisms that precipitate acute heart attacks, left ventricular hypertrophy also directly predisposes to and aggravates clinical presentation of coronary heart disease through a number of biological mechanisms. These include the following: increase in oxygen requirement related to left ventricular geometry; coronary hypertension, with endothelial dysfunction and reduced coronary reserve; diastolic dysfunction; and structural remodelling of myocardium and vascular bed. Some of these alterations are also worsened by underlying coronary heart disease, and can potentially be maintained by loop mechanisms. A recognizable stage of abnormal coronary haemodynamics in the context of left ventricular hypertrophy is probably that at which coronary reserve is impaired in the absence of any other sign of heart disease; in many circumstances, this may occur early in the disease process.