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Classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy.

Classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy. A clinical pathophysiological classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy has been established on the basis of the degree to which the heart is affected by chronic, systemic arterial hypertension: Degree I: Asymptomatic patients without left ventricular hypertrophy but with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction according to Doppler mitral inversion relation (E/A < 0.9) or to gamma scintigraphy (peak filling rate reduction < or = 2.7 EDC.s-1. These patients are classified as Group 1. Degree II: Asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patients (New York Heart Association class I) with echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy; classified as Group IIA or IIB according to whether weight-adjusted maximal oxygen uptake is normal or below normal, respectively. Degree III: The basic characteristic is the presence of congestive heart failure with normal ejection fraction (EF > or = 50%). Two subsets can be distinguished on the basis of degree of hypertrophy: Group IIIA, with a mass/volume index > 1.8, and IIIB with a mass/volume index < 1.8. The differences between the two are as follows: patients classified as IIIA had a lower rate of regional ischaemia, a higher ejection fraction, a more frequently audible fourth sound, rarely a third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio < 0.5; IIIB patients had a higher prevalence of regional ischaemia (thallium-positive), a frequently audible third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio > 0.5. Degree IV: This category is characterized by the presence of depressed contractility, which could cause heart failure, by an ejection fraction < 50% and an increase in ventricular volumes. Echocardiography shows increased distance between mitral point E and the septum. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png European heart journal Pubmed

Classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy.

European heart journal , Volume 14 Suppl J: 7 – Feb 14, 1994

Classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy.


Abstract

A clinical pathophysiological classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy has been established on the basis of the degree to which the heart is affected by chronic, systemic arterial hypertension: Degree I: Asymptomatic patients without left ventricular hypertrophy but with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction according to Doppler mitral inversion relation (E/A < 0.9) or to gamma scintigraphy (peak filling rate reduction < or = 2.7 EDC.s-1. These patients are classified as Group 1. Degree II: Asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patients (New York Heart Association class I) with echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy; classified as Group IIA or IIB according to whether weight-adjusted maximal oxygen uptake is normal or below normal, respectively. Degree III: The basic characteristic is the presence of congestive heart failure with normal ejection fraction (EF > or = 50%). Two subsets can be distinguished on the basis of degree of hypertrophy: Group IIIA, with a mass/volume index > 1.8, and IIIB with a mass/volume index < 1.8. The differences between the two are as follows: patients classified as IIIA had a lower rate of regional ischaemia, a higher ejection fraction, a more frequently audible fourth sound, rarely a third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio < 0.5; IIIB patients had a higher prevalence of regional ischaemia (thallium-positive), a frequently audible third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio > 0.5. Degree IV: This category is characterized by the presence of depressed contractility, which could cause heart failure, by an ejection fraction < 50% and an increase in ventricular volumes. Echocardiography shows increased distance between mitral point E and the septum.

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ISSN
0195-668X
pmid
8281972

Abstract

A clinical pathophysiological classification of hypertensive cardiomyopathy has been established on the basis of the degree to which the heart is affected by chronic, systemic arterial hypertension: Degree I: Asymptomatic patients without left ventricular hypertrophy but with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction according to Doppler mitral inversion relation (E/A < 0.9) or to gamma scintigraphy (peak filling rate reduction < or = 2.7 EDC.s-1. These patients are classified as Group 1. Degree II: Asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic patients (New York Heart Association class I) with echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy; classified as Group IIA or IIB according to whether weight-adjusted maximal oxygen uptake is normal or below normal, respectively. Degree III: The basic characteristic is the presence of congestive heart failure with normal ejection fraction (EF > or = 50%). Two subsets can be distinguished on the basis of degree of hypertrophy: Group IIIA, with a mass/volume index > 1.8, and IIIB with a mass/volume index < 1.8. The differences between the two are as follows: patients classified as IIIA had a lower rate of regional ischaemia, a higher ejection fraction, a more frequently audible fourth sound, rarely a third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio < 0.5; IIIB patients had a higher prevalence of regional ischaemia (thallium-positive), a frequently audible third sound and a cardiothoracic ratio > 0.5. Degree IV: This category is characterized by the presence of depressed contractility, which could cause heart failure, by an ejection fraction < 50% and an increase in ventricular volumes. Echocardiography shows increased distance between mitral point E and the septum.

Journal

European heart journalPubmed

Published: Feb 14, 1994

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