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Left ventricular diastolic filling in the elderly: the cardiovascular health study.

TitleLeft ventricular diastolic filling in the elderly: the cardiovascular health study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1998
AuthorsGardin, JM, Arnold, AM, Bild, DE, Smith, VE, Lima, JA, Klopfenstein, HS, Kitzman, DW
JournalAm J Cardiol
Volume82
Issue3
Pagination345-51
Date Published1998 Aug 01
ISSN0002-9149
KeywordsAged, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Blood Flow Velocity, Cardiovascular Diseases, Cohort Studies, Diastole, Echocardiography, Doppler, Electrocardiography, Female, Health Status, Heart Ventricles, Humans, Male, Ventricular Function, Left
Abstract<p>Changes in left ventricular (LV) diastolic function (e.g., as measured by transmitral flow velocity) are known to occur with aging. In addition, impaired LV diastolic function plays an important role in such cardiovascular disorders common in the elderly as hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and congestive heart failure (CHF). Participants in the Cardiovascular Health Study, a multicenter study of community-dwelling men (n=2,239) and women (n=2,962) > or = 65 years of age, underwent an extensive baseline evaluation, including echocardiography. Early diastolic LV Doppler (transmitral) peak filling velocity decreased, and peak late diastolic (atrial) velocity increased with age in multivariate analyses (all p <0.001). Early and late diastolic peak filling velocities were both significantly higher in women than in men, even after adjustment for body surface area (or height and weight). In multivariate models in the entire cohort and a healthy subgroup (n=703), gender, age, heart rate, and blood pressure (BP) were most strongly related to early and late diastolic transmitral peak velocities. Early and late diastolic peak velocities both increased with increases in systolic BP and decreased with increases in diastolic BP (p <0.001). Doppler transmitral velocities were compared among health status subgroups. In multiple regression models adjusted for other covariates, and in analysis of variance models examining differences across subgroups adjusted only for age, the subgroup with CHF had the highest early diastolic peak velocities. All clinical disease subgroups had higher late diastolic peak velocities than the healthy subgroup, with the subgroups with either CHF or hypertension having the highest age-adjusted means. The subgroup with hypertension had the lowest ratio of early-to-late diastolic peak velocity, and men with CHF had the highest ratio. These findings are consistent with previous reports that hypertensive subjects exhibit an abnormal relaxation pattern, whereas patients with CHF develop a pattern suggestive of an increased early diastolic left atrial-LV pressure gradient.</p>
Alternate JournalAm. J. Cardiol.
PubMed ID9708665
Grant ListN01-HC-85079 / HC / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
N01-HC-85080 / HC / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
N01-HC-85081 / HC / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States