RACHEL J. MIDDLETON*,
PATRICK S. PARFREY and
ROBERT N. FOLEY*
*Department of Nephrology, Hope Hospital, Salford, United
Kingdom Divisions of Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, Memorial University of
Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada.
Correspondence to Dr. Robert N. Foley, Hope Hospital, Stott Lane, M6 8HD
Salford, UK. Phone: 44-161-787-5710; Fax: 44-161-787-5775; E-mail:
rfoley{at}hope.srht.nwest.nhs.uk
Physiologically, left ventricular hypertrophy is primarily anadaptive
remodeling process, compensating for an increase inworkload placed on the
heart with the aim of minimizing ventricularwall stress. Two contrasting
models of adaptation may developdepending on the patterns of stress imposed.
Pressure overload,caused, for example, by hypertension or aortic stenosis,
requiresthe generation of greater intracavitary pressure during ventricular
contraction.This is achieved by arraying contractile protein units in
parallel.Relatively, an increase in wall thickness and a fall in cavity
volumetake place. Concentric hypertrophy, as this process is known,
leadsto decreased diastolic compliance and may place the myocardiumat risk
of ischemia, even without coronary artery disease. Inconditions of volume
overload, such as anemia or aortic incompetence,lengthening of contractile
units leads to a physiologicallyuseful increase in systolic stroke volume,
according to Starling'sLaw. Unopposed, this process of left ventricular
dilation leadsto increased wall tension, a state known to increase oxygen
requirements,and myocyte burnout. According to the Law of Laplace, the wall
tensionof a hollow spherical body is directly proportional to radiusand
pressure and inversely proportional to wall thickness. Thus,in states of left
ventricular dilation, wall thickening andleft ventricular hypertrophy are
useful secondary order adaptationsthat tend to decrease wall tension.
The molecular mechanisms that underlie these processes are slowlybeing
unraveled. Subtle signaling changes can lead from physiologicadaptation to
pathologic maladaptation. With continuing pressureand volume overload,
cardiac myocyte apoptosis accelerates.In addition, fibrosis accelerates.
Hypertrophy, apoptosis, andfibrosis are influenced by constitutional and
genetic factors,hormones, growth factors, and cytokines such as endothelin 1,
angiotensinII, insulin-like growth factor, and tumor necrosis factor .
Thebalance of these factors and downstream intracellular signalscan alter
the balance among hypertrophy, apoptosis, and fibrosis
(1).
Experimental studies, especially the pioneering work from theHeidelberg
group, have greatly advanced our understanding ofthe morphology and
pathogenesis of uremic cardiomyopathy. Theprincipal morphologic features are
increased heart size, interstitialfibrosis, thickening of intramyocardial
arterioles, and a reductionof capillary length density, so that there is a
reduction inthe ratio of perfusing capillaries to myocardium supplied
(2).In these models, uremic
cardiomyopathy is very much a "metabolic"condition, with little
or no relationship to classic hemodynamicstresses, such as hypertension and
anemia. Parathyroid hormone(3)
is a permissive factor for these changes, which seem tobe preventable by
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition
(4),agents that reduce central
sympathetic outflow (4) and
endothelinantagonists (5).
Hyperparathyroidism, by virtue of its effectas a calcium ionophore, is known
to lead to intramyoctye calciumoverload, altered bioenergetics, and relative
ischemia (6).Bradykinin may
also be a contributory factor to the preventiveaction of ACE inhibition
(7). Immunohistochemical
studies ofsignal transduction factors suggest that rates of apoptosismay
accelerate during the development of uremic cardiomyopathy
(8).
Left ventricular hypertrophy is a histologic entity. Myocardialbiopsy is
rarely performed, so it is rarely possible in practiceto prove that
maladaptive pathologic features, especially fibrosis,are present. Instead, we
rely on measures of left ventricularsize, geometry, and function.
Echocardiography is noninvasiveand provides an accurate assessment of each of
these parameters.For each parameter, superior techniques exist but are not
routinelyused because of expense, unavailability, or invasiveness. Thus,
magneticresonance imaging seems to be a superior technique to assessleft
ventricular mass and cavity volume in patients with end-stagerenal disease
(ESRD) (9). Similarly, cardiac
function is measuredbetter with invasive techniques. In practice,
echocardiographyis a reasonable overall tool and is highly suited to
longitudinalresearch studies.
Left ventricular mass is calculated by assuming that the ventricleis a
hollow spheroid. In the general population, left ventricularmass increases
with age, male gender, and body size. For comparativepurposes, left
ventricular mass usually is normalized to someindex of body size. The ideal
method remains a matter of debate.However, normalization to body surface area
is the most commonlyused method. In the healthy, adult, Framingham
population, theupper limits of normal are 131 g/m2 for males and
100 g/m2 forfemales
(10). Calculated mass index
increases with extracellularfluid volume expansion. The calculated mass index
has been estimatedto decrease by approximately 26 g/m2 during a
dialysis session,as a result of fluid removal
(11). A consequence of this is
theneed to interpret echocardiographic mass index in light of extracellular
fluidvolume in dialysis patients. Many recently completed and ongoingstudies
have specified arbitrarily the need to study the patientswithin 1 kg of dry
weight, typically immediately after dialysisor the following day
(12).
A classification that is in common use categorizes patientson the basis of
relative wall thickness and the presence ofleft ventricular hypertrophy.
Relative wall thickness is calculatedas (IVS + PWT)/(IVS + PWT + EDD), where
IVS is the thicknessof the interventricular septum, PWT is posterior wall
thickness,and EDD is the end-diastolic diameter of the left ventricle.Normal
relative wall thickness is defined as being <0.45.Patients are divided
into four categories as shown in Figure
1A.This classification system has been shown to have long-term
prognosticpower in patients with essential hypertension
(13), a situationin which
concentric left ventricular hypertrophy is a much morecommon adaptation than
left ventricular dilation. Where leftventricular dilation is present, the
absence of hypertrophyis a catastrophic situation, as it implies a very
thin-walledventricle working under high tension. These patients are
classifiedas normal using this system, because relative wall thicknessis
<0.45 and the left ventricular mass index is normal. Indialysis patients,
a classification system that depends muchmore on left ventricular cavity
volume has been shown to havesuperior discriminant power for predicting
new-onset ischemicheart disease, cardiac failure, and death. In this system,
shownin Figure 1B, prognosis
worsens, as shown in Figure 2,
as follows:normal (cavity volume < 90 ml/m2, no LVH),
concentric LVH(cavity volume < 90 ml/m2, LVH), LV dilation
(cavity volume> 90 ml/m2), and systolic dysfunction (fractional
shortening< 25%) (14).
Figure 1. (A) Classification system of Koren et al.
(13), which has prognostic
impact in essential hypertension. Relative wall thickness (RWT) is calculated
as (IVS + PWT)/(IVS + PWT + EDD), where IVS is the thickness of the
interventricular septum, PWT is posterior wall thickness, and EDD is the
end-diastolic diameter of the left ventricle. (B) Classification system, which
has prognostic impact in dialysis patients
(14).
Figure 2. (A) Spectrum of left ventricular abnormalities at inception of dialysis
therapy (14,
16,
20). (B) Outcome, adjusted for
age, gender, and diabetes mellitus, according to type of left ventricular
abnormalities at inception of dialysis therapy
(15,
17,
21). N, normal; CLVH,
concentric left ventricular hypertrophy; LVD, left ventricular dilatation;
SDF, systolic dysfunction; IHD, ischemic heart disease; CHF, congestive heart
failure.
Clinical Epidemiology, Risk Factors, and Treatment
Left ventricular hypertrophy has a prevalence of approximately40% in
patients with chronic renal insufficiency, a figure thatrises to
approximately 75% by the onset of ESRD
(15,16).
Cardiovascularmortality rates in ESRD patients are high and have been
estimatedto be between 100 and 1000 times more than expected in youngadults.
Cardiac failure and LVH are key prognostic variables.It became clear in the
past decade that accelerated pump failuremay be a greater problem than
accelerated atherosclerosis, whichremains a disputed entity in these
populations. (17).
Progressive left ventricular dilation, which becomes less reversiblewith
time, seems to be the most characteristic morphologic patternof dialysis
patients (18,
19). As shown in
Figure 2, cardiacenlargement
and poor systolic function were associated withincreased risks of developing
ischemic heart disease and cardiacfailure in dialysis patients, in one
long-term cohort of dialysispatients starting dialysis therapy
(20). In addition, a fallin
left ventricular mass index or a rise in fractional shorteningin the first
year of dialysis therapy was associated with alower probability of new-onset
cardiac failure (21).
Many risk factors for left ventricular hypertrophy have beensuggested in
chronic renal failure patients, some of which areshown in
Table 1. Risk factors that
inherently are less easyto reverse are shown in the left-hand column, and
those thatare more susceptible to intervention are listed in the right-hand
column.Arteriovenous connections are amenable to intervention, an optionthat
is rarely exercised because they represent a life linefor hemodialysis
patients.
Anemia has been associated with left ventricular hypertrophyin most
echocardiographic studies of renal patients. Most ofthe initial studies were
performed in dialysis patients. Oneof the earliest studies to demonstrate
this was that of Londonet al.
(18). Echocardiography was
performed in 57 selected normotensivehemodialysis patients in comparison with
40 healthy controlsubjects who were matched for gender, age, and BP.
Enlargementof the ventricle was related to the degree of anemia and the
hemodynamiceffect of the arteriovenous fistula. The study of Levin et
al.(15) showed a robust
association between modest declines inhemoglobin levels, from a baseline
level of 12.8 g/dl, and progressiveleft ventricular growth in patients with
early renal insufficiency.Our own prospective inception cohort study of
dialysis patientsshowed clear, inverse relationships between baseline
hemoglobinlevels and cardiac size. In this study, monthly hemoglobin levels
werelower than conventional guidelines suggest, at an average of8.8 g/dl.
Anemia in the long term was associated with progressiveLV dilation, new-onset
cardiac failure, and death in these patients
(22).These findings are
consistent with several observational studiesthat have suggested a
dose-response association between theseverity of anemia, mortality, and
hospitalization in hemodialysispatients
(23,24,25,26).
Several treatment studies demonstrated that partial correctionof anemia
leads to a decrease in left ventricular dimensions,without leading to full
correction of left ventricular hypertrophyand dilation. In addition, partial
correction of anemia hasled consistently to improved quality of life,
exercise capacity,and cognitive function
(27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34).
The impactof complete correction of renal anemia is a reasonable questionin
light of these findings. Several studies have examined thisissue, and more
are in progress. The United States Normalizationof Hematocrit Trial studied
1233 hemodialysis patients withsymptomatic ischemic heart disease or cardiac
failure. The primaryoutcome was either myocardial infarction or death. By
generalpopulation norms, these patients had been anemic for severalyears.
Patients in the higher hematocrit group (42%) had a trendtoward greater
mortality than those in the lower hematocritgroup (30%) and a higher rate of
vascular access thrombosis
(35).This study showed that
late normalization of hemoglobin wasnot beneficial in chronically anemic
hemodialysis patients whohad already developed decompensated cardiac
disease.
The Canadian Normalization of Hemoglobin study also comparednormalization
of hemoglobin to partial correction of anemiain hemodialysis patients. A
total of 146 hemodialysis patientswith either asymptomatic concentric left
ventricular hypertrophyor left ventricular dilation were randomly assigned to
maintainhemoglobin levels of 10 g/dl or to be ramped upward, to 13.5g/dl. In
the left ventricular dilation group, the changes incavity volume were
equivalent in both hemoglobin groups. Inthe concentric LV hypertrophy group,
the changes in left ventricularmass index were similar; those assigned to
higher targets, however,were less likely to have developed left ventricular
dilation.Patients in the higher hemoglobin arm had less depression and
fatigueand improved relationships. There was no increase in the rateof
dialysis access loss (12).
It is likely that the left ventricular changes observed in uremicpatients
may be more inherently susceptible to prevention thanto treatment. The
evidence against target hemoglobin levelsbelow 11 to 12 g/dl is persuasive.
Normalization of hemoglobinis very likely to be associated with enhanced
quality of lifeand physical performance, but the safety and cost of this
approachand its impact on cardiovascular outcomes remain open questions,as
do the relative effects of early and late intervention. Ongoingrandomized
trials should shed light on this issue over the next5 yr.
Hypertension and Extracellular Fluid Volume Expansion
Hypertension, which is ubiquitous in renal impairment and maybe caused
partly by extracellular fluid expansion, activationof neurohormones,
endothelial dysfunction, and large arterystiffening, has shown inconsistent
associations with mortalityin dialysis patients. Most recent observational
studies havetended to show an inverse, or absent, association with mortality.
Thereis a considerable possibility that these effects are an exampleof
reverse causation in an inherently diseased population, inwhich the
relationship "risk factor leading to disease" hasevolved into
"disease state modifying former risk factor." Incontrast to the
inconsistent mortality associations, the observationalliterature consistently
associates left ventricular hypertrophywith rising BP, in both
cross-sectional and prospective designsand in both early renal disease and
ESRD. Thus, in the studyof early renal insufficiency patients of Levin et
al. (15),increasing
systolic BP levels, even within ranges close to conventionalnormotension,
were independently associated with progressiveleft ventricular hypertrophy
over a 1-yr period. Our own prospectivestudy of dialysis patients
(36) found a positive
associationbetween time-averaged BP levels and the likelihood of progression
ofleft ventricular hypertrophy, new-onset ischemic heart disease,and
new-onset cardiac failure. These associations were alsoapparent within
apparently normotensive ranges. A recent cross-sectionalstudy of hemodialysis
patients suggests that ambulatory BP levelscorrelate even more closely with
the extent of left ventricularhypertrophy
(37).
Studying the ideal approach to BP control in patients with renal
insufficiencylargely has been neglected. Interdialytic fluid gains were
associatedwith echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy in the classic
studyof London et al. in 1987
(18). Attaining true dry
weight seemsdesirable, as suggested by case series that suggest that
intensiveultrafiltration regimens can lead to regression of left ventricular
hypertrophyand systolic dysfunction in dialysis patients
(38). Observationalstudies
suggest that daily hemodialysis regimens may be superiorto intermittent
regimens in this regard (39,
40). In practice,most
patients with ESRD still receive antihypertensive medications.Very few
studies have compared the efficacy of different classesof agents in
regressing left ventricular hypertrophy. Some observationalstudies suggest
that ACE inhibitors may lead to regression ofleft ventricular hypertrophy by
mechanisms that extend beyondBP control
(41). London et al.
(42) randomly assigned a group
ofpersistently hypertensive hemodialysis patients to perindoprilor
nitrendipine in a 1-yr study. Although similar reductionsin BP levels were
achieved, the ACE inhibitor group had superiorregression of left ventricular
hypertrophy (43). It remains
tobe determined whether polymorphisms of the ACE gene influencethis process
in patients with renal insufficiency.
Animal and human studies suggest that only a minor componentof uremic
cardiomyopathy is attributable to known factors. Thissuggests, indirectly,
that the uremic internal environment hasa direct effect on cardiac size,
shape, and function. The experimentalmodels alluded to in the second section
of this article stronglysupport this hypothesis. The best clinical evidence
publishedto date is indirectthe observation that left ventricular
hypertrophy,left ventricular dilation, and especially systolic dysfunction
improveafter renal transplantation
(44)and in sharp
contrastto the progressive worsening seen in patients who remain ondialysis
therapy.
Abnormalities of calcium-phosphate homeostasis may be associatedwith left
ventricular abnormalities in patients with renal insufficiency.Relatively few
clinical studies have addressed these issueswith scientific rigour, and the
impact of these parameters onbone function is much more clearly delineated.
Hyperparathyroidismhas been associated with inadequate compensatory wall
thickeningin states of left ventricular dilation
(18), and left ventricular
parametershave been observed to improve after parathyroidectomy
(45).Myocardial calcium
deposition seems to be common in ESRD
(46).Its reversibility and
prognostic impact are unknown. It is noteworthy,however, that a high calcium
x phosphate product is associatedwith increased mortality in
hemodialysis patients (47).
Theseclinical findings, which are disparate, coupled with convincingelegant
and extensive experimental findings in animals, supportthe hypotheses that
aggressively lowering the duration and extentof exposure to uremic toxins,
hyperphosphatemia, and hyperparathyroidismpromotes cardiac health in renal
insufficiency.
The precise contributions of traditional and uremia-specificfactors to the
development and progression of left ventriculardysfunction in renal patients
remains to be elucidated. We haveknown since 1836 that ventricular
abnormalities are highly prevalentin ESRD
(48). Our understanding of the
importance and pathogenesisof these processes has accelerated in the past
decade. The growthof basic scientific, observational, and interventional
researchis explosive and is likely to lead to therapeutic advances inthe
next decade.
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