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Identifying Early Changes in Myocardial Microstructure in Hypertensive Heart Disease

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Listed:
  • Pranoti Hiremath
  • Michael Bauer
  • Aaron D Aguirre
  • Hui-Wen Cheng
  • Kazumasa Unno
  • Ravi B Patel
  • Bethany W Harvey
  • Wei-Ting Chang
  • John D Groarke
  • Ronglih Liao
  • Susan Cheng

Abstract

The transition from healthy myocardium to hypertensive heart disease is characterized by a series of poorly understood changes in myocardial tissue microstructure. Incremental alterations in the orientation and integrity of myocardial fibers can be assessed using advanced ultrasonic image analysis. We used a modified algorithm to investigate left ventricular myocardial microstructure based on analysis of the reflection intensity at the myocardial-pericardial interface on B-mode echocardiographic images. We evaluated the extent to which the novel algorithm can differentiate between normal myocardium and hypertensive heart disease in humans as well as in a mouse model of afterload resistance. The algorithm significantly differentiated between individuals with uncomplicated essential hypertension (N = 30) and healthy controls (N = 28), even after adjusting for age and sex (P = 0.025). There was a trend in higher relative wall thickness in hypertensive individuals compared to controls (P = 0.08), but no difference between groups in left ventricular mass (P = 0.98) or total wall thickness (P = 0.37). In mice, algorithm measurements (P = 0.026) compared with left ventricular mass (P = 0.053) more clearly differentiated between animal groups that underwent fixed aortic banding, temporary aortic banding, or sham procedure, on echocardiography at 7 weeks after surgery. Based on sonographic signal intensity analysis, a novel imaging algorithm provides an accessible, non-invasive measure that appears to differentiate normal left ventricular microstructure from myocardium exposed to chronic afterload stress. The algorithm may represent a particularly sensitive measure of the myocardial changes that occur early in the course of disease progression.

Suggested Citation

  • Pranoti Hiremath & Michael Bauer & Aaron D Aguirre & Hui-Wen Cheng & Kazumasa Unno & Ravi B Patel & Bethany W Harvey & Wei-Ting Chang & John D Groarke & Ronglih Liao & Susan Cheng, 2014. "Identifying Early Changes in Myocardial Microstructure in Hypertensive Heart Disease," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(5), pages 1-9, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0097424
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097424
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