Background: It has been proposed that concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is related to a worse degree of target organ damage in hypertensives with this feature than in those without. Moreover, the presence of cerebral white matter lesions (WMLs) is considered to be an early marker of brain damage in essential hypertension. The aim of this study was to assess the association between the presence of silent WMLs and left ventricular mass and geometry in middle-aged individuals with hypertension that had never been treated.
Methods: A total of 62 patients (39 men, 23 women, aged 50 to 60 years, mean age 54.4 +/- 3.2 years) with never-treated essential hypertension and without clinical evidence of target organ damage were studied. All patients underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging and were classified into two groups according to the presence or absence of WMLs. Echocardiography measuring posterior wall thickness (PWT), interventricular septum thickness (IVST) and left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (LVEDD) was also performed. Left ventricular mass index (LVMI) was calculated using the Penn convention criteria, and relative wall thickness ratio (RWT) was estimated by the standard formula: 2 x PWT/LVEDD.
Results: Hypertensive patients with WMLs exhibited significantly higher PWT, IVST, LVMI, and RWT when compared with hypertensive patients without WMLs. In addition, 23 of 26 hypertensive patients with WMLs showed echocardiographic criteria for LVH that was significantly higher than that observed in hypertensive patients without WMLs (21 of 36; P = .01). Concentric hypertrophy (LVH and RWT > or = 0.45) was present in 14 hypertensive patients with WMLs and in only four patients without WMLs (P = .002).
Conclusion: There is a close association between cerebral WMLs and concentric LVH in asymptomatic middle-aged hypertensive patients, independent of blood pressure values.