Objective: To evaluate the effects of arterial hypertension on the pulmonary circulation and the right heart.
Setting: Coronary Care Unit (UTIC Arsénio Cordeiro) Hemodynamics Laboratory and Medicine I Echocardiography Laboratory-Santa Maria Hospital.
Participants: 38 hypertensive patients separated in two groups: 24 with thickened septum and left ventricular posterior wall (10 with hemodynamic evaluation)--Group A--and 14 without thickening--Group B; a control group of 12 healthy volunteers--Group C.
Results: The hypertensive patients with hemodynamic evaluation had normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressure the average pulmonary resistance (135.29 +/- 63.47 dyn.cm.5), pulmonary systolic (31.30 +/- 10.01 mmHg) and mean pressures (18.23 +/- 8.21 mmHg) were raised, but the diastolic pulmonary pressure was normal. The right ventricle systolic pressure was raised (32.10 +/- 9.12 mmHg) and there was no modification of the right atrial or ventricular telediastolic pressures. On echocardiography there was a diastolic thickening of the right ventricular free wall in both group A (7.08 +/- 1.41 mm) and B (4.07 +/- 1.00 mm) as compared to group C (3.08 +/- 0.51 mm); there were similar findings regarding systolic thickness with statistical significance in group A (p less than 0.001). The right ventricular ejection fraction was normal in both groups. There was a positive correlation between the diastolic thickness of left ventricular posterior wall and right ventricular free wall in hypertensive patients and normotensive volunteers (r = 0.7754; p less than 0.001).
Conclusions: The findings suggest an anatomic an functional relationship between both ventricles regarding the cardiac repercussions of arterial hypertension.