Background: To valorate the effect of four antihypertensive drugs on the regression of cardiac mass and diastolic function, by echocardiography-Doppler, in not treated hypertensive subjects.
Methods: 60 mild-moderate hypertensive subjects were studied randomized in four groups of 15 patients each one: enalapril (10-40 mg/d), atenolol (25-100 mg/d), verapamil-retard (120-240 mg/d), alphametildopa (250 mg/8h to 3 g/d). The active drug therapy phase was 6 months, performing echo-Doppler, evaluating posterior-wall and septal-wall thicknesses, ventricular mass index, ratio of early to atrial peak diastolic filling velocity (E/A), the first-third filling fraction and atrial filling fraction.
Results: The cardiac mass index decreased with the four drugs: with enalapril from 178 +/- 28 to 155 +/- 29 g/m2 (p < 0.05), with atenolol from 170 +/- 23 to 154 +/- 19 g/m2 (p < 0.05), with verapamil from 180 +/- 27 to 159 +/- 22 g/m2 (p < 0.05) and with alphametildopa from 176 +/- 30 to 142 +/- 22 g/m2 (p < 0.01). The E/A ratio and first-third filling fraction only improved in the atenolol subgroup, from 0.79 +/- 0.13 to 0.97 +/- 0.16 (p < 0.01) and from 36 +/- 5 to 44 +/- 9% (p < 0.01), decreasing atrial filling fraction from 37 +/- 6 to 30 +/- 8% (p < 0.01), without modifying with enalapril (0.74 +/- 0.14 to 0.76 +/- 0.20, 35 +/- 5% to 36 +/- 7%, 38 +/- 5 to 39 +/- 7%, p = NS), verapamil (0.69 +/- 0.12 to 0.74 +/- 0.17, 35 +/- 6% to 36 +/- 8% to 40 +/- 12%, p = NS) neither alphametildopa (0.72 +/- 0.14 to 0.71 +/- 0.21, 34 +/- 5% to 35 +/- 7%, 40 +/- 6% to 41 +/- 9%, p = NS). The heart rate decreased more with atenolol than with the other drugs (61 +/- 15 vs 71 +/- 12, p < 0.01).
Conclusions: In hypertensive patients the decreasing of cardiac mass is not accompanied of improvement of the diastolic function except in patients treated with atenolol, probably due to bradycardia.