These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Asymmetric septal hypertrophy and left atrial dilatation in patients with end-stage renal disease on long-term hemodialysis.
    Author: Hüting J, Kramer W, Charra B, Laurent G, Wizemann V, Schütterle G.
    Journal: Clin Nephrol; 1989 Dec; 32(6):276-83. PubMed ID: 2532998.
    Abstract:
    Some literature reports associate a reduced weekly duration of treatment (3 x 4 h/week) for patients on maintenance hemodialysis with an increased cardiovascular mortality. To determine whether the improved survival of patients on long weekly hemodialysis (LHD: 3 x 8 h/week) can be associated with different cardiac changes, the cardiac characteristics of a group of 50 patients on LHD were analyzed in a non-invasive assessment. The main findings were an increased left ventricular (LV) muscle mass (176 + 54 g/m2), mass/volume ratio (1.69 + 0.37 g/ml) and left atrial diameter (39.7 + 5.7 mm). The increase in LV muscle mass was due mainly to a high prevalence of asymmetric septal thickening. The ratio septum/LV posterior wall was directly correlated with the left atrial diameter (r = 0.52), LV end-diastolic diameters were inversely correlated with hemoglobin concentration (r = 0.62). LV dilatation and/or LV systolic dysfunction were not characteristic findings: Only 6% of patients had a moderately enlarged (less than 65 mm) LV diameter, LV ejection fraction was decreased in 12%. There was no significant correlation between the degree of LV hypertrophy or left atrial dilatation and patient age, total dialysis duration, interdialytic weight gain, hemoglobin concentration, parameters of blood purification, blood pressure before and after dialysis, history of hypertension. We conclude that cardiac characteristics in patients on LHD are comparable to those described for large patient groups on short hemodialysis. Our findings do not explain improved survival on LHD.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]