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Title: [An echocardiographic study of cardiac function in chronic hemodialysis patients]. Author: Okada Y. Journal: Nihon Jinzo Gakkai Shi; 1989 Jul; 31(7):765-74. PubMed ID: 2585830. Abstract: Echocardiography was studied in 83 uremic patients on maintenance hemodialysis and 18 normal subjects. Cardiac systolic and diastolic functions were evaluated according to Yamaguchi's method. Systolic functions such as ejection fraction and fractional shortening decreased in the patients receiving hemodialysis for less than 3 months. However, they remained within normal range in the patients under hemodialysis for more than 3 months. There were no significant correlations between systolic functions and mean blood pressure or various serum biochemical parameters such as urea nitrogen, creatinine, Na, K, Ca, P, hematocrit and PTH-C. Diastolic functions such as rapid filling rate/endosystolic volume, mean velocity of circumferential fiber lengthening during rapid filling, diastolic descent rate and diastolic posterior wall velocity also decreased in the patients receiving hemodialysis for less than 3 months. However, they increased slightly in the patients under hemodialysis for more than 3 months, although they were still lower than those in normal subjects. They were not related to mean blood pressure or various serum biochemical parameters. Hemodialysis patients had left ventricular hypertrophy regardless of duration of hemodialysis. Diastolic dysfunction in hemodialysis patients seemed to be due to systolic dysfunction, left ventricular hypertrophy and diminished ventricular compliance with myocardial degeneration. It was also suggested that increasing slow filling and atrial contraction in diastole might be related to diastolic dysfunction. These cardiac changes may be compensatory reactions of cardiac muscle to various uremic environments such as anemia, hypertension, fluid retention, electrolytes disturbance or uremic toxins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]