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Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiogenic reflexes and left ventricular hypertrophy.

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TLDR
Cardiopulmonary reflex control of circulation is markedly impaired in the presence of cardiac hypertrophy, with (severe hypertensive subjects) or without (athletes) high blood pressure values and therapeutic regression of cardiachypertrophy seems to restore, although not fully normalize, this reflex function.
Abstract
Studies performed in both animal and human species have shown that receptors anatomically located in the cardiac walls and in the pulmonary vascular bed exert a powerful influence on sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone and renin release from the kidney. This paper will review recent data collected by our group on the effects on this homeostatic reflex function of two different models of cardiac hypertrophy, i.e. that associated with arterial hypertension and that induced by prolonged physical training. It will also examine whether and to what extent cardiopulmonary reflex control of circulation can be restored after an effective antihypertensive pharmacological treatment has induced a regression of the structural alterations of the heart. The results of these studies suggest that cardiopulmonary reflex control of circulation is markedly impaired in the presence of cardiac hypertrophy, with (severe hypertensive subjects) or without (athletes) high blood pressure values. In hypertensives, furthermore, therapeutic regression of cardiac hypertrophy seems to restore, although not fully normalize, this reflex function. Taken together these findings suggest that cardiac hypertrophy, per se, is a condition characterized by the loss of the reflex functions exerted by cardiac receptors, with adverse consequences on cardiovascular homeostasis.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ventricular repolarization is prolonged in nondipper hypertensive patients: role of left ventricular hypertrophy and autonomic dysfunction

TL;DR: Nondippers show a prolonged ventricular repolarization throughout the 24-h period, absent either in dippers or normotensives, which may lead to prolongation of QTc, potentially facilitating ventricular arrhythmias in nondipper hypertensive patients.
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Is there increased sympathetic activity in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

TL;DR: In patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, heart rate variability was significantly related to left ventricular end-systolic dimension and left atrial dimension but not to maximalleft ventricular wall thickness.
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Parasympathetic dysfunction in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy assessed by heart rate variability: comparison between short-term and 24-h measurements.

TL;DR: Assessment of cardiac autonomic function in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy by assessing heart rate variability (HRV), comparing a short‐term laboratory method with an ambulatory (24‐h) method, in patients with and without beta‐blockade shows that short‐ and long‐term methods yield similar results, suggesting that a short-term registration might be sufficient to assess HRV in Patients with HCM.
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Baroreflex activation therapy systems: current status and future prospects.

TL;DR: Due to the fact that neurohumoral activation and hyperadrenergic tone are present in several pathophysiological conditions it is possible to assume a wider use of these systems in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypertension and the heart.

TL;DR: The clinical relevance of this reflex dysfunction is based on the evidence that these alterations may favor the occurrence of an increased sympathetic vasoconstrictor drive, thereby promoting the development of the hypertensive state.
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