scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Serum Insulin Levels, 24-Hour Blood Pressure Profile, and Left Ventricular Mass in Nonobese Hypertensive Patients

TLDR
It is indicated that in nonobese hypertensive patients, insulin resistance does not have any influence on the 24-hour blood pressure profile or on left ventricular mass index.
Abstract
In essential hypertensive patients, considered to be insulin-resistant, a blunted decline in nocturnal blood pressure is associated with increased adrenergic tone and left ventricular mass. Since insulin stimulates the sympathetic system, we tested whether insulin resistance and insulinemia influence left ventricular mass and the 24-hour blood pressure profile. We studied 29 nonobese hypertensive patients with office diastolic pressure between 95 and 110 mm Hg and normal oral glucose tolerance test after a 4-month washout period. They were then assigned to M-mode echocardiographic evaluation and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. The glucose and insulin responses to a 75-g oral glucose load were compared with those obtained in 16 weight-matched normotensive control subjects. During the oral glucose tolerance test the hypertensive patients compared with control subjects presented higher levels of glucose at 60 minutes (138.7 +/- 30.3 versus 108.7 +/- 35.7 mg/dL; P < .05) and 90 minutes (114.0 +/- 23.8 versus 94.8 +/- 31.1 mg/dL; P < .05) and insulin at 60 minutes (287.1 +/- 259.4 versus 142.1 +/- 83.9 pmol/L; P < .05). However, peak insulin levels after glucose load did not correlate with ambulatory blood pressure values or left ventricular mass index. Left ventricular mass index showed significant correlation with mean sleeping systolic pressure (rs = 56, P < .05) and diurnal systolic pressure (rs = .37, P < .05) but not with mean diurnal or sleeping diastolic pressures. In conclusion, our results indicate that in nonobese hypertensive patients, insulin resistance does not have any influence on the 24-hour blood pressure profile or on left ventricular mass index.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of excess fat on cardiac morphology and function: study in uncomplicated obesity.

TL;DR: The data showed that obesity, in the absence of glucose intolerance, hypertension, and dyslipidemia, seems to be associated only with an impairment of diastolic function and hyperkinetic systole, and not with left ventricular hypertrophy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Associations of Insulin Levels With Left Ventricular Structure and Function in American Indians The Strong Heart Study

TL;DR: Positive relations between insulin and heart size in nondiabetic adults are largely due to associations with body size; after adjustments for covariates, fasting insulin levels are related to greater LV size and cardiac output in men and more concentric LV geometry in women.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic Syndrome and Echocardiographic Left Ventricular Mass in Blacks The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study

TL;DR: In this cross-sectional population-based study of black women and men, the degree of metabolic syndrome clustering was strongly related to LV mass and its wall thickness components, consistent with a possible influence of underlying factors such as insulin resistance or other vascular processes on myocardial thickening and not on chamber size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship of insulin sensitivity and left ventricular mass in uncomplicated obesity.

TL;DR: The findings showed that insulin resistance, in uncomplicated obesity, is associated with an increased LVM and precocious changes of left ventricular geometry, whereas preserved insulin sensitivity is not associated withIncreased LVM.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia: No independent relation to left ventricular mass in humans.

TL;DR: When adequate account is taken of body mass and blood pressure, insulin, as concentration, secretion, or action, is not an independent determinant of LVM in nondiabetic subjects.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Echocardiographic assessment of left ventricular hypertrophy: Comparison to necropsy findings

TL;DR: To determine the accuracy of echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) dimension and mass measurements for detection and quantification of LV hypertrophy, results of blindly read antemortem e chocardiograms were compared with LV mass measurements made at necropsy in 55 patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insulin Resistance: A Multifaceted Syndrome Responsible for NIDDM, Obesity, Hypertension, Dyslipidemia, and Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

TL;DR: In summary, insulin resistance appears to be a syndrome that is associated with a clustering of metabolic disorders, including non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, lipid abnormalities, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insulin resistance in essential hypertension

TL;DR: Results provide preliminary evidence that essential hypertension is an insulin-resistant state and insulin resistance involves glucose but not lipid or potassium metabolism, is located in peripheral tissues but not the liver, is limited to nonoxidative pathways of intracellular glucose disposal, and is directly correlated with the severity of hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circadian blood pressure changes and left ventricular hypertrophy in essential hypertension.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of circadian blood pressure changes on the echocardiographic parameters of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy were investigated in 235 consecutive subjects (137 unselected untreated patients with essential hypertension and 98 healthy normotensive subjects) who underwent 24-hour noninvasive ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and cross-sectional and M-mode echology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Insulin and Glucose Infusions on Sympathetic Nervous System Activity in Normal Man

TL;DR: Insulin infusion increases sympathetic nervous system activity in the absence of changes in blood glucose in nonobese young men using glucose clamp techniques.
Related Papers (5)