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Comparative Study
. 1995 Jan-Feb;8(1):37-47.
doi: 10.1016/s0894-7317(05)80356-6.

Relationship between left ventricular wall thickness and left atrial size: comparison with other measures of diastolic function

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Comparative Study

Relationship between left ventricular wall thickness and left atrial size: comparison with other measures of diastolic function

C L Simek et al. J Am Soc Echocardiogr. 1995 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

We postulated that in patients with essential hypertension and normal left ventricular (LV) systolic function, left atrial (LA) size correlates with LV wall thickness by better reflecting the chronicity and duration of LA hypertension than the commonly used hemodynamic and Doppler measures of LV diastolic function. Accordingly, hemodynamic, Doppler, and two-dimensional echocardiographic measurements were performed in 30 subjects with no cardiovascular abnormalities other than essential hypertension (mean systolic blood pressure of 150 +/- 29 mm Hg). The mean LV wall thickness was 0.57 +/- 0.14 cm/m2 and the mean LV ejection fraction was 0.62 +/- 0.12. Hemodynamic and Doppler measures including pulmonary capillary wedge and LV end-diastolic pressures, isovolumic LV pressure relaxation, LV chamber elastic stiffness, and E/A ratio (E and A waves on the pulsed Doppler signal of the mitral valve) correlated poorly (r = 0.01 to -0.52) with LV wall thickness. Both E/A ratio and isovolumic LV pressure relaxation correlated better (p = 0.05) with patient age than with LV wall thickness. In contrast, LA area (in the apical four-chamber view) had a good correlation (r = 0.77 for LA area in atrial diastole and r = 0.86 for LA area in atrial systole) with LV wall thickness. Multiple regression analysis revealed LA area in atrial systole to be the best correlate of LV wall thickness. We conclude that because the left atrium is a thin-walled structure, its size may increase with an increase in LA pressure. In the absence of mitral valve disease and atrial fibrillation, LA size may reflect the chronicity and duration and thus the history of LA hypertension. LA size in the apical four-chamber view may, therefore, provide a simple noninvasive assessment of the degree of LV diastolic dysfunction.

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