Diastolic dysfunction in asymptomatic hemodialysis patients in the light of the current echocardiographic guidelines.
Jan MalikJaroslav KudlickaAnna ValerianovaLucie KovarovaTereza KmentovaJana LachmanovaPublished in: The international journal of cardiovascular imaging (2019)
The prevalence of the left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is very high in end-stage renal disease treated by hemodialysis. Diastolic dysfunction is a frequent consequence and leads to the development of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. New American/European echocardiographic guidelines for the assessment of diastolic function simplified the evaluation and were published recently. The aim of this study was to reveal if the new guidelines stratify asymptomatic hemodialysis patients by the levels of brain-natriuretic peptide (BNP). A cohort of 46 patients hemodialyzed in one center with the lack of overt heart failure, systolic dysfunction, arrhythmia or significant valvular disease were examined by echocardiography before and after a single hemodialysis and blood samples for BNP analysis were drawn at both occasions. The LVH was present in 53% of patients, concentric remodeling in another 17%. Higher indexed left ventricular mass was related to higher BNP levels (r = 0.58, p = 0.0001). Before hemodialysis, diastolic dysfunction was present in 61%: grade 1 in 25%, grade 2 in 21% and grade 3 in 8%. The higher grade of diastolic dysfunction was associated with the incremental increase of BNP. The post-dialysis echocardiography did not allow the assessment of diastolic function in as many as 37% of patients. Our study has shown that the application of the current guidelines for the assessment of diastolic function based on simple four criteria differentiate hemodialysis symptomless patients with preserved systolic function according to BNP levels. BNP levels also rose together with the left ventricular mass. The ratio E/e' medial seemed to be a better predictor of increased BNP than E/e' lateral or E/e' averaged.
Keyphrases
- left ventricular
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- heart failure
- ejection fraction
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- left atrial
- aortic stenosis
- acute myocardial infarction
- blood pressure
- mitral valve
- newly diagnosed
- risk factors
- gene expression
- clinical practice
- systematic review
- prognostic factors
- minimally invasive
- genome wide
- resting state
- acute coronary syndrome
- acute heart failure
- cerebral ischemia