Experimental findings suggest that catecholamines increase protein synthesis and play a role in cardiac hypertrophy. We hypothesize that elevated circulating plasma catecholamines in pheochromocytoma influence cardiac structural and functional remodeling. We compared 15 patients with surgically proven pheochromocytoma and 15 with untreated essential hypertension; we matched the patients for age, sex, body surface area, and blood pressure (BP) levels. Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) was identified by M-mode echocardiography in six patients with pheochromocytoma and in four with essential hypertension. Among both groups there were no differences in cardiac structure, no correlation between left ventricular mass and BP, no significant differences in mitral E-F slope, no correlation between either plasma norepinephrine or plasma epinephrine levels, and no differences in the left ventricular structural indices measured. In the pheochromocytoma group, left ventricular end systolic stress and end systolic diameter were significantly lower and left ventricular percent fractional shortening was higher. Plasma norepinephrine levels were higher in the pheochromocytoma group, but did not differ among patients of that group with and without LVH. We conclude that in both pheochromocytoma and essential hypertension, only a subset of patients develop evidence of LVH, and that in pheochromocytoma, the elevation of circulating plasma catecholamines is not necessarily associated with LVH. These results indicate that factors other than catecholamines and BP determine the development of LVH in pheochromocytoma.
Paravalvular leakage is a major complication of prosthetic valve dysfunction. Sixty-one subjects with valvular heart disease who had received prosthetic mitral valve replacement 5 months to 5 years before (43 received a porcine prosthesis and 18 received Bjork-Shiley valve prostheses) were evaluated for this complication. Careful auscultation was performed by two experienced cardiologists followed by transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography. Physiologic leaks were detected in all Bjork-Shiley valves, but in only 30% of porcine valves using transesophageal echocardiography. These regurgitant jets were flame-like, with mean low velocities of 50 +/- 12.3 cm/sec and 48 +/- 18.2 cm/sec in the two types of valves. Neither transthoracic echocardiography nor auscultation could detect physiological regurgitant jets. Ten cases with paravalvular leak were detected by transesophageal echocardiography and subsequently demonstrated by left ventriculography (7 porcine, 3 Bjork-Shiley valves). Pathologic regurgitant jets were seen as high-velocity, systolic-retrograde turbulent flow across the prosthesis. However, only 6 cases of prosthetic valve dysfunction were detected by transthoracic echocardiography, 4 cases of mild paravalvular leakage went undetected. Thirteen of the 61 subjects had an apical systolic murmur and suspected prosthetic valve leakage; in 10 of the 13 cases the findings corresponded to those obtained by transesophageal echocardiography. In 3 cases of double valve replacement with Bjork-Shiley valves the magnitude of the leakage was overestimated by auscultation.
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