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Cardiac Remodeling and Exercise Training in Hypertension
Libonati JR
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00001]
Masked hypertension including morning, nocturnal,
and stress (worksite) hypertension
Eguchi K, Kario K
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00002]
Nocturnal Hypertension and Chronic Kidney Disease
Fukuda M, Mizuno M, Kimura G
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00003]
Lifestyle Modification for Masked Hypertension
Kawano Y
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00004]
Clinical Significance of the Blood Pressure Changes
from Day to Night
Verdecchia P, Angeli F, Gentile G, Mazzotta G,
Gattobigio R, Reboldi G
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00005]
Elevated heart rate, a risk factor and risk marker
of cardiovascular disease
Inoue T, Ohya Y
[Abstract] [BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00006]
Abstracts

Cardiac Remodeling and Exercise Training in Hypertension
Libonati JR
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00001]
Myocardial hypertrophy secondary to hypertension is associated
with a parallel addition of sarcomeres that characteristically
increases cardiomyocyte cell size and width. From a cellular
perspective, concentric hypertrophy differs from eccentric
hypertrophy in that with eccentric hypertrophy, cardiomyocytes
adapt by increasing sarcomeres in series thereby inducing
an increase in cell length. Recently, specific signaling cascades
have been associated with concentric and eccentric hypertrophic
phenotypes, i.e. calcineurin and IGF, respectively. Even though
compensatory concentric hypertrophy is often regarded as an
adaptation to normalize wall stress in hypertension, it is
frequently manifest with abnormal cardiac function. While
recent reports have questioned the necessity of wall stress
normalization, the mechanisms associated with the dichotomous
adaptive and maladaptive aspects of myocardial hypertrophy
are important to understand. Few data exist with respect to
how exercise training superimposed on hypertension impacts
LV remodeling. Several recent studies in animals have shown
that exercise superimposed on hypertension can induce cardiomyocyte
proliferation and reduce apoptosis while potentiating cardiomyocyte
hypertrophy. Interestingly, neither Akt nor calcineurin abundance
seems to underlie exercise-induced hypertrophy in hypertension.
In fact, calcineurin abundance is blunted in exercise trained
hypertensive hearts. In humans, exercise training in hypertensive
patients has been shown to either regress or not change the
extent of cardiac hypertrophy. Overall there are only a few
studies examining cardiac morphometry and function in subjects
with hypertension. The purpose of this review will be to cover
the major human and animal findings on this topic, address
relevant hypertrophic signaling pathways with exercise superimposed
on hypertesnion, and broaden the discussion of exercise and
hypertension towards how exercise impacts the cardiomyocyte
cell cycle.
[Back to top]
Masked hypertension including morning, nocturnal,
and stress (worksite) hypertension
Eguchi K, Kario K
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00002]
In patients with diabetes, control of blood pressure (BP)
is as important as glycemic control in preventing cardiovascular
disease. In hypertension and diabetes guidelines, the evaluation
of BP is limited to clinic BP; out-of-office BP monitoring
is not recommended for diabetic patients. Recently, an accumulation
of evidence has shown that out-of-office BP monitoring is
useful for risk stratification in diabetes. Especially, masked
hypertension, defined as normal clinic BP but high BP in the
ambulatory condition, is a big clinical problem. Masked hypertension
in diabetes is associated with advanced target organ damage,
such as silent brain damage, cardiac hypertrophy, renal damage,
and atherosclerosis. Cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy (CAN)
has been reported to be associated with cardiovascular complications,
but CAN in the early stage is difficult to detect. CAN could
be a cause of increased fluctuation of BP and abnormal circadian
rhythm of BP. For example, masked nocturnal hypertension,
defined as normal BP in the daytime but high BP at night,
is difficult to diagnose, and is also associated with advanced
target organ damage. In conclusion, masked hypertension exists
also in substantial proportion of diabetic patients and is
associated with advanced target organ damage. The cardiovascular
prognosis of masked hypertension in diabetes will be clarified
in the near future. The primary mechanism underlying masked
hypertension or masked nocturnal hypertension in diabetes
would be the presence of CAN, which is also an independent
predictor for cardiovascular prognosis. Further study is needed
to test the cardiovascular prognosis of masked hypertension
in diabetes in order to clarify whether or not out-of-office
BP measurement is really necessary in the management of BP.
[Back to top]
Nocturnal Hypertension and Chronic Kidney Disease
Fukuda M, Mizuno M, Kimura G
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00003]
It is well appreciated that the kidneys play an important
role in long-term regulation of blood pressure (BP). Our recent
studies have suggested that kidneys may participate with short-term
regulation of BP such as circadian BP rhythm. Sodium sensitivity
of BP is increased in both chronic kidney disease (CKD) where
glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is reduced and disorders
with enhanced tubular sodium reabsorption where GFR is augmented.
In such patients with high-sodium sensitivity, the nocturnal
BP dip is diminished, resulting in non-dipper pattern of circadian
BP rhythm irrespectively of the mechanisms causing sodium
sensitivity. We have found in patients with CKD that the night/day
ratios of BP, natriuresis and proteinuria were all increased
as GFR was reduced. In addition, night/day ratio of natriuresis
was closely correlated with night/day ratio of BP. These findings
force us to postulate that reduced renal capacity to excrete
sodium into urine causes nocturnal elevation of BP, that is
non-dipper, in order to compensate for diminished daytime
natriuresis by enhancing pressure-natriuresis during night.
Both high sodium-sensitivity and non-dippers are risks for
cardiovascular disease. Investigation on the renal mechanisms
of non-dipper and nocturnal hypertension may be the shortest
way to solve cardio-renal connection.
[Back to top]
Lifestyle Modification for Masked Hypertension
Kawano Y
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00004]
Masked hypertension is commonly seen in treated and untreated
individuals and has been shown to be associated with target
organ damage and poor cardiovascular prognosis. Although the
etiology of masked hypertension appears to be complex, several
lifestyle-related factors not only play important roles in
the pathophysiology of essential hypertension but are also
related to masked hypertension. Masked hypertension can be
classified according to the 24-hour blood pressure profile.
Morning hypertension may be caused by evening alcohol consumption,
mental and physical stress, and the morning use of short-acting
antihypertensive drugs. Daytime hypertension is related to
habitual smoking and mental and physical stress. Nighttime
hypertension is seen in various conditions including a high
salt intake, renal dysfunction, obesity, sleep apnea, and
autonomic failure. Therefore, lifestyle modifications are
effective in the treatment of masked hypertension. Alcohol
restriction is expected to lower morning blood pressure, smoking
cessation and stress management preferably lower daytime blood
pressure, and sodium restriction and weight reduction may
be effective to control nighttime blood pressure. It is important
to identify the subtype and related factor(s) for each individual
with masked hypertension, and to treat each patient appropriately
according to the cause of masked hypertension.
[Back to top]
Clinical Significance of the Blood Pressure Changes
from Day to Night
Verdecchia P, Angeli F, Gentile G, Mazzotta G,
Gattobigio R, Reboldi G
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00005]
Blood pressure (BP) decreases by 10% to 20% from day to night.
However, in 25% to 35% of hypertensive subjects there is some
reduction in the day-night BP decline. In 3% to 5% of uncomplicated
hypertensive subjects there is actually an increase, not a
decrease, in BP from day to night. Many studies from independent
centers showed that not only left ventricular hypertrophy,
but also ventricular arrhythmias, silent cerebrovascular disease,
microalbuminuria and progression of renal damage are more
advanced in subjects with blunted or abolished fall in BP
from day to night than in those with normal day-night BP difference.
There is also evidence from longitudinal studies that a blunted,
abolished or even reversed BP drop from day to night is associated
with an increase in the risk of serious cardiovascular complications.
However, if the quantity or quality of sleep is poor during
overnight BP monitoring, night-time BP rises and its prognostic
significance is no longer reliable. Studies which compared
the prognostic value of daytime BP with that of night-time
BP inevitably found the superiority of the latter for predicting
prognosis. The exciting potential therapeutic implication
that the control of night-time BP could be more rewarding,
in terms of prevention of cardiovascular disease, than that
of daytime BP has yet to be addressed in appropriately designed
intervention trials. Of note, 24-hour ABP monitoring is the
only practical way to assess the day-night rhythm of BP.
[Back to top]
Elevated heart rate, a risk factor and risk marker
of cardiovascular disease
Inoue T, Ohya Y
[BSP/CHR/E-Pub/00006]
Evidences from epidemiologic studies demonstrate
that heart rate is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular
disease events within a wide range of subjects. An increase
in the resting heart rate predisposes to cardiometabolic abnormalities
and is closely associated with them. Heart rate is also closely
associated with inflammation, endothelial function, plaque
formation and progression, eventually plaque rupture, and
cardiovascular death indicating that heart rate is associated
with every process of atherosclerosis. Postprandial dysmetabolism
induced by excessive intake of high-calorie diet generates
oxidative stress leading to inflammation, sympathoexitation,
and heart rate elevation. While the heart rate accelerates
atherosclerosis via sympathetic nervous system, heart rate
per se promotes atherosclerosis independent of sympathoexitation.
Elevated heart rate accelerates the frequency of vascular
wall stress, and low or oscillatory shear stress found downstream
of non-target lesion, resulting in structural changes in the
vascular wall and endothelial dysfunction. Evidence of heart
rate lowering strategy for patients with coronary artery disease
is considered mainly to be attributed to lowering the frequency
of flow oscillation found downstream of non-target lesion.
This local effect of heart rate-lowering strategy is a unique
one that no other drugs have. Heart rate provides us a lot
of information about the patients' cardiovascular risk status.
Moreover, heart rate per se could be an independent risk factor
and might be an important therapeutic target.
[Back to top]
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