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Left ventricular hypertrophy and its detection in an African community

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), the detection of which is recommended for
routine risk prediction by all guidelines, is more prevalent in groups of African ancestry.
This is in-part attributed to higher prevalence rates of obesity. The ability to detect LVH
using electrocardiographic (ECG) criteria may be modified in groups of African ancestry.
The impact of co-existent obesity on the ability to detect ECG-LVH in this ethnic group
has not been determined. Moreover, whether estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)
or serum C-reactive protein (CRP concentrations are independently associated with LV
mass index (LVMI) and can therefore be used to complement ECG criteria for LVH
detection is uncertain.

ECG voltage criteria for the detection of echocardiographic LVH were evaluated in
661 participants from a community sample of African ancestry (43% obese). Body mass
index (BMI) was inversely associated with Sokolow-Lyon (SL) voltages (partial r=-0.27,
p<0.0001) and no BMI-Cornell voltage relations were noted (p=0.21). BMI was associated
with voltage criteria that incorporate only limb lead recordings (r=0.17-0.23), but these
relationships were weaker than BMI-LVMI relations (r=0.36, p<0.01-p<0.0001 for
comparisons of r values). All ECG criteria were as strongly related to blood pressure (BP)
as LVMI. Sokolow-Lyon voltage-LVMI relations were noted only after adjustments for BMI
(p<0.02) and SL voltages showed no performance for LVH detection. Cornell voltages
showed significant performance in the non-obese (area under the receiver operating
curve [AUC]=0.67±0.04, p<0.0005), but not the obese (AUC=0.56±0.04, p=0.08). ECG
criteria which employ limb-lead recordings only (e.g. RaVL) showed better performance in
non-obese than obese (AUC=0.75±0.04 and 0.59±0.04 respectively, p<0.005 for
comparison) and markedly reduced specificity for LVH detection in obese (76%) than
non-obese (92%, p<0.0001) despite similar sensitivities (32 vs 29%). Thus, in groups of
African ancestry, obesity contributes toward a poor validity and performance of all voltage
criteria for the detection of LVH. None of the current criteria are recommended for use in
obesity in groups of African descent. Alternative approaches are required for LVH
detection in these groups.In 621 randomly selected participants from the community sample [332 were normotensive (NT)], eGFR was associated with LVMI and LVM in excess of that predicted from stroke work (inappropriate LVM, LVMinappr) in all participants (LVMI: partial r=-0.18, p<0.0001; LVMinappr: partial r=-0.17, p<0.0001) and NT (LVMI: partial r=-0.23,p<0.0001; LVMinappr: partial r=-0.22, p<0.0001) separate from hypertensives. When replacing clinic BP with either aortic systolic BP (applanation tonometry and SphygmoCor software), 24-hour BP, aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) (applanation tonometry and SphygmoCor software), stroke work (for LVMI), LV end diastolic diameter (LVEDD), or circumferential wall stress in the regression models, eGFR retained strong associations with LVMI (p=0.01 to <0.0001) and LVMinappr (p<0.005 to <0.0001). Thus, strong relationships between eGFR and LVM occur at a community level irrespective of the presence of hypertension and independent of 24-hour and aortic BP, PWV, LVEDD,stroke work and wall stress. The independent relationships between eGFR and LVMI, support the notion that eGFR may be evaluated for LVH detection.

In 361 randomly selected participants from a community with a high prevalence of
CRP concentrations considered to be high-risk (54.0%), but without cardiovascular or
renal disease, serum CRP concentrations were correlated with both LVMI and LVMinappr
(p<0.0001). With adjustments for a number of potential confounders including age,
systolic BP, waist circumference (or BMI), and glucose control (glycated haemoglobin),
the relationships between serum CRP concentrations and both LVMI and LVMinappr
(partial r=0.11, p<0.05 for both) persisted. The independent relationship between CRP
and LVMI or LVMinappr translated into a higher multivariate-adjusted LVMI and LVMinappr values in the highest as compared to the lowest quartile of CRP (LVMI; highest quartile CRP=48.8±10.7, lowest quartile CRP=45.0±11, p<0.05; LVMinappr; highest quartile CRP=137±24, lowest quartile CRP=127±24, p<0.05). The independent relationships between CRP and LVMI, support the notion that CRP may also be evaluated for LVH
detection.

In 358 participants from a randomly selected community sample with a high
prevalence of obesity (41%), a combination of CRP concentrations and eGFR above or
below the median for the sample respectively showed significant performance
(AUC=0.61±0.03, p<0.0005), but a low specificity for LVH detection (77%). When eGFR
and CRP concentrations were employed to complement RaVL, although the overall
performance did not improve (AUC=0.71±0.03, p<0.0005, RaVL alone: AUC=0.70±0.03),
the specificity increased (93%) whilst sensitivity (25%) was in-line with previously
reported sensitivities for LVH detection using ECG criteria in alternative population
samples. Without changing overall performance, eGFR together with RaVL increased the
specificity to 88% and CRP concentrations when considered together with RaVL
increased the specificity to 87%. Thus, in a community sample where the specificity and
performance of ECG criteria for LVH detection are poor, the use of eGFR and/or CRP
concentrations to complement ECG criteria increase the specificity without altering the
overall performance.

In conclusion, the present thesis provides evidence to indicate that current ECG
criteria for the detection of LVH are invalid in obese individuals of African ancestry, but
that clinical markers of renal dysfunction and systemic inflammation, which are
associated with LVMI independent of haemodynamic factors and co-morbidities may be
employed to complement ECG criteria to improve the specificity for LVH detection.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/14600
Date25 April 2014
CreatorsMaunganidze, Fabian
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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