Background and aim . Aortic root dilatation (ARD) is a cardiovascular phenotype of adverse prognostic value; its prevalence has been mostly investigated in population-based samples and selected hypertensive cohorts. Data from clinical practice are rather scant. Thus, we examined the prevalence and correlates of ARD in a large sample of hypertensive patients referred by general practitioners for a routine echocardiographic examination. Methods . A total of 2229 untreated and treated hypertensive subjects (mean age 62 years) referred to 17 outpatient echocardiographic laboratories across Italy for detection of hypertensive subclinical cardiac damage were included in the study. ARD was defi ned by aortic diameter exceeding 3.7 cm in women and 3.9 cm in men. Results . ARD was found in 263 patients, with an overall prevalence of 11.8% (16.9% in men and 6.2% in women, p Ͻ 0.05). In multivariate regression analyses, body surface area (BSA), left ventricular (LV) mass and age were in ranking order the most important correlates of aortic root size in the whole population study as well as in men. In women, LV mass and its derivative indexes were the most important independent variables associated to aortic root size. Conclusions . This multicenter nationwide survey indicates that ARD is a frequent cardiovascular phenotype in hypertensives referred to echo-labs for detection of hypertensive organ damage. BSA, LV mass and age are the most important correlates of this phenotype. The hierarchical order of these factors differs between genders, LV mass being the strongest independent variable in women.
Critical care is underprioritized. A global call to action is needed to increase equitable access to care and the quality of care provided to critically ill patients. Current challenges to effective critical care in resource-constrained settings are many. Estimates of the burden of critical illness are extrapolated from common etiologies, but the true burden remains ill-defined. Measuring the burden of critical illness is epidemiologically challenging but is thought to be increasing. Resources, infrastructure, and training are inadequate. Millions die unnecessarily due to critical illness. Solutions start with the implementation of first-step, patient care fundamentals known as Essential Emergency and Critical Care. Such essential care stands to decrease critical-illness mortality, augment pandemic preparedness, decrease postoperative mortality, and decrease the need for advanced level care. The entire healthcare workforce must be trained in these fundamentals. Additionally, physician and nurse specialists trained in critical care are needed and must be retained as leaders of critical care initiatives, researchers, and teachers. Context-specific research is mandatory to ensure care is appropriate for the patient populations served, not just duplicated from high-resourced settings. Governments must increase healthcare spending and invest in capacity to treat critically ill patients. Advocacy at all levels is needed to achieve universal health coverage for critically ill patients.
Prevalence of left atrial enlargement (LAE) in hypertension has been mostly assessed in population-based samples and selected hypertensive groups. A few data are available in clinical practice. We examined LAE prevalence and severity in a cohort of hypertensive patients referred by general practitioners to a routine echocardiographic examination. A total of 2170 hypertensive individuals (mean age 62 years, 53% men) referred by practitioners to 17 outpatient echocardiographic laboratories across Italy for detection of hypertensive cardiac disease were included in the study. LAE was defined as: A) absolute LA diameter >4.0 cm in men and >3.8 cm in women; B) LA diameter normalized to body surface area (BSA) >2.3 cm/m 2 in both sexes. Left atrial enlargement was graded as mild, moderate, and severe according to Lang's report. Patients with LAE were 38% by criterion A, and 20% by criterion B. A moderate/severe increase in LA size was present in 34% (A) and 32% (B) of patients with LAE. Severe LAE was 3.3-fold (A) and 2.6-fold (B) more frequent in women than in men. Left ventricular mass was the strongest correlate of absolute LA diameter as well as of normalized LA diameter, after age. Left atrial enlargement defined either by absolute or normalized LA diameter is a frequent cardiac phenotype in hypertensive patients referred to echo-labs in clinical practice. This cardiac parameter is closely related to LV mass and its severity is highly prevalent in women.
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