[Hypertensive cardiopathy--an adaptive or a pathologic phenomenon?].

1989 
: The hypertensive cardiopathy is a controversial entity as regards the physiopathological mechanisms and clinical aspects. Defined as the hypertrophy of the left ventricle, secondary to the permanent tension increases, it accompanies not only the severe forms of arterial hypertension but also the medium and mild ones. In the authors' opinion, based on numerous experimental and clinical studies, the main factor that initiates the myocardial hypertrophy is the increased parietal tension (hemodynamic hypertrophy). The natural evolution is progressive, the myocardial hypertrophy initially adaptive becomes pathological and the cardiac performance is affected gradually, first in its diastolic and then in its systolic component, up to the final stage of congestive cardiac insufficiency. The structural changes of the myocardial fibre also document the adaptive and pathological hypertrophy, the alteration of the myocardial contractility consisting in the difficulty of transforming the chemical energy into mechanical work. The clinical aspects show an incipient myocardial hypertrophy, considered adaptive, since the cardiac performance is normal; an important hypertrophy affecting the diastolic component and the hypertrophy with dilatation that affects the overall performance. Of the evaluation methods, the echocardiography is the most accurate one in quantifying hypertrophy, evaluation of the cardiac performance and possibility of detecting several characteristic aspects of the hypertensive cardiopathy. The transition moment from the adaptive hypertrophy to the pathological hypertrophy cannot be exactly established but it is documented that the hemodynamic and nonhemodynamic hypertrophy is a supplementary cardiovascular risk factor.
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