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Essential hypertension worsens left ventricular contractility in systemic sclerosis.

Journal of Rheumatology 2021 January 16
OBJECTIVE: Primary cardiac involvement in systemic sclerosis (SSc) is prevalent and morbid, however the influence of traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as essential hypertension (HTN) are unclear. In the present study, we sought to understand the effects of HTN on left ventricular (LV) contractility in SSc patients using echocardiographic speckle-derived global longitudinal strain (GLS).

METHODS: 56 SSc patients with HTN (SSc+HTN+) and 82 SSc patients without HTN (SSc+ HTN-) were compared with 40 non-SSc controls with HTN (SSc-HTN+) and 40 non-SSc controls without HTN (SSc-HTN-), matched by age and sex. All HTN patients were on stable antihypertensive therapies. Echocardiographic measures included LV ejection fraction (LVEF), left atrial volume index (LAVi), and LV diastolic function. LV contractility was assessed by GLS, averaged across the 18 LV segments.

RESULTS: SSc patients had diminished GLS regardless of HTN status when compared to both control groups despite normal LVEF, p<0.001. SSc+HTN+ had the highest prevalence of diastolic dysfunction with significantly higher septal E/e', a marker of LV filling pressures (p<0.05), as well as the largest reduction in GLS compared to SSc+HTN- and both control groups.

CONCLUSION: Speckle-derived strain revealed diminished LV contractility in SSc patients despite normal LVEF. SSc+HTN+ had more prominent reductions in GLS associated with evidence of LV remodeling and worsened diastolic function. Our findings demonstrate the presence of subclinical LV contractile dysfunction in SSc that is further exacerbated by concomitant HTN, thereby identifying HTN as an important modifiable cardiovascular risk factor that should be managed aggressively in this at-risk population.

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