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[Cardiac hypertrophy in hypertension--clinical significance and possibilities of control].

Left ventricular hypertrophy constitutes an essential risk factor for sudden death, myocardial infarction and heart failure. The death rates of patients with ECG-demonstrated cardiac hypertrophy are 4.8 times as high as those of healthy subjects. Cardiac hypertrophy is associated with a substantially increased incidence of ventricular arrhythmias. The condition is treatable in most patients. While the most effective group of drugs for controlling cardiac hypertrophy are ACE inhibitors; methyldopa, calcium antagonists, and beta-blockers have also proved useful in the management of cardiac hypertrophy in hypertension. Diuretics other than indapamide are not appropriate for treating cardiac hypertrophy. An additional benefit of ACE inhibitor administration is they can favourable affect increased levels of collagen in the hypertrophic myocardium. The prognosis of hypertensive patients, whose treatment has lead to regression in cardiac hypertrophy in hypertension, is markedly better than that of patients in whom regression fails to be achieved. A role in the development of cardiac hypertrophy in hypertension, in addition to the blood pressure level, is played by a number of mechanisms; it is the genetic factor which has received most attention recently. As the prognosis of hypertrophic patients has been found to correlate more closely with left ventricular weight, determined by echocardiography, than with blood pressure, echocardiography should be employed more often in the future to help optimize antihypertensive therapy.

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