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Edited by
Dharti Patel, Mount Sinai West and Morningside Hospitals, New York,Sang J. Kim, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York,Himani V. Bhatt, Mount Sinai West and Morningside Hospitals, New York,Alopi M. Patel, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Jersey
The chapter discusses basic cardiac physiology topics. Cardiac cycle begins in the atrium at the SA node and propagates via the electrical pathway to the ventricular myocardium. Automaticity in the SA node is achieved by a slow spontaneous depolarization of the membrane during phase 4. Heart rate is regulated by interaction between sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. At rest, the vagal effects usually dominate. Frank–Starling law is the relation between myocardial fiber length and strength of contraction. Contractility measures cardiac performance at a given preload and afterload. Blood flow through the capillaries is regulated by arterioles. The Starling equation describes the net capillary filtration. Fluid filtrated from the capillaries is transported via the lymphatic system back to the circulation. Coronary blood flow is mainly regulated via local metabolites.
Despite successful surgical repair of aortic coarctation, life expectancy is reduced, and up to one-third of patients remain or become hypertensive. So as to characterize the responses for blood pressure, we have studied 55 patients with surgically repaired coarctation. Their mean age was 11.3 ± 5.97 years. We documented maximal uptake of oxygen, anaerobic threshold, plasma renin activity and blood pressures during a Bruce protocol treadmill test. The velocity across the site of repair as imaged by crosssectional echocardiography was measured before and after exercise. We measured the changes in heart rate and blood pressure subsequent to an infusion of 1 ug per kg of isoprenalin, monitoring blood pressure over 24 hours in all patients.
Results
When compared with 40 healthy age-matched controls, the patients with coarctation had a normal exercise capacity. Resting systolic blood pressures above the 95th percentile were present in 45% of the patients. Exercise-induced hypertension, and an elevation in the average systolic 24 hour blood pressures, were observed, but less frequently than elevated baseline values, suggesting that socalled white-coat” hypertension may be present in this population. Abnormal reactions and elevation of plasma renin activity were related to a history of paradoxical hypertension at the time of surgery. Attenuation of the circadian rhythm for blood pressure was a frequent finding, and may have implications in the development of long-term damage to end-organs. A high correlation was found between mean systolic blood pressure measured by 24 hour monitoring and left ventricular hypertrophy (r=0.65, p<0.05).
Conclusions
Abnormalities in blood pressure occurred independently of significant mechanical obstruction. Despite successful surgical repair, abnormalities in the shape of the aortic arch, reduced sensitivity of baroreceptor reflexes, and neurohumoral factors may all contribute to the development of hypertension.
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