Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . LV hypertrophy without high BP increased risk for CV events, CV death and HF hospitalization. The dual ...
Elevated left ventricular mass, known as left-ventricular hypertrophy, is a stronger predictor of coronary artery disease-related death and heart failure than coronary artery calcium score, according ...
Several lines of evidence based on cross-sectional and longitudinal studies point to a reduced nocturnal BP fall as a marker of subclinical (i.e., LVH, renal and vascular damage) and overt CV ...
A new deep-learning algorithm can better identify subtle left ventricular (LV) wall geometric measurements on echocardiography than expert physicians, as validated on three international cohorts, a ...
Objectives American-style football (ASF) athletes are at risk for the development of concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (C-LVH), an established cardiovascular risk factor in the general ...
Investigators conducted this subanalysis among patients aged 20 to 27 years, using data from the National Growth and Health Study to determine potential racial differences in left ventricular mass ...
Patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis at intermediate and high risk for surgery who, after TAVR, have a larger regression in left ventricular mass at 1 year will then go on to have ...
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), or an increase in cardiac mass, usually reflects pathologic adaptation to chronic pressure or volume loads. Physiologic adaptation in athletes as well as genetic, ...
A small panel of circulating biomarkers may reliably distinguish hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) from similar conditions that cause left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), researchers found. From ...
This article and associated images are based on a poster originally authored by Katarina Rydén Markinhuhta, Linda Hägerstrand, Margareta Behrendt, Weike Bao, Qing-Dong Wang, Alison Rowles and Pernilla ...