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(Circulation. 2004;110:1456-1462.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Articles |
From Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY (R.B.D., K.W.); Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Östra, and University of Göteborg, Göteborg, Sweden (B.D.); Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway (F.E.G.); Skellefteå Lasarett and Umeå University, Skellefteå, Sweden (K.B.); Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland (M.S.N.); Veterans Administration Hospital, Washington, DC (V.P.); Merck and Co, Inc, West Point, Pa (K.E.H., J.M.E.); and Glostrup University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark (J.R., K.W.).
Correspondence to Richard B. Devereux, MD, Cornell Medical Center, 525 E 68th St, New York, NY 10021. E-mail rbdevere{at}med.cornell.edu
Received June 20, 2003; de novo received May 20, 2004; accepted June 10, 2004.
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results A total of 960 patients with essential hypertension and LV hypertrophy (LVH) on screening ECG were enrolled at centers in 7 countries and studied by echocardiography at baseline and after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years randomized therapy. Clinical examination and blinded readings of echocardiograms in 457 losartan-treated and 459 atenolol-treated participants with
1 follow-up measurement of LV mass index (LVMI) were used in an intention-to-treat analysis. Losartan-based therapy induced greater reduction in LVMI from baseline to the last available study than atenolol with adjustment for baseline LVMI and blood pressure and in-treatment pressure (21.7±21.8 versus 17.7±19.6 g/m2; P=0.021). Greater LVMI reduction with losartan was observed in women and men, participants >65 or <65 years of age, and with mild or more severe baseline hypertrophy. The difference between treatment arms in LVH regression was due mainly to reduced concentricity of LV geometry in both groups and lesser increase in LV internal diameter in losartan-treated patients.
Conclusions Antihypertensive treatment with losartan, plus hydrochlorothiazide and other medications when needed for pressure control, resulted in greater LVH regression in patients with ECG LVH than conventional atenolol-based treatment. Thus, angiotensin receptor antagonism by losartan has superior efficacy for reversing LVH, a cardinal manifestation of hypertensive target organ damage.
Key Words: angiotensin controlled clinical trials echocardiography hypertension hypertrophy, left ventricular
| Introduction |
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Meta-analyses of available studies have suggested that interruption of renin-angiotensin system activity with ACE inhibitors11,12 or angiotensin II receptor antagonists13,16 may regress hypertensive LVH most effectively, but this has not been established in a large, definitive trial. Recently, the main results of the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) trial demonstrated both prevention of the prespecified clinical end point and greater reduction in indirect ECG measures of LVH with losartan than atenolol.17 The present study was undertaken to examine the relative effectiveness of losartan versus atenolol for regression of hypertensive LVH in the large LIFE echocardiographic substudy.
| Methods |
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Treatment Regimens
Blinded treatment was begun with losartan 50 mg or atenolol 50 mg and matching placebo of the other agent.18 During clinic visits at 1, 2, 4, and 6 months and semiannually thereafter, study therapy could be uptitrated by adding hydrochlorothiazide 12.5 mg and then increasing blinded losartan or atenolol to 100 mg and thereafter if needed to reduce BP to
140/90 mmHg, increasing hydrochlorothiazide to 25 mg, and instituting calcium channel blockade or other medications (excluding angiotensin II receptor antagonists, ß-blockers, or ACE inhibitors).
Echocardiographic Methods
Centers for the present LIFE substudy had established expertise in quantitative echocardiography. To standardize echocardiogram performance in multiple sites, physician or technician sonographers from each center underwent training with written materials,23,24 didactic presentations, and practical demonstrations of the performance protocol.
Echocardiograms were performed between October 5, 1995, and September 30, 2001, with phased-array echocardiographs. Recordings were made by a standardized protocol under which
10 consecutive beats of 2D and M-mode recordings of LV internal diameter and wall thicknesses at or just below the tips of the mitral leaflets were recorded in parasternal long- and short-axis views. Apical 2- and 4-chamber images were used to assess LV wall motion. Studies were read at Cornell Medical Center by investigators blinded to clinical information.
Echocardiographic Measurements
Correct orientation of imaging planes was verified as described previously.25 Measurements were made by investigators blinded to treatment allocation and temporal sequence using a computerized review station; measurements were verified, and commonly corrected, or made by experienced investigators (R.B.D. in 89%). End-diastolic and end-systolic LV internal dimension and wall thicknesses were measured by American Society of Echocardiography (ASE) recommendations26,27 on up to 3 cardiac cycles.
Calculation of Derived Variables
End-diastolic ASE LV dimensions were used to calculate LV mass by a formula validated by necropsy comparison (r=0.90, P<0.001).28 The ability to substitute 2D LV dimensions when M-mode beam orientation was suboptimal increased the yield of LV mass values to 91% to 98% in previous large studies.2931 The resultant LV mass values showed excellent reproducibility (
=0.93, P<0.001); ±17 g had an 80% likelihood of being a true change without significant regression to the mean in 183 hypertensive patients studied twice by echocardiography.32 To account for the impact of body size, LV mass was indexed for body surface area [LV mass index (LVMI)].33
Statistical Analyses
Data are expressed as mean±SD. Differences between groups were assessed by independent-samples t tests for continuous variables and
2 statistics for categorical variables. After verification readings to determine the accuracy of extreme values, data were exported electronically to the Clinical Biostatistics Department at Merck Research Laboratories for statistical analyses.
Analysis Plan
The study was considered positive if losartan was more effective than atenolol for LVMI reduction at the P<0.05 level. Analysis of clinical end-point data in the LIFE study was based on the intention-to-treat principle. All randomized patients were followed up for end-point determination for the entire duration of the study, regardless of protocol violations or adherence to study medication. All randomized patients in the echocardiography substudy were included in statistical analyses if they had a valid, readable baseline echocardiogram and
1 readable follow-up echocardiogram. The main hypothesis was addressed by comparing change in echocardiographic LVMI between treatment groups from the baseline measurement to the patients last measurement during the trial; the time course of LV mass change in the 2 groups was also compared. The distribution of change in LV mass was nearly normal; therefore, comparison between treatment groups used a parametric model. To investigate the overall effect of treatments on LVMI over time, mixed models with repeated measures over time were used. The primary model used annual changes in LVMI as the dependent variables and baseline LVMI and BP as covariates. To determine the treatment effect independent of BP control, annual BP values were added to the mixed model as time-varying covariates. Further analyses adjusted for on-treatment heart rate reduction, a manifestation of the biological effect of ß-blockade and a stimulus to increase in stroke volume.
Study Power
The planned sample of 1000 patients was based on a projected between-study SD of 25 g/m2. Given the observed SD of 20 g/m2 over the first year of blinded therapy in LIFE, the study had >90% power to detect a between-group difference of 10 g/m2.
| Results |
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-blockers (4.0 or 3.1%), and vasodilators (4.2 or 3.9%).
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Among patients with baseline LV mass, 438 of 457 randomized to losartan and 440 of 459 (both 96%) randomized to atenolol had
1 follow-up LV mass determination. Echocardiograms were scheduled annually for all patients whether or not they remained on blinded study medication. Baseline and 1-year echocardiographic data could be compared in 414 losartan-treated and 411 atenolol-treated patients (both 91%) with baseline LV mass; 24 and 29 additional losartan- and atenolol-treated patients without 1-year LVMI measurements provided LVMI comparisons with baseline at
1 subsequent follow-up times.
Hemodynamic Effects of Study Treatment
Systolic and diastolic BPs were controlled similarly during the course of LIFE by losartan and atenolol (Figure 1). Target BP in the LIFE study (<140/90 mmHg) was attained in 37% and 33% in the losartan and atenolol treatment arms, respectively, at the last evaluation (P=0.139). By the end of the study, 8% and 9% of losartan- and atenolol-treated patients arms were on 50 mg test drug monotherapy, 15% and 19% took 50 mg of study drug with hydrochlorothiazide and/or other antihypertensive medications, and 53% and 45% took 100 mg of test drug, usually with other antihypertensive therapy (P=NS). At study end, 23% and 27% of losartan and atenolol patients were no longer receiving study therapy. Mean daily study therapy dose was 80 and 84 mg in the losartan and atenolol groups.
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On average, heart rate fell from baseline by 1 to 2 and 7 to 9 bpm in the losartan- and atenolol-treated groups, respectively, at each annual visit (all P<0.001), whereas body weight showed no significant change.
Change in LV Dimensions and Mass During Blinded Treatment
Septal and posterior wall thickness decreased progressively in both treatment groups during blinded treatment with significantly greater increase in LV internal diameter in atenolol-treated patients (P=0.004; Figure 2). As a result of changes in primary LV dimensions, LV relative wall thickness decreased similarly with both treatments (Figure 3).
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A greater decrease in mean LV mass in losartan- than atenolol-treated patients was present after 1 year of blinded treatment and persisted to the last available echocardiogram (P=0.009; Figure 4). The change from baseline to the final available in-study echocardiogram in the primary predesignated end point of LVMI was greater (21.7±21.8 g/m2) in losartan- than atenolol-treated patients (17.7±19.6 g/m2; P=0.011 adjusted for baseline LVMI and BP, P=0.027 with additional adjustment for in-treatment BPs; Figure 5). Additional analysis comparing all in-study echocardiograms on patients randomized to losartan or atenolol, adjusting for in-study BPs, confirmed the greater reduction in LVMI with losartan (21.1±21.0 versus 17.5±18.8 g/m2; P=0.016). Most of the reduction in LV mass occurred by month 24 of study treatment (Figure 4). LVMI was significantly affected by in-treatment systolic BP (P=0.009) and marginally by on-treatment heart rate (P=0.055) but not diastolic BP. Addition of baseline and on-treatment heart rate to the model evaluating the effect of treatment on LVMI reduced the statistical significance of the between-treatment difference in change in LVMI from baseline to the last available measurement (from P=0.027 to 0.062) and from baseline to all available in-trial measurements (from P=0.016 to P=0.070).
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LV Mass Change in Population Subsets
The greater benefit of losartan in LVMI reduction was seen in women (20.0 versus 15.2 g/m2) and men (22.9 versus 19.4 g/m2; P=NS) and patients younger (22.8 versus 18.2 g/m2) and older (20.8 versus 17.4 g/m2) than 65 years of age. LV mass decreased more on losartan than atenolol in whites (22.1 versus 17.7 g/m2) but not in the smaller group of other races (16.7 versus 17.8 g/m2). Patients without diabetes at baseline benefited more from losartan than atenolol (23.0 versus 17.6 g/m2), whereas the 103 with diabetes had slightly greater benefit with atenolol (11.4 versus 18.4 g/m2). LVMI decreased more on losartan than atenolol in patients with baseline Cornell voltage-duration products in the lowest tertile (<2491 mVxms in women and <2380 mVxms in men) (20.9 versus 16.2 g/m2) and in the highest tertile (>2970 and >2912 mVxms, respectively) (24.4 versus 19.2 g/m2), with a parallel trend in the group with intermediate ECG LV hypertrophy (19.4 versus 18.6 g/m2). LVMI decreased more with losartan than atenolol in patients who exercised or consumed alcohol regularly at enrollment in LIFE (21.8±21.8 versus 17.9±18.8, P=0.027; and 23.1±22.2 versus 19.3±18.0, P=0.096, respectively).
| Discussion |
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Comparison With Previous Studies
In an early meta-analysis, Dahlöf et al11 reported that ACE inhibitors reduced LV mass the most with more modest benefit from other treatments when induced BP reduction and baseline LV mass were taken into account. More recent analyses of randomized, controlled parallel-group trials12,13 found a significant difference between LV effects of ACE inhibitors and ß-blockers and suggested similar benefits for AT1 receptor antagonists. The present study provides definitive evidence of a greater reduction in LV mass by losartan than by atenolol, confirming previous suggestions13,16 of superior regression of hypertensive LVH by AT1 receptor antagonism. In the Treatment of Mild Hypertension Study (TOMHS), no difference was observed between the ACE inhibitor and ß-blocker arms.14 The Veterans Administration Study15 provided suggestive evidence of greater LVH regression by a diuretic or ACE inhibitor but was partially confounded by high participant dropout (61%). The greater regression of LVH with losartan than with atenolol, which itself decreases renal renin release, may be related to the ability of selective AT1 angiotensin receptor antagonism to block angiotensin II effects more completely than usual doses of ACE inhibitors or indirect effects of ß-blockade.
Hemodynamic Correlates of LV Mass Change
As expected, LV mass change was related to BP reduction in the LIFE echocardiography substudy population. Previous studies34,35 have revealed that on-treatment LV mass change is more closely related to change in 24-hour BP than in clinic BP. Thus, the impact of intrapatient variability in BP reduction on LVMI change may be underestimated in the present study. The greater reduction in LVMI with losartan was partially attenuated when on-treatment heart rate was considered, but whether this reflects biological effects of ß-blockade or an increase in stroke volume with slower heart rate cannot be determined.
Time Course of LV Geometric Changes
In contrast to earlier trials in which regression of LVH was often assessed over months,11 LIFE performed annual echocardiograms over 5 years of blinded treatment. Beyond the substantial decrease in LV mass during the first year, especially in losartan-treated patients, there were smaller further decreases in LV wall thicknesses, relative wall thickness, and LVMI during years 2 and 3 in both treatment arms. These results suggest that the benefit of antihypertensive treatment on LV remodeling cannot be fully appreciated unless treatment trials last
3 years.
Study Limitations
Because it was considered unethical to include a placebo arm in the LIFE study, which enrolled patients with hypertension and LVH, the study could overestimate or underestimate beneficial cardiac effects of study treatments. However, precautions were taken to minimize measurement bias. Echocardiograms from at least 2 and usually 3 different study years were read concurrently; and final measurements on 89% of studies, including 100% of baseline recordings and 96% of those after 4 and 5 years, were made by 1 highly experienced investigator. In addition, primary intention-to-treat results reflect LV effects of losartan- and atenolol-based regimens rather than pure monotherapy. However, in view of the known difficulty of controlling BP in moderate hypertension complicated by target organ damage, this closely emulates actual clinical practice.
Clinical Implications
LIFE revealed significantly greater regression of LVMI in hypertensive patients with ECG LVH on losartan- than atenolol-based therapy despite comparable BP lowering, thereby supporting the hypothesis that losartan has direct cardiac benefits.
| Appendix |
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LIFE Echocardiography Substudy Investigators
Working Group: Richard B. Devereux, MD, New York, NY; Björn Dahlöf, MD, PhD, Göteborg, Sweden; Kurt Boman, MD, Skellefteå, Sweden; Eva Gerdts, MD, PhD, Bergen, Norway; Markku S. Nieminen, MD, Helsinki, Finland; Jens Rokkedal, MD, Copenhagen, Denmark; Vasilios Papademetriou, MD, Washington, DC; and Kristian Wachtell, MD, PhD, Copenhagen, Denmark. Merck coordinators: Sigrid Helle Berg, Drammen, Norway, and Anne Morosky, West Point, Pa.
Reading Center
Richard B. Devereux, Jonathan N. Bella, Vittorio Palmieri, Jennifer E. Liu, Kristian Wachtell, Eva Gerdts, Mary Paranicas, Dawn Fishman, Virginia Burns, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY.
Field Centers
Denmark: Jens Berning (Ålborg), Per Hildebrandt (Frederiksberg), John Larsen (Næstved), Ole Lederballe Pedersen (Viborg), Jens Rokkedal and Kristian Wachtell (Glostrup); Finland: Tapio Aalto and Markku S. Nieminen (Helsinki), Erik Englblom (Turku), (Helsinki), Antti Ylitalo (Oulu); Iceland: Yfirlæknir Gudmundur Thorgeirsson (Reykjavik); Norway: Vernon Bonarjee (Stavanger), Gisle Fröland and Jan E. Otterstad (Tönsberg), Eva Gerdts and Hans Björnstad (Haukeland), Agathe Nuland and Gunnar Smith (Ullevål), Johannes Soma and Asbjørn Støylen (Trondheim); Sweden: Kurt Boman (Skellefteå), Björn Dahlöf (Göteborg), Christer Höglund (Stockholm); United Kingdom: Frank G. Dunn (Glasgow); United States: Jerome Anderson (Oklahoma City, OK), Gerard Aurigemma (Worcester, Mass), Martin Beck (Charlotte, NC), Maria Canossa-Terris (Miami Beach, Fla), Albert Carr (Augusta, Ga), Richard Devereux, Anekwe Onwuayi, and Robert Phillips (New York, NY), Ted Feldman (Coral Gables, Fla), Fetnat Fouad-Tarazi (Cleveland, Ohio), Thomas Giles (New Orleans, La), Mark Goldberg (Tucson, Ariz), Alan Gradman (Pittsburgh, Pa), William Graettinger (Reno, Nev), Charles Kaupke (Orange, Calif), Michael Koren (Jacksonville, Fla), Kenneth LaBresh (Pawtucket, RI), Phillip Liebson (Chicago, Ill), Shawna Nesbitt (Ann Arbor, Mich), Elizabeth Ofili (Atlanta, Ga), Vasilios Papademetriou and Otelio Randall (Washington, DC), Gilbert Perry (Birmingham, Ala), Louis Salciccioli (Brooklyn, NY), Matthew Weir (Baltimore, Md), Jackson Wright (Cleveland, Ohio), and Miguel Zabalgoitia (San Antonio, Tex).
Statistical Coordinating Center
Katherine Harris, DrPH.; Steven Snapinn, PhD; Ying Wan, MD.
National Coordinators
Sigrid Helle Berg; Robert Zeldin, MD; Donald Wilcox; Andreas Moan; Shonna Cohen; Anne Morosky.
| Acknowledgments |
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E. Gerdts, K. Wachtell, P. Omvik, J. E. Otterstad, L. Oikarinen, K. Boman, B. Dahlof, and R. B. Devereux Left Atrial Size and Risk of Major Cardiovascular Events During Antihypertensive Treatment: Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension Trial Hypertension, February 1, 2007; 49(2): 311 - 316. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. M. Okin and R. B. Devereux Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Regression and Atrial Fibrillation Incidence--Reply JAMA, January 3, 2007; 297(1): 40 - 41. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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V. Barrios, C. Escobar, A. Calderon, J. Pablo Tomas, S. Ruiz, J. L. Moya, A. Megias, O. Vegazo, and R. Fernandez Regression of left ventricular hypertrophy by a candesartan-based regimen in clinical practice The VIPE study Journal of Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System, December 1, 2006; 7(4): 236 - 242. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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B. Williams The Year in Hypertension J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., October 17, 2006; 48(8): 1698 - 1711. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. F. O'Rourke and J. B. Seward Central Arterial Pressure and Arterial Pressure Pulse: New Views Entering the Second Century After Korotkov Mayo Clin. Proc., August 1, 2006; 81(8): 1057 - 1068. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Saeed, G. Guron, A. Oldfors, B. Lindelow, and H. Herlitz Cardiac fibrosis triggered by the kidney: a case report Nephrol. Dial. Transplant., June 1, 2006; 21(6): 1713 - 1715. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. T. Getts, S. M. Hazlett, S. B. Sharma, R. L. McGill, R. W. W. Biederman, R. J. Marcus, and S. E. Sandroni Regression of left ventricular hypertrophy after bilateral nephrectomy Nephrol. Dial. Transplant., April 1, 2006; 21(4): 1089 - 1091. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Volpe, G. Tocci, and E. Pagannone Fewer Mega-Trials and More Clinically Oriented Studies in Hypertension Research? The Case of Blocking the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System. J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., April 1, 2006; 17(4_suppl_2): S36 - S43. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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The CAFE Investigators, for the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial, CAFE Steering Committee and Writing Committee, B. Williams, P. S. Lacy, S. M. Thom, K. Cruickshank, A. Stanton, D. Collier, A. D. Hughes, et al. Differential Impact of Blood Pressure-Lowering Drugs on Central Aortic Pressure and Clinical Outcomes: Principal Results of the Conduit Artery Function Evaluation (CAFE) Study Circulation, March 7, 2006; 113(9): 1213 - 1225. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. M Ferrario Role of Angiotensin II in Cardiovascular Disease -- Therapeutic Implications of More Than a Century of Research Journal of Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System, March 1, 2006; 7(1): 3 - 14. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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R. E. Schmieder The role of non-haemodynamic factors of the genesis of LVH Nephrol. Dial. Transplant., December 1, 2005; 20(12): 2610 - 2612. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. F. O'Rourke and M. E. Safar Letter Regarding Article by Devereux et al, "Regression of Hypertensive Left Ventricular Hypertrophy by Losartan Compared With Atenolol: The Losartan Intervention for Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) Trial" Circulation, June 7, 2005; 111(22): e377 - e377. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. G.A. Veliotes, A. J. Woodiwiss, D. A.J. Deftereos, D. Gray, O. Osadchii, and G. R. Norton Aldosterone Receptor Blockade Prevents the Transition to Cardiac Pump Dysfunction Induced by {beta}-Adrenoreceptor Activation Hypertension, May 1, 2005; 45(5): 914 - 920. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. B. Devereux, K. Wachtell, E. Gerdts, K. Boman, M. S. Nieminen, V. Papademetriou, J. Rokkedal, K. Harris, P. Aurup, and B. Dahlof Prognostic Significance of Left Ventricular Mass Change During Treatment of Hypertension JAMA, November 17, 2004; 292(19): 2350 - 2356. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. M. Gardin and M. S. Lauer Left Ventricular Hypertrophy: The Next Treatable, Silent Killer? JAMA, November 17, 2004; 292(19): 2396 - 2398. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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