Aorto-septal angulation is defined as an acute angled connection between the anterior aortic wall and the interventricular septum. It is quite a common 2D-echo finding. Does it correspond to a simple anatomical curiosity or is it associated with certain well defined diseases? Could it be a cause of obstruction to left ventricular ejection? To try to answer these questions, 66 consecutive cases of aorto-septal angulation were analysed; the echocardiographic and clinical data were correlated. The dynamic features of angulation were studied during the cardiac cycle and the investigations were completed by a phonomecanogramme with pharmacodynamic stress tests. All patients had cardiovascular pathology: aorto-septal angulation was not observed in normal subjects. The dynamic 2D-echo study distinguished two types of angulation with respect to the cardiac cycle: predominantly diastolic angulation tending to correct itself in systole (16 patients: Group CI); the majority of these patients had severe compensated aortic regurgitation; fixed angulation with no significant change between diastole and systole (50 patients: Group C2). This group consisted of patients with ventricular deformation due to coronary artery disease and patients with hypertension associated in some cases with other pathologies. Phonomecanography with pharmacodynamic stress testing in Group C2 revealed the possibility of dynamic obstruction to left ventricular ejection (6 cases) and the apparition of an ejectional systolic murmur (2 cases). Aorto-septal angulation seems to be closely related to hypertension (57% of patients) irrespective of age. Therefore, it should not be classified exclusively as a change observed in the "aging heart" but it may be the direct consequence of an adaptation to systolic strain of the left ventricle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PLoS One
February 2024
Department of Cardiology, Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.
Aortic and valvular calcification are well-known risk factors for cardio-cerebrovascular events in patients undergoing hemodialysis. We investigated the clinical impact of an angulated aorto-septal angle as a result of aortic elongation due to aortic calcification on cardio-cerebrovascular outcomes in patients undergoing hemodialysis. We investigated 306 patients (mean age 65.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRom J Intern Med
July 1996
N. Gh. Lupu Institute of Internal Medicine, Bucharest, Romania.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a primary heart disease, in most of the cases genetically transmitted, characterized by hypertrophy, often asymmetric, of the left ventricle (LV), presents certain peculiarities in old agers. The shape of the LV in old agers, is characterized by aorto-septal angulation, by the frequent presence of a septal bulge and the calcification of the posterior mitral ring which contributes to the narrowing of the LV ejection tract by the anterior displacement of the mitral valve. Thus, HCM in old agers can also have an acquired component associated with the mild changes of aging, which in certain conditions can lead to the appearance of some peculiar forms of disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAorto-septal angulation is defined as an acute angled connection between the anterior aortic wall and the interventricular septum. It is quite a common 2D-echo finding. Does it correspond to a simple anatomical curiosity or is it associated with certain well defined diseases? Could it be a cause of obstruction to left ventricular ejection? To try to answer these questions, 66 consecutive cases of aorto-septal angulation were analysed; the echocardiographic and clinical data were correlated.
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