Hypertrophy or hyperplasia in cardiac muscle. Post-mortem human morphometric study.

Eur Heart J

1st Department of Cardiology, Medical Academy, Poznań, Poland.

Published: January 1993

In 103 hearts with various forms of cardiac muscle hypertrophy the following parameters were estimated: diameter, length, volume, density and number of myocytes, and density of myocyte nuclei. The values of all histometric parameters correlated well with left ventricular (LV) weight up to 350 g. In heavier hearts these parameters remained approximately of the same magnitude. The number of myocytes was significantly higher in hearts with LV weight above 250 g. The influence on LV weight of age, coronary artery diameters, degree of atherosclerosis, weight and percent of fibrous tissue was also evaluated. On the basis of a linear discriminant function, hearts were divided into three classes: (1) LV weight < or = 250 g (absence of hyperplasia, hypertrophy only); (2) LV weight 251-350 g (hypertrophy+signs of hyperplasia); (3) LV weight > 350 g (marked signs of hyperplasia). The percent of fibrosis increased proportionally to LV weight. Where LV weight was above 250 g there was a subsequent increase in the mean percent of fibrosis (approx. 26%). This phenomenon (plateau of percent fibrosis) is the result of an increased number of myocytes (myocyte hyperplasia). We suggest that, independent of aetiology, in all hearts above 350 g (patients with congestive heart failure) hyperplasia phenomenon exists.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/14.1.40DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

number myocytes
12
weight 250
12
percent fibrosis
12
weight
9
cardiac muscle
8
weight 350
8
hearts
5
hyperplasia
5
hypertrophy hyperplasia
4
hyperplasia cardiac
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!