Cardiac hypertrophy due to pressure and volume overload: distinctly different biological phenomena?

Int J Cardiol. 1991 May;31(2):133-41. doi: 10.1016/0167-5273(91)90207-6.

Abstract

Myocardial hypertrophy is a morphological adaptive response to chronic work overload imposed on the heart. It has been categorized into two distinct basic types: concentric hypertrophy, occurring in response to a sustained pressure overload in which wall thickness increases without chamber enlargement, and eccentric hypertrophy, in response to a chronic volume overload in which chamber volume enlarges without a relative increase in its wall thickness. It should be emphasized, in this context, that these adjectives are somewhat confusing, since the hypertrophy observed is not eccentric in the fashion often seen in the left ventricle of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In fact, the hypertrophy is concentric in both instances, but is associated with an increase in chamber volume when described as eccentric, yet occurring with a maintained volume when said to be concentric. In rats made anemic by iron deficiency, the volume overloaded heart achieves an adaptive increase in mass characterized as hypertrophy occurring in the setting of dilated ventricle. This so-called eccentric hypertrophy depends on catecholamines as possible signals for myocardial growth, and progresses with preserved ultrastructure and contractile performance of the cardiac muscle. A gradually imposed volume overload results in a harmonious growth of the heart (it retains a relative normal shape, becoming a magnified normal heart), probably mediated by release of catecholamines into the myocardium. This process resembles the normal cardiac growth in response to the obligatory volume load imposed by an increasing cardiac output (greater metabolic demands) and blood volume.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Blood Volume / physiology*
  • Cardiomegaly / etiology
  • Cardiomegaly / pathology
  • Cardiomegaly / physiopathology*
  • Hypertension / complications*
  • Rats