Does antecedent hypertension worsen microvascular injury and increase the risk of all-cause death or heart failure in patients with acute ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction?
In patients with acute myocardial infarction, antecedent hypertension is associated with less LVEF recovery and a significantly higher risk of long-term death or heart failure.
The rationale for our study was to investigate the pathophysiology of microvascular injury in patients with acute ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction in relation to a history of hypertension. We undertook a cohort study using invasive and noninvasive measures of microvascular injury, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging at 2 days and 6 months, and assessed health outcomes in the longer term. Three hundred twenty-four patients with acute myocardial infarction (mean age, 59 12 years; blood pressure, 135 25 / 79 14 mm Hg; 237 73% male, 105 32% with antecedent hypertension) were prospectively enrolled during emergency percutaneous coronary intervention. Compared with patients without antecedent hypertension, patients with hypertension were older (63 12 years versus 57 11 years; P<0.001) and a lower proportion were cigarette smokers (52 50% versus 144 66%; P=0.007). Coronary blood flow, microvascular resistance within the culprit artery, infarct pathologies, inflammation (C-reactive protein and interleukin-6) were not associated with hypertension. Compared with patients without antecedent hypertension, patients with hypertension had less improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction at 6 months from baseline (5.3 8.2% versus 7.4 7.6%; P=0.040). Antecedent hypertension was a multivariable associate of incident myocardial hemorrhage 2-day post-MI (1.81 0.98-3.34; P=0.059) and all-cause death or heart failure (n=47 events, n=24 with hypertension; 2.53 1.28-4.98; P=0.007) postdischarge (median follow-up 4 years). Severe progressive microvascular injury is implicated in the pathophysiology and prognosis of patients with a history of hypertension and acute myocardial infarction. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT02072850.
Carrick et al. (Mon,) studied this question.