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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan N. Bella is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan N. Bella.


Circulation | 2002

Mitral Ratio of Peak Early to Late Diastolic Filling Velocity as a Predictor of Mortality in Middle-Aged and Elderly Adults: The Strong Heart Study

Jonathan N. Bella; Vittorio Palmieri; Mary J. Roman; Jennifer E. Liu; Thomas K. Welty; Elisa T. Lee; Richard R. Fabsitz; Barbara V. Howard; Richard B. Devereux

Background—With aging, left ventricular filling tends to decrease in early diastole, reducing the mitral ratio of peak early to late diastolic filling velocity (E/A). However, the prognostic significance of low or high E/A in older adults remains to be elucidated in population-based samples. Methods and Results—Doppler echocardiograms were analyzed in 3008 American Indian participants in the second Strong Heart Study examination who had no more than mild mitral or aortic regurgitation. Participants were followed for a mean of 3 years after Doppler echocardiography to assess risks of all-cause and cardiac death associated with E/A <0.6 or >1.5; 2429 (81%) participants had normal E/A ratio, 490 (16%) had E/A <0.6, and 89 (3%) had E/A >1.5. All-cause mortality was higher with E/A <0.6 or E/A >1.5 (12% and 13% versus 6%), as was cardiac mortality (4.5% and 6.5% versus 1.6%; both P <0.001). Adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, HDL and LDL cholesterol, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, coronary heart disease, left ventricular hypertrophy, and low ejection fraction (<40%), the relative risk of all-cause death with E/A >1.5 was 1.73 (95% CI, 0.99 to 3.03;P =0.05); the relative risk of cardiac death was 2.8 (95% CI, 1.19 to 6.75;P <0.05). E/A <0.6 was not independently associated with increased all-cause or cardiac mortality (P =0.19 and 0.31, respectively) after adjusting for covariates. Conclusions—In a population-based sample of middle-aged and elderly adults, mitral E/A >1.5 at baseline Doppler echocardiography is associated with 2-fold increased all-cause and 3-fold increased cardiac mortality independent of covariates; mitral E/A <0.6 was also associated with 2-fold increased all-cause and cardiac mortality but not independent of covariates.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Reliability of Echocardiographic Assessment of Left Ventricular Structure and Function The PRESERVE Study

Vittorio Palmieri; Björn Dahlöf; Vincent DeQuattro; Norman Sharpe; Jonathan N. Bella; Giovanni de Simone; Mary Paranicas; Dawn Fishman; Richard B. Devereux

OBJECTIVES The study was done to evaluate reliability of echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) mass. BACKGROUND Echocardiographic estimation of LV mass is affected by several sources of variability. METHODS We assessed intrapatient reliability of LV mass measurements in 183 hypertensive patients (68% men, 65 +/- 9 years) enrolled in the Prospective Randomized Enalapril Study Evaluating Regression of Ventricular Enlargement (PRESERVE) trial after a screening echocardiogram (ECHO) showed LV hypertrophy. A second ECHO was repeated at randomization (45 +/- 25 days later). Two-dimensional (2D)-guided M-mode or 2D linear measurements of LV cavity and wall dimensions were verified by one experienced reader. RESULTS Mean LV mass was similar at first and second ECHO (243 +/- 53 vs. 241 +/- 54 g) and showed high reliability as estimated by intraclass correlation coefficient (RHO) = 0.93. Within-patient 5th, 10th, 90th and 95th percentiles of between-study difference in LV mass were -32 g, -28 g, +25 g and +35 g. Mean LV mass fell less from the first to the second ECHO than expected from a formula to predict regression to the mean (2 +/- 19 vs. 17 +/- 12 g, p < 0.001). Reliability was also high for LV internal diameter (RHO = 0.87), septal (RHO = 0.85) and posterior wall thickness (RHO = 0.83). Substantial or moderate reliability was observed for measures of LV systolic function and diastolic filling (RHO from 0.71 to 0.57). CONCLUSIONS Left ventricular mass had high reliability and little regression to the mean; between-study LV mass change of +/-35 g or +/-17 g had > or = 95% or > or = 80% likelihood of being true change.


Circulation | 2001

Effect of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus on Left Ventricular Geometry and Systolic Function in Hypertensive Subjects Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network (HyperGEN) Study

Vittorio Palmieri; Jonathan N. Bella; Donna K. Arnett; Jennifer E. Liu; Albert Oberman; Min Yan Schuck; Dalane W. Kitzman; Paul N. Hopkins; Derek Morgan; D. C. Rao; Richard B. Devereux

Background—Type 2 diabetes is a cardiovascular risk factor. It remains to be elucidated in a large, population-based sample whether diabetes is associated with changes in left ventricular (LV) structure and systolic function independent of obesity and systolic blood pressure (BP). Methods and Results—Among 1950 hypertensive participants in the HyperGEN Study without overt coronary heart disease or significant valve disease, 20% (n=386) had diabetes. Diabetics were more likely to be women, black, older, and have higher BMI and waist/hip ratio than were nondiabetics. After adjustment for age and sex, diabetics had higher systolic BP, pulse pressure, and heart rate; lower diastolic BP; and longer duration of hypertension than nondiabetics. LV mass and relative wall thickness were higher in diabetic than nondiabetic subjects independent of covariates. Compared with nondiabetic hypertensives, diabetics had lower stress-corrected midwall shortening, independent of covariates, without difference in LV EF. Insulin levels and insulin resistance were higher in non–insulin-treated diabetics (n=195) than nondiabetic (n=1439) subjects (both P <0.01). Insulin resistance positively but weakly related to LV mass and relative wall thickness. Conclusions—In a relatively healthy, population-based sample of hypertensive adults, type 2 diabetes was associated with higher LV mass, more concentric LV geometry, and lower myocardial function, independent of age, sex, body size, and arterial BP.


Hypertension | 2000

Impact of Different Partition Values on Prevalences of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy and Concentric Geometry in a Large Hypertensive Population: The LIFE Study

Kristian Wachtell; Jonathan N. Bella; Philip R. Liebson; Eva Gerdts; Björn Dahlöf; Tapio Aalto; Mary J. Roman; Vasilios Papademetriou; Hans Ibsen; Jens Rokkedal; Richard B. Devereux

Left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and concentric remodeling have been defined by using a variety of indexation methods and partition values (PVs) for LV mass and relative wall thickness (RWT). The effects of these methods on the distribution of LV geometric patterns in hypertensive subjects remain unclear. Echocardiograms were obtained in 941 patients with stage I to III hypertension and LV hypertrophy by ECG. LV mass was calculated by using different methods of indexation for body size and different PVs to identify hypertrophy: LV mass/body surface area (g/m(2)) PV for men/women 116/104, 125/110, or 125/125; LV mass/height (g/m) PV 143/102 or 126/105; and LV mass/height(2.7) (g/m(2.7)) PV 51/51 or 49.2/46.7. RWT was calculated by either 2xend-diastolic posterior wall thickness (PWT)/end-diastolic LV internal dimension (LVID) or end-diastolic interventricular septum dimension+end-diastolic PWT/end-diastolic LVID. LV hypertrophy or remodeling was present in 63% to 86% of subjects, and LV hypertrophy was present in 42% to 77%. By any index, eccentric hypertrophy was the common LV geometric pattern. Use of interventricular septum dimension+PWT/LVID to calculate RWT slightly increased the prevalence of normal geometry and eccentric hypertrophy compared with the use of 2xPWT/LVID. Subjects with LV hypertrophy identified by only LV mass/height(2.7) PV 49.2/46.7 were more obese, whereas those identified by only LV mass/body surface area PV 116/104 were taller and thinner than those in the 2 concordant groups with or without LV hypertrophy by both criteria. By either criterion, there were no significant differences between different LV geometric patterns in clinical cardiovascular disease. Hypertensive patients with LV hypertrophy by ECG have a high prevalence of geometric abnormalities, especially eccentric hypertrophy, irrespective of method of indexation or PV. LV mass indexation by body surface area or height(2.7) identifies lean and obese subjects, respectively. We found no difference in prevalent cardiovascular disease in subjects identified by either criterion, suggesting a similar high risk.


Circulation | 1998

Relations of Left Ventricular Mass to Fat-Free and Adipose Body Mass The Strong Heart Study

Jonathan N. Bella; Richard B. Devereux; Mary J. Roman; Michael J. O'Grady; Thomas K. Welty; E. T. Lee; Richard R. Fabsitz; Barbara V. Howard

BACKGROUND It is unclear whether increased left ventricular (LV) mass in overweight individuals is related to their adiposity or to greater fat-free mass (FFM). METHODS AND RESULTS We compared echocardiographic LV mass to FFM and adipose body mass by bioelectric impedance and to anthropometric measurements in 3107 American Indian participants in the Strong Heart Study. In men and women, the relations of LV mass and FFM (r=0.37 and 0.38, P<0.001) were closer (P<0.05 to <0.001) than they were with adipose mass, waist/hip ratio, body mass index, systolic blood pressure, height, or height2.7. Regression analyses showed that in men LV mass had the strongest independent relation with FFM, followed by systolic blood pressure and age (all P<0.001); in women, LV mass was related to FFM more strongly than it was to systolic blood pressure, age (all P<0. 001), and diabetes (P=0.012). Adipose mass had no independent relation to LV mass. When waist/hip ratio or body mass index were substituted for adipose mass, LV mass was independently related to FFM (P<0.001) and body mass index (P=0.02) but not to waist/hip ratio in men and was independently related to FFM and waist/hip ratio (both P<0.001) but not to body mass index in women. Using 97.5 percentile gender-specific partitions for LV mass/FFM in reference individuals, we found that LV hypertrophy occurred in 20.8% of Strong Heart Study participants with hypertension, overweight, or diabetes compared with 10.5% and 16.7% by LV mass indexed for body surface area or height2.7. CONCLUSIONS LV mass is more strongly related to FFM than to adipose mass, waist/hip ratio, body mass index, or height-based surrogates for lean body weight; LV mass/FFM criteria may increase sensitivity to detect LV hypertrophy.


Hypertension | 2004

Differences in Left Ventricular Structure Between Black and White Hypertensive Adults The Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network Study

Jorge R. Kizer; Donna K. Arnett; Jonathan N. Bella; Mary Paranicas; D. C. Rao; Michael A. Province; Albert Oberman; Dalane W. Kitzman; Paul N. Hopkins; Jennifer E. Liu; Richard B. Devereux

The degree to which ethnic differences in left ventricular structure among hypertensive adults are independent of clinical and hemodynamic factors remains uncertain. We assessed whether left ventricular mass and geometry differ between black and white hypertensives after accounting for differences in such factors. Our study group comprised 1060 black and 580 white hypertensive participants free of valvular or coronary disease in a population-based cohort. Blood pressure was measured during a clinic visit and echocardiography was performed using standardized protocols. After controlling for clinical and hemodynamic parameters (cardiac index, peripheral resistance index, and pulse pressure/ stroke index), both left ventricular mass and relative wall thickness were higher in blacks than whites (173.9±30.9 versus 168.3±24.3 grams, P =0.006, and 0.355±0.055 versus 0.340±0.055 grams, P <0.001). Similarly, the adjusted risk of having left ventricular hypertrophy, whether indexed by height2.7 or by body surface area, was greater for blacks than for whites (odds ratio: 1.80; 95% CI: 1.29 to 2.51; and odds ratio: 2.50; 95% CI: 1.58 to 3.96, respectively), and this was also true for concentric geometry (odds ratio: 2.28; 95% CI: 1.22 to 4.25). Further adjustment for relatedness in this genetic epidemiological study did not attenuate these differences. Our findings confirm the strong association between black ethnicity and increased left ventricular mass and relative wall thickness in hypertensive adults and demonstrate that these differences are independent of standard clinical and hemodynamic parameters. Whether such differences relate to distinct ambulatory pressure profiles or an ethnic propensity to cardiac hypertrophy requires further investigation.


Circulation | 2002

Change in diastolic left ventricular filling after one year of antihypertensive treatment: The Losartan Intervention For Endpoint Reduction in Hypertension (LIFE) Study.

Kristian Wachtell; Jonathan N. Bella; Jens Rokkedal; Vittorio Palmieri; Vasilios Papademetriou; Björn Dahlöf; Tapio Aalto; Eva Gerdts; Richard B. Devereux

Background—It is well established that hypertensive patients with left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy have impaired diastolic filling. However, the impact of antihypertensive treatment and LV mass reduction on LV diastolic filling remains unclear. Methods and Results—Echocardiograms were recorded in 728 hypertensive patients with ECG-verified LV hypertrophy (Cornell voltage-duration or Sokolow-Lyon) at baseline and after 1 year of blinded treatment with either losartan or atenolol-based regimen. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures (BP) were reduced on average 23/11 mm Hg; isovolumic relaxation time and E/A ratio became more normal, and LV inflow deceleration time prolonged (all P <0.001). Directionally opposite changes in isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT) and deceleration time indicate improvement in active LV relaxation and passive chamber stiffness during early diastole. Prevalences of normal LV filling increased, abnormal relaxation and pseudonormalization decreased, and restrictive filling pattern remained unchanged (P <0.05). Patients with reduction in LV mass had smaller left atrial diameter, shortened IVRT, increased E/A ratio, and prolonged LV inflow deceleration time (all P <0.001). Patients without LV mass reduction had no change in diastolic filling parameters (P =NS). IVRT shortening was independently associated with reduction in LV mass. Increase in E/A ratio was independently associated with reduction in diastolic BP, and increase in the deceleration time was independently associated with reduced end-systolic relative wall thickness. Conclusions—Antihypertensive therapy resulting in LV mass or relative wall thickness regression is associated with significant improvement of diastolic filling parameters related to active relaxation and passive chamber stiffness compared with patients without regression, independent of BP reduction; however, abnormalities of diastolic LV filling remain common.


Journal of Hypertension | 2002

Association of left ventricular hypertrophy with metabolic risk factors: the HyperGEN study.

Giovanni de Simone; Vittorio Palmieri; Jonathan N. Bella; Aldo Celentano; Yuling Hong; Albert Oberman; Dalane W. Kitzman; Paul N. Hopkins; Donna K. Arnett; Richard B. Devereux

Objective To determine whether combinations of metabolic risk factors (obesity, diabetes and hypercholesterolemia) influence the magnitude of left ventricular (LV) mass and prevalence of LV hypertrophy. Design Cross-sectional, relational. Methods A total of 1627 hypertensive (85.9% treated, 1036 women, 1041 African Americans) and 342 normotensive (180 women, 183 African Americans) participants in the Hyper tension G enetic E pidemiology N etwork (HyperGEN) Study, without prevalent cardiovascular disease, were studied. Echocardiographic LV mass, normalized by height2.7 or fat-free mass or body surface area (BSA) and the ratio of stroke volume to pulse pressure as a percentage of predicted (as a crude estimate of arterial compliance) were analyzed in relation to obesity [by body mass index (BMI)], central fat distribution (by waist circumference), diabetes (by ADA criteria) and hypercholesterolemia. Results Obesity, hypercholesterolemia, and diabetes were more frequent among hypertensives than normotensives (all P < 0.001). After controlling for age, sex, race and type and combination of antihypertensive medication, LV mass/height2.7, but not LV mass/fat-free mass and LV mass/BSA, increased with the number of metabolic risk factors, both in normotensive and hypertensive participants, also after further adjustment for blood pressure (all P < 0.001). Stroke volume/pulse pressure also decreased in hypertensive, but much less in normotensive subjects, with increasing number of metabolic risk factors, independently of relevant confounders (P < 0.0001). Prevalence of LV hypertrophy was predicted by older age, hypertension, central fat distribution, black race and independently increased with the number of associated metabolic risk factors (P < 0.0001). Conclusions The progressive addition of metabolic risk factors including central obesity, diabetes and hypercholesterolemia is associated with higher LV mass normalized by height2.7, independently of hypertension and other important biological covariates. Obesity played a major role in this association. This finding indicates that LV mass is a potentially useful bioassay of strategies of global cardiovascular prevention.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Separate and joint effects of systemic hypertension and diabetes mellitus on left ventricular structure and function in American Indians (the Strong Heart Study).

Jonathan N. Bella; Richard B. Devereux; Mary J. Roman; Vittorio Palmieri; Jennifer E. Liu; Mary Paranicas; Thomas K. Welty; Elisa T. Lee; Richard R. Fabsitz; Barbara V. Howard

Although the association of systemic hypertension (SH) with diabetes mellitus (DM) is well established, the cardiac features and hemodynamic profile of patients with SH and DM diagnosed by American Diabetes Association criteria have not been elucidated. To address this issue, echocardiograms were analyzed in 1,025 American Indian participants of the Strong Heart Study with neither DM nor SH, 642 with DM alone, 614 with SH alone, and 874 with SH and DM. In analyses that adjusted for age, gender, body mass index, and heart rate, DM and SH were associated with increased left ventricular (LV) wall thicknesses, with the greatest impact of DM on LV relative wall thickness and of the combination of DM and SH on LV mass (both p <0.001). LV fractional shortening was reduced with SH and SH + DM, midwall shortening was reduced with DM, SH, and their combination, and was reduced in both diabetic groups compared with their nondiabetic counterparts (p <0.001). DM alone was associated with lower measures of LV pump performance (stroke volume, cardiac output, and their indexes) than SH alone. Pulse pressure/stroke index, an indirect measure of arterial stiffness, was elevated in participants with DM or SH alone and most in those with both conditions. There were progressive increases from the reference group to DM alone, SH alone, and DM + SH with regard to prevalences of LV hypertrophy (12% to 19%, 29% and 38%) and subnormal LV myocardial function (7% to 10%, 11% and 18%, both p <0.001). In conclusion, DM and SH each have adverse effects on LV geometry and function, and the combination of SH and DM results in the greatest degree of LV hypertrophy, myocardial dysfunction, and arterial stiffness.


Blood Pressure | 2001

Echocardiographic left ventricular geometry in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy: The LIFE Study.

Richard B. Devereux; Jonathan N. Bella; Kurt Boman; Eva Gerdts; Markku S. Nieminen; Jens Rokkedal; Vasilios Papademetriou; Kristian Wachtell; Jackson Wright; Mary Paranicas; Peter M. Okin; Mary J. Roman; Gunnar Smith; Bjorn Dahlof

Aim: To assess the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and concentric remodeling in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic (ECG)-LVH and to estimate the costeffectiveness of echocardiography and ECG for detection of LVH.Design: Echocardiographic LV measurements and the prevalence of abnormal LV geometric patterns were compared between 964 hypertensive patients with ECG-LVH (Cornell voltage-duration product > 2440 and/or SV1

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Richard B. Devereux

NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital

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Jennifer E. Liu

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Björn Dahlöf

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

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Albert Oberman

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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