Bővebb ismertető
Preface
Understanding the mechanisms involved in patho-
physiological processes may not always lead imme-
diately to direct therapeutic benefit and often the
desire to investigate is triggered as much by curios-
ity as benevolent goals. Research in the field of left
ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a very good
example of how careful, patient and persistent
work can transform our understanding of a condi-
tion and galvanise efforts to develop more effective
treatments for it. Epidemiological research
unmasked the adverse prognosis of LVH in man
and thereby initiated a raft of experimental and
clinical investigations into its causes, consequences
and treatment. Recognition of the proarrhythmic
effects of hypertrophy prompted studies of the
underlying electrophysiological mechanisms as did
the transition to heart failure in many patients lead
to a better understanding of the associated contrac-
tile dysfunction. The occurrence of myocardial
ischaemia in the abscence of epicardial coronary
disease is something of a conundrum to cardiolo-
gists who deal with the current epidemic of athero-
matous disease; however the underlying mecha-
nisms for this are now well understood in cardiac
hypertrophy. The molecular triggers, signals and
messengers involved in the hypertrophic process
have important links to normal growth and devel-
opment and have attracted intense interest in
recent years. Recognition of hypertrophic car-
diomyopathy as a genetic disease was a major
advance as is the evolving understanding of the
role of genetic factors in determining the hyper-
trophic response to hypertension. Regression of
LVH is now recognised as an important and
achievable therapeutic objective and this seemed
an appropriate time to bring together a group of
workers involved in all aspects of research in this
field from epidemiology to molecular genetics to
document their experience in a book. The aim has
been to provide an account of the multi-discipli-
nary advances in understanding LVH which have
been achieved in the past two decades.
Research is an ongoing process to extend the
boundaries of knowledge, often fuelled by ques-
tions arising from past experiments. The aim here
is to inform, but also to engage the reader in the
research process and thereby to generate questions
which may influence future research.
DJS
July 1998