1. Echocardiographic heart ageing patterns predict cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular events and reflect biological age: the SardiNIA study
- Author
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Ganau, Antonello, Orrù, Marco, Floris, Matteo, Saba, Pier Sergio, Loi, Federica, Sanna, Giuseppe D, Marongiu, Michele, Balaci, Lenuta, Curreli, Niccolò, Ferreli, Liana A P, Loi, Francesco, Masala, Marco, Parodi, Guido, Delitala, Alessandro P, Schlessinger, David, Lakatta, Edward, Fiorillo, Edoardo, and Cucca, Francesco
- Abstract
Age is the main risk factor for cardiovascular (CV) disease. Since people age and develop diseases at very different rates, biological age has been proposed as a more accurate measure of the body’s functional decline. This study aimed to investigate the ageing rates of the heart and to assess their impact on CV events. The phenotypic age of the heart was also estimated as a proxy for biological age. Associations of age with Doppler echocardiographic parameters were analysed in a subgroup of 2614 clinically healthy subjects, part of a larger cohort of 3817 adults of both sexes.Three patterns of slow, normal, and accelerated ageing rates of the heart were detected. They predicted both CV and non-CV events, with different and progressively increasing event rates from the slow to the accelerated pattern. Compared with chronological age, the phenotypic (biological) age of the heart was 9 years younger in the slow pattern, 4 years older in the accelerated pattern, and comparable in the normal pattern.A standard Doppler echocardiogram is therefore able to detect three distinct heart ageing patterns, which reflect different biological susceptibilities to age-dependent diseases and provide a new tool for personalizing timeliness and intensity of prevention.Graphical Abstract
- Published
- 2024
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