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Aortic stiffness is independently associated with interstitial myocardial fibrosis by native T1 and accelerated in the presence of chronic kidney disease

Authors :
Mengzhen Chen
Luca Arcari
Juergen Engel
Tilo Freiwald
Steffen Platschek
Hui Zhou
Hafisyatul Zainal
Stefan Buettner
Andreas M. Zeiher
Helmut Geiger
Ingeborg Hauser
Eike Nagel
Valentina O. Puntmann
Source :
International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature, Vol 24, Iss , Pp - (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Background: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have considerable cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Aortic stiffness is an independent predictor of cardiovascular risk and related to left ventricular remodeling and heart failure. Myocardial fibrosis is the pathophysiological hallmark of the failing heart. Methods and results: An observational study of consecutive CKD patients (n = 276) undergoing comprehensive clinical cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. The relationship between aortic stiffness, myocardial fibrosis, left ventricular remodeling and the severity of chronic kidney disease was examined. Compared to age-gender matched controls with no known kidney disease (n = 242), CKD patients had considerably higher myocardial native T1 and central aortic PWV (p ≪ 0.001), as well as abnormal diastolic relaxation by E/e′ (mean) by echocardiography (p ≪ 0.01). A third of all patients had LGE, with similar proportions for the presence and the (ischaemic and non-ischaemic) pattern between the groups. PWV was strongly associated with and age, NT-proBNP and native T1 in both groups, but not with LGE presence or type; the associations were amplified in severe CKD stages. In multivariate analyses, PWV was independently associated with native T1 in both groups (p ≪ 0.01) with near two-fold increase in adjusted R2 in the presence of CKD (native T1 (10 ms) R2, B(95%CI) CKD vs. non-CKD 0.28, 0.2(0.15–0.25) vs. 0.18, 0.1(0.06–0.15), p ≪ 0.01). Conclusions: Aortic stiffness and interstitial myocardial fibrosis are interrelated; this association is accelerated in the presence of CKD, but independent of LGE. Our findings reiterate the significant contribution of CKD-related factors to the pathophysiology of cardiovascular remodeling. Keywords: Aortic stiffness, Chronic kidney disease, Native T1 mapping

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23529067
Volume :
24
Issue :
-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5eb19bc1fd424e3fb17b0c783ee71b19
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcha.2019.100389