Literature DB >> 19344538

Correlations of phenotype and genotype in relation to morphologic remodelling of the aortic root in patients with Turner's syndrome.

Daniela Prandstraller1, Laura Mazzanti, Alessandro Giardini, Luigi Lovato, Federica Tamburrino, Emanuela Scarano, Alessandro Cicognani, Rossella Fattori, Fernando M Picchio.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with Turner's syndrome are at risk of aortic dilation and dissection. Currently, it is not known whether such dilation is related to associated cardiovascular abnormalities, or to the genetic anomaly itself.
METHODS: We studied echocardiographically 107 patients with genetically proven Turner's syndrome, with heterogeneous underlying karyotypes, and without associated cardiac lesions. Their average age was 19.6 plus or minus 8.4 years. We compared the finding with those from 71 age-matched healthy female volunteers. The diameter of the aorta was measured at the level of the basal attachments of the aortic valvar leaflets, the sinuses of Valsalva, the sinutubular junction, and its ascending component.
RESULTS: Compared to control subjects, the patients with Turner's syndrome had larger diameters of the aorta at the level of the sinuses of Valsalva, at 23.4+/-4.8 versus 25.5+/-4.1 millimetres (p = 0.0014), the sinutubular junction, at 19.9+/-3.8 versus 23.3+/-4.1 millimetres (p < 0.0001), and the ascending aorta, at 22.3+/-4.9 versus 24.6+/-4.4 millimetres (p = 0.0011). Dilation of the sinutubular junction, found in just over one-quarter of the patients, was more common than dilation of the ascending aorta, the latter found in less than one-tenth. The patients with Turner's syndrome, therefore, presented with remodelling of the aortic root, with relative dilation of the sinutubular junction. The underlying karyotype influenced both the dimensions of the sinutubular junction (p = 0.0054), and the ascending aorta (p = 0.0064), so that patients with the karyotype 45X had larger aortas. The karyotype was the strongest predictor by multivariate analysis for dilation at both these sites (p = 0.0138 and 0.0085, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: Dilation at the sinutubular junction is frequent in patients with Turner's syndrome, and is more common than dilation of the ascending aorta. The syndrome is associated with a remodelling of the aortic root, with prominent dilation of the sinutubular junction. There seems to be a relation between aortic dilation and the underlying genotype.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19344538     DOI: 10.1017/S1047951109004016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiol Young        ISSN: 1047-9511            Impact factor:   1.093


  2 in total

1.  Cardiovascular pathology in males and females with 45,X/46,XY mosaicism.

Authors:  Katya De Groote; Martine Cools; Jean De Schepper; Margarita Craen; Inge François; Daniel Devos; Karlien Carbonez; Benedicte Eyskens; Daniel De Wolf
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-14       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Cardiac abnormalities in girls with Turner syndrome: ECG abnormalities, myocardial strain imaging, and karyotype-phenotype associations.

Authors:  Iris D Noordman; Zina Fejzic; Melanie Bos; Anthonie L Duijnhouwer; Gert Weijers; Marlies Kempers; Remy Merkx; Janiëlle A E M van der Velden; Livia Kapusta
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2021-05-10       Impact factor: 2.802

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.