| Literature DB >> 20412468 |
Naylin Bissessor1, Luke Shanahan, Yong Shen Wee, Ralph Stewart, Boris Lowe, Andrew Kerr, Irene Zeng, Rohan Jayasinghe, Harvey White.
Abstract
N-terminal prohormone B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) is an important biomarker of prognosis in heart failure and single valve disease. There are limited studies of complex valve disease. Patients with complex valve disease adopt a sedentary lifestyle, so symptoms may be difficult to detect. The authors aimed to determine whether NT-proBNP correlates with the severity of the valve lesion and underlying cardiac function and whether resting NT-proBNP predicts impaired peak VO(2) in patients with complex valve disease. Forty-five patients with complex moderate to severe stenosis or regurgitation of the heart valves underwent a clinical assessment, echocardiography, resting NT-proBNP assessment, and formal cardiopulmonary exercise testing. In a multivariate analysis, the log NT-proBNP (beta=-9.3, SE=1.9, P<.0001) and lean body weight (beta=0.59, SE=0.22, P=.01) were dominant independent predictors of peak VO(2). An NT-proBNP value of 84 pmol/L had 77% sensitivity and 70% specificity to predict impaired functional capacity, peak VO(2) <60% (predicted), area under the curve=0.80. Resting NT-proBNP was the best predictor of peak VO(2) in patients with complex valve disease, while symptoms and ejection fraction are a less reliable guide.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20412468 DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-7133.2009.00132.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Congest Heart Fail ISSN: 1527-5299