Literature DB >> 20483890

Ventricular hypertrophy and cavity dilatation in relation to body mass index in women with uncomplicated obesity.

Oliver J Rider1, Steffen E Petersen, Jane M Francis, Mohammed K Ali, Lucy E Hudsmith, Monique R Robinson, Kieran Clarke, Stefan Neubauer.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The traditionally accepted mechanism for ventricular adaptation to obesity suggests that cavity dilatation in response to increased blood volume and elevated filling pressure results in ventricular hypertrophy as a compensatory mechanism. Our hypothesis was that, instead, initiation of ventricular hypertrophy in obesity may be explained by changes in hormonal milieu and not by cavity dilatation. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: 88 female subjects without identifiable cardiovascular risk factors, covering a wide range of body mass indices (BMI), from normal (21.2 ± 1.6 kg/m(2)) to severely obese (45.0 ± 4.6 kg/m(2)), underwent cardiovascular MRI to determine left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) mass and volumes.
RESULTS: BMI correlated positively with LV and RV mass and end-diastolic volumes (EDV). However overweight is associated with a significant LV and RV hypertrophy (LV: 78 ± 11 g vs 103 ± 16 g, p<0.01; RV: 26 ± 7 g vs 40 ± 11 g, p<0.01) was observed in the absence of differences in LV and RV volumes (LV: EDV 119 ± 15 vs 121 ± 21 ml, p>0.99, RV: 131 ± 17 vs 130 ± 24 ml; p>0.99). Furthermore, significant increases of serum leptin occurred at this pre-obese stage (15.6 ± 19 vs 36.5 ± 22 ng/ml; p=0.013).
CONCLUSION: In a cohort of healthy female subjects with a wide range of BMIs, ventricular hypertrophy occurs without associated cavity dilatation in overweight individuals, while in manifest obesity, both cavity dilatation and ventricular hypertrophy occur. Elevated leptin levels may have a role in this effect on ventricular mass.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20483890     DOI: 10.1136/hrt.2009.185009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart        ISSN: 1355-6037            Impact factor:   5.994


  24 in total

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