| Literature DB >> 25907665 |
Claudia R Morris1, Hae-Young Kim2, Elizabeth S Klings3, John Wood4, John B Porter5, Felicia Trachtenberg2, Nancy Sweeters6, Nancy F Olivieri7, Janet L Kwiatkowski8, Lisa Virzi2, Kathryn Hassell9, Ali Taher10, Ellis J Neufeld11, Alexis A Thompson12, Sandra Larkin13, Jung H Suh13, Elliott P Vichinsky6, Frans A Kuypers13.
Abstract
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) commonly develops in thalassaemia syndromes, but is poorly characterized. The goal of this study was to provide a comprehensive description of the cardiopulmonary and biological profile of patients with thalassaemia at risk for PH. A case-control study of thalassaemia patients at high versus low PH-risk was performed. A single cross-sectional measurement for variables reflecting cardiopulmonary status and biological pathophysiology were obtained, including Doppler-echocardiography, 6-min-walk-test, Borg Dyspnoea Score, New York Heart Association functional class, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), chest-computerized tomography, pulmonary function testing and laboratory analyses targeting mechanisms of coagulation, inflammation, haemolysis, adhesion and the arginine-nitric oxide pathway. Twenty-seven thalassaemia patients were evaluated, 14 with an elevated tricuspid-regurgitant-jet-velocity (TRV) ≥ 2·5 m/s. Patients with increased TRV had a higher frequency of splenectomy, and significantly larger right atrial size, left atrial volume and left septal-wall thickness on echocardiography and/or MRI, with elevated biomarkers of abnormal coagulation, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels and arginase concentration, and lower arginine-bioavailability compared to low-risk patients. Arginase concentration correlated significantly to several echocardiography/MRI parameters of cardiovascular function in addition to global-arginine-bioavailability and biomarkers of haemolytic rate, including LDH, haemoglobin and bilirubin. Thalassaemia patients with a TRV ≥ 2·5 m/s have additional echocardiography and cardiac-MRI parameters suggestive of right and left-sided cardiac dysfunction. In addition, low arginine bioavailability may contribute to cardiopulmonary dysfunction in β-thalassaemia.Entities:
Keywords: arginase; global arginine bioavailability ratio; haemolysis; pulmonary hypertension; β-thalassaemia
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25907665 PMCID: PMC4452408 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.13452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998