| Literature DB >> 26273598 |
Enea Bonci1, Claudio Chiesa2, Paolo Versacci3, Caterina Anania3, Lucia Silvestri3, Lucia Pacifico3.
Abstract
In the last 20 years, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the leading cause of chronic liver disease worldwide, primarily as a result of the epidemic of obesity. NAFLD is strongly associated with insulin resistance, glucose intolerance, and dyslipidemia and is currently regarded as the liver manifestation of the metabolic syndrome, a highly atherogenic condition even at a very early age. Patients with NAFLD including pediatric subjects have a higher prevalence of subclinical atherosclerosis, as shown by impaired flow-mediated vasodilation, increased carotid artery intima-media thickness, and arterial stiffness, which are independent of obesity and other established risk factors. More recent work has identified NAFLD as a risk factor not only for premature coronary heart disease and cardiovascular events, but also for early subclinical abnormalities in myocardial structure and function. Thus, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to test the hypothesis that NAFLD is associated with evidence of subclinical cardiac structural and functional abnormalities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26273598 PMCID: PMC4529899 DOI: 10.1155/2015/213737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Schematic flow chart for the selection of studies.
Figure 2Forest plots show the comparison of LV mass indexed to BSA between NAFLD patients and NO NAFLD subjects.
Figure 3Forest plots show the comparison of early mitral velocity (E)/late mitral velocity (A) ratio between NAFLD patients and NO NAFLD subjects.
Figure 4Forest plots show the comparison of E/early diastolic tissue velocity (e′) ratio between NAFLD patients and NO NAFLD subjects.
Figure 5Forest plots show the comparison of LV mass indexed to height2.7 between NAFLD and NO NAFLD obese children and adolescents (a) and between obese children with NAFLD and healthy lean subjects (b).
Figure 6Forest plots show the comparison of early mitral velocity (E)/late mitral velocity (A) ratio between NAFLD and NO NAFLD obese children and adolescents.
Figure 7Forest plots show the comparison of E/early diastolic tissue velocity (e′) ratio between NAFLD and NO NAFLD obese children and adolescents.
| Author/ | Study design, population, and sample size | Diagnosis | Outcomes | Main results | Comment | NOS score |
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Goland et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound and liver biopsy in a subgroup of 11 NAFLD patients. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography; pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Patients with NAFLD had mild changes in cardiac geometry (thickening of the interventricular septum and posterior wall and increased LV mass) as well as significant differences in parameters of diastolic function compared with the control group. | All data were adjusted for BMI. | 7 |
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| Fallo et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed Doppler echocardiography). | NAFLD patients had similar prevalence of LV hypertrophy compared to subjects without NAFLD, but a higher prevalence of LV diastolic dysfunction. | Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that HOMA-IR and diastolic dysfunction remained independently associated with NAFLD. | 7 |
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| Fotbolcu et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Patients with NAFLD had changes in cardiac geometry (thickening of the interventricular septum and posterior wall and increased LV mass) as well as significant differences in parameters of systolic and diastolic function compared with the control group. | No correlation was found between BMI and waist circumference and | 7 |
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| Bonapace et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | T2DM patients with fatty liver showed LV diastolic dysfunction, even if the LV morphology and systolic function were preserved. | LV dysfunction remained significant after adjustment for hypertension and other cardiometabolic risk factors. | 8 |
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| Karabay et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver biopsy. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography, pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography, and speckle tracking echocardiography). | Patients with NAFLD and its subgroups had changes in cardiac geometry (thickening of the interventricular septum and posterior wall and increased LV mass) as well as significant differences in parameters of diastolic function compared with the control group. | Speckle tracking echocardiography showed no differences in strain between subgroup patients (simple steatosis versus borderline NASH versus definite NASH). | 7 |
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| Kim et al./ | Population-based. | Liver computed tomography. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Compared with subjects with neither NAFLD nor MetS, those with both disorders showed the most significant differences in structural and functional LV parameters, such as LV mass index, transmitral Doppler indices, and systolic/diastolic TDI values. | In multivariate analyses, NAFLD and MetS were each significantly and independently associated with TDI | 7 |
T2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus; BMI: body mass index; HOMA-IR: homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; MetS: metabolic syndrome; NAFLD: nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; LV: left ventricular; NASH: nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; NOS: Newcastle-Ottawa Scale; TDI: tissue Doppler imaging.
| Authors/ | Study design, population, and sample size | Diagnosis | Outcomes | Main results | Comments | NOS score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alp et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound. | LV structure and function; epicardial fat (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Increased end-systolic thickness of the interventricular septum and larger LV mass, as well as LV systolic and diastolic dysfunction, were found in NAFLD group. In addition, obese children with NAFLD had increased epicardial fat thickness. | On logistic regression analysis including anthropometric and metabolic variables, total adipose tissue mass percentage and IVSs were the only independent parameters associated with liver steatosis. | 8 |
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| Sert et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Liver ultrasound and elevated serum alanine aminotransferase. | LV structure and function (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Obese adolescents with NAFLD exhibited increased LV dimensions and mass, as well as LV diastolic dysfunction. | 7 | |
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| Pacifico et al./ | Cross-sectional. | Hepatic magnetic resonance imaging and liver biopsy in a subgroup of 41 NAFLD patients (26 had definite NASH and 15 were not-NASH). | LV structure and function; epicardial fat (M-mode echocardiography and pulsed and tissue Doppler echocardiography). | Increased interventricular septum thickness at end-diastole and at end-systole, as well as LV systolic and diastolic dysfunction, was found in NAFLD group. Children with more severe liver histology had worse LV dysfunction than those with more mild liver changes. NAFLD group had also increased epicardial fat thickness. | Patients with definite NASH had significantly lower | 8 |
NAFLD: nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; LV: left ventricular; BMI: body mass index; NASH: nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; NOS: Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.