| Literature DB >> 27104526 |
Cristiane A Villela-Nogueira1, Nathalie C Leite2, Claudia R L Cardoso3, Gil F Salles4.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the leading cause of chronic liver diseases worldwide. Liver inflammation and fibrosis related to NAFLD contribute to disease progression and increasing liver-related mortality and morbidity. Increasing data suggest that NAFLD may be linked to atherosclerotic vascular disease independent of other established cardiovascular risk factors. Central arterial stiffness has been recognized as a measure of cumulative cardiovascular risk marker load, and the measure of carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV) is regarded as the gold standard assessment of aortic stiffness. It has been shown that increased aortic stiffness predicts cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in several clinical settings, including type 2 diabetes mellitus, a well-known condition associated with advanced stages of NAFLD. Furthermore, recently-published studies reported a strong association between NAFLD and increased arterial stiffness, suggesting a possible link in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and NAFLD. We sought to review the published data on the associations between NAFLD and aortic stiffness, in order to better understand the interplay between these two conditions and identify possible common physiopathological mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: arterial stiffness; liver fibrosis; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; pulse wave velocity; steatohepatitis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27104526 PMCID: PMC4848916 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17040460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Studies evaluating associations between non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and arterial stiffness.
| Author, Year | Number of Participants and Methods of Liver Investigation | Study Design | Aims | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shiotani | 353 young university Japanese adults, submitted to abdominal ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate the validity of noninvasive ba-PWV measurements in overweight young adults. | ba-PWV was increased in males with NAFLD and might conceivably be useful to predict NAFLD. |
| Salvi | 220 participants (123 women), aged between 30 and 70 years, from the Cardio-gambettola observatory liver steatosis estimation (GOOSE) study, submitted to abdominal ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate the relationship between metabolic syndrome, NAFLD and subclinical vascular disease, evaluated by carotid IMT and cf-PWV. | A possible independent role of NAFLD in determining arterial stiffness. |
| Vlachopoulos | 23 biopsy-proven NAFLD patients and 28 matched controls. | Transversal | To investigate associations between NAFLD and functional arterial changes and early atherosclerosis. | NAFLD was associated with endothelial dysfunction and aortic stiffness (cf-PWV). |
| Kim | 4467 patients submitted to abdominal ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate the association of NAFLD and ba-PWV in patients with and without metabolic syndrome. | NAFLD was independently associated with increased ba-PWV, irrespective of multiple covariates, only in patients without metabolic syndrome. |
| Huang | 8632 Chinese from a population-based sample; NAFLD detected by ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate associations between NAFLD and early atherosclerosis (carotid IMT and ba-PWV). | NAFLD was associated with increased carotid IMT and ba-PWV, independent of traditional CV risk factors and metabolic syndrome. |
| Lee | 1442 healthy adults; NAFLD detected by ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate association between NAFLD and arterial stiffness (ba-PWV). | Arterial stiffness was associated with NAFD, independent of classical CV risk factors. |
| Huang | 964 adolescents (17-year-olds) from an Australian birth cohort, submitted to abdominal ultrasound. | Transversal | To examine if NAFLD was associated with aortic PWV, independent of cardiometabolic factors. | Aortic PWV was related to the presence of NAFLD that was predicated by the presence of an adverse metabolic profile in adolescents. |
| Sunbul | 100 patients with biopsy-proven NAFLD and 50 age- and sex-matched controls. | Transversal | To examine the relationship between aortic PWV and AIx, the histological severity of NAFLD and epicardial fat thickness (EFT). | Patients with NAFLD have an increased arterial stiffness, which reflects both the severity of liver fibrosis and increased EFT values. |
| Omelchenko | 52 NAFLD patients detected by ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate associations between adiponectin levels and arterial stiffness parameters (cf-PWV and AIx). | Adiponectin remained a significant predictor of PWV, even after controlling for age and gender, suggesting an active role of adiponectin in the pathophysiology of vascular disease in NAFLD patients. |
| Yu | 1296 non-obese, non-hypertensive, non-diabetic adults, NAFLD by ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate then association between NAFLD and arterial stiffness (ba-PWV). | NAFLD was associated with ba-PWV in Chinese individuals without obesity, hypertension and diabetes. |
| Chen | 2550 participants with ultrasound-confirmed NAFLD from a community-based sample. | Transversal | To evaluate whether advanced fibrosis assessed by NAFLD fibrosis score was associated with subclinical atherosclerosis in NAFLD patients. | Advanced fibrosis was associated with carotid intima media thickness, the presence of carotid plaques and arterial stiffness, independent of cardiometabolic risk factors and insulin resistance. |
| Chou | 4860 non-diabetic, pre-diabetic and newly-diagnosed T2DM individuals, evaluated by abdominal ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate PWV in patients with NAFLD. | The effect of NAFLD on arterial stiffness was apparent only in subjects with normal glucose tolerance. |
| Ozturk | 61 biopsy-proven NAFLD patients and 41 controls without NAFLD; adult male patients between 20 and 40 years of age. | Transversal | To evaluate the relationship between NAFLD and subclinical atherosclerosis and to investigate the associations according to the presence or absence of metabolic syndrome. | The presence of NAFLD was associated with endothelial dysfunction and atherosclerosis, independent of metabolic syndrome. |
| Chung | 2954 healthy individuals; NAFLD detected by ultrasound. | Transversal | To evaluate the association between NAFLD and arterial stiffness (cardio-ankle vascular index). | NAFLD was associated with increased arterial stiffness, independent of cardio-metabolic risk factors. |
| Li | 728 men and 497 women without hypertension and diabetes; NAFLD detected by ultrasound. | Longitudinal | To evaluate the relationship between the presence of NAFLD at baseline and progression of arterial stiffness (ba-PWV) during follow-up (5 years). | Patients with NAFLD had a faster progression of arterial stiffness, independent of other CV risk factors. |
| Leite | 291 T2DM patients; NAFLD by abdominal ultrasound or liver biopsy. | Longitudinal | To evaluate the association between progressions of aortic PWV (7 years of follow-up) with advanced liver fibrosis identified by transient elastography. | High or increasing aortic stiffness predicted the development of advanced liver fibrosis on transient elastography. |
Abbreviations: T2DM, type-2 diabetes mellitus; NAFLD, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; cf-PWV, carotid-femoral pulse-wave velocity; ba-PWV, brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity; AIx, arterial augmentation index; IMT, intima media thickness.