| Literature DB >> 30165747 |
Bogdan Ioan Coculescu1,2,3, Gabi Valeriu Dincă1, Constantin Bălăeţ3,4, Gheorghe Manole1,5, Maria Bălăeţ6, Cristina Mariana Stocheci7.
Abstract
The current study was conducted on a sample of 91 patients diagnosed with diastolic dysfunction (DD) with preserved systolic function caused by a painful chronic ischaemic cardiopathy - angina pectoris stable at the effort. The diagnosis was established following anamnesis, electrocardiogram, and echocardiography. Myeloperoxidase (MPO) serum levels were assessed in all patients and then these values were correlated with some of the echocardiography parameters that proved the mentioned diagnosis. In conclusion, the execution of this investigation triad (electrocardiogram, echocardiography, and MPO) allows: Stratifying the patients depending on the disease risk by early detecting of any possible DD with preserved systolic function. The use of the MPO increased circulating levels as a biomarker for diagnosis and risk due to the statistically significant correlation between those and the results of the other two aforementioned paraclinical investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Myeloperoxidase (MPO); diastolic dysfunction (DD); left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF); preserved systolic function (PRESYF); reactive oxygen species (ROS)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30165747 PMCID: PMC6127850 DOI: 10.1080/14756366.2018.1499626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem ISSN: 1475-6366 Impact factor: 5.051
Cardiac insufficiency (CI) biomarkers classification after the pathophysiological mechanism they are involved in .
| Category/axis of clinical importance | Enumeration of the approved biomarkers used in CI management |
|---|---|
| Myocytic stress (cardiac fibre stretch) | BNP, NT-proBNP, proadrenomeduline, sST2 |
| Neurohormonal activation | Norepinephrine, renin, angiotensin II, aldosterone, vasopressin |
| Myocytic injury | Troponin I and T, CK-MB |
| Inflammation | PCR, TNF, APO-1, Interleukin 1, 6, and 18 |
| Oxidative stress and vascular remodelling | Oxidised LDL, MPO, plasma and urinary isoprostanes, plasmatic malondialdehyde, serum uric acid |
| Extracellular matrix remodelling | Metalloproteinases, metalloproteinase tissue inhibitors, collagen propeptides |
| Renal injury | Creatinine, cystatin |
Main analysed echocardiography parameters and the standard values.
| Echographical parameter | Mentions related to the mode of determination | Normal values/unit of measurement/expression | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LA volume | ≤20 ml | |||
| LV volume | Telesystolic | 12–35 ml/m2 | ||
| Telediastolic | 35–75–90 ml/m2 | |||
| LV diameter | Telesystolic | 24–40 mm | ||
| Telediastolic | 35–75 mm | |||
| LA volume index | 30–35 ml/m2 | |||
| LV volume index | 76 ml/m2 | |||
| LA diameter | 28–44 mm | |||
| MAPSE | Indicator of LV longitudinal curtailment extent | normal ≥12 mm | ||
| TASPE | Systolic “excursion” of the tricuspid annular plane | ≥20 mm | ||
| Relatively thickness of | SIV | Formula: 2DDSIV/DDLV | Women: 6–11 mmMen: 6–12 mm | media: 9 mm |
| LVPP | Formula: 2DDPPS/DDPPS | |||
| LV mass | Formula Devereux R.B., modified | 175 ± 30 gram | ||
| LV mass index | LV mass to body surface ratio | Women 75–97 g/m2 | ||
| Men: 115 g/m2 | ||||
| Transmural flux | E wave speed | Maximum velocity of mitral flux in protodiastole | 50–100 cm/sec | |
| A wave speed | Maximum velocity of tardive diastolic filling | 20–60 cm/s | ||
| E/A ratio | Normal LV diastolic function (normal mitral flow) | 1–2 | ||
| Delayed relaxation mitral flux | ≤0.8 | |||
| E′ speed | Lateral ring | Normal LV diastolic function (normal mitral flow) | >10 cm/s | |
| Delayed relaxation mitral flux | ||||
| Septum ring | Normal LV diastolic function (normal mitral flow) | >15 cm/s | ||
| Delayed relaxation mitral flux | <7 cm/s | |||
| E/E′ ratio | Permits the identification of the pressure in pulmonary capillaries | ≤8; (ideal >10) | ||
| TRIV (LV isovolumetric relaxation time) | Normal LV diastolic function (normal mitral flow) | 70–90 ms | ||
| Delayed relaxation mitral flux | >90 ms | |||
| TDE (E wave deceleration time) | Normal LV diastolic function (normal mitral flow) | 160–240 ms | ||
| Delayed relaxation mitral flux | >240 ms | |||
LA: left atrial; MAPSE: mitral annular plane systolic excursion; SIV: interventricular septum; LVPP: LV posterior wall; DDSIV: diastolic diameter of the interventricular septum; DDPPLV: LV posterior wall in diastole; DDLV: LV diastolic diameter.
Figure 1.Average age of the patients from the research sample; comparison between the subsamples depending on sex.
Serum tests results of the patients analysed in the present research.
| Parameter | Reference values | Amount of patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unit | Domain (normal/pathologic) | Abs. val. | % | ||
| Hb | Men | g/dL | Normal: 14–17.5 | 56 | 68.5 |
| Women | Normal: 12–16 | 35 | 31.5 | ||
| Ht | Men | % mL | Normal: 40–48 | 56 | 68.5 |
| Women | Normal: 36–42 | 35 | 31.5 | ||
| ESR (1h) | mm | Normal: <20 | 91 | 100 | |
| Blood glucose | mg/dL | Normal: 73–110 | 91 | 100 | |
| Cholesterol | Total | mg/dL | Normal: <200 | 11 | 12.1 |
| mg/dL | Borderline: 200–240 | 16 | 17.6 | ||
| mg/dL | High risk: ≥240 | 64 | 70.3 | ||
| HDL | mg/dL | ≥40 | 11 | 12.1 | |
| Total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol | Low risk: 3.3–4.4 | 12 | 13.2 | ||
| Low risk: 4.4–7.1 | 31 | 34.0 | |||
| Moderate risk: 7.1–11 | 38 | 41.7 | |||
| High risk: ≥11.1 | 9 | 9.8 | |||
| LDL | mg/dL | Optimal: <100 | 7 | 7.7 | |
| mg/dL | Optimal to limit: <129 | 10 | 10.9 | ||
| mg/dL | Borderline:130–159 | 11 | 12.1 | ||
| mg/dL | High: 160–189 | 29 | 31.9 | ||
| mg/dL | Very high: ≥190 | 34 | 37.3 | ||
| Triglycerides | mg/dL | Normal: <150 | 10 | 10.9 | |
| mg/dL | Borderline: 150–199 | 18 | 19.8 | ||
| mg/dL | High: 200–499 | 49 | 53.8 | ||
| mg/dL | Very high: ≥500 | 14 | 15.4 | ||
| High-sensibility C reactive protein (hs CRP) | mg/L | Low risk: <1 | 17 | 18.3 | |
| mg/L | Medium risk: 1–2.9 | 46 | 50.6 | ||
| mg/L | High risk: ≥3 | 28 | 30.8 | ||
| Myeloperoxidase | U/mL | Negative level: <7 | 24 | 24.1 | |
| U/mL | Intermediate level: 7–10 | 29 | 31.6 | ||
| U/mL | Positive level >10 U | 38 | 41.5 | ||
| Liver alkaline iso-phosphatase (ALP) | U/L | Normal: 30–120 | 91 | 100 | |
| Glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT or AST) | U.I./L | Normal: 5–40 | 91 | 100 | |
| Glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT or ALT) | U.I/L | Normal: 7–56 | 91 | 100 | |
| Creatinine | mg/dL | Normal: <1.2 | 91 | 100 | |
Symptoms incidence and defining signs of DD in the study sample.
| Symptom presented | Incidence expressed in | |
|---|---|---|
| Absolute amount of cases | % | |
| No symptoms* | 21 | 23 |
| Dyspnoea at effort | 29 | 31.8 |
| Arterial hypotension at effort | 17 | 18.6 |
| Dyspnoea + hypotension (both at effort) | 24 | 27.1 |
*Patients had stable angina pectoris, but none of the symptoms that define DD.
NYHA classification of cardiac insufficiency .
| Class | Symptoms defining the class |
|---|---|
| No symptoms at effort | |
| No symptoms at resting state.Slightly limited physical activity; symptoms appear at greater levels of physical activity than usual (daily). | |
| Usual (low) physical activity induces symptoms.Symptoms disappear at resting state. | |
| Severe limitation in physical activity, symptoms appear even atresting state. |
Incidence of myocardial contractile deficit cases in the study, based on NYHA classification criteria.
| Class of contractile deficit | Incidence expressed in | |
|---|---|---|
| Absolute amount of cases | % | |
| I | 21 | 23 |
| II | 48 | 52.8 |
| III | 22 | 24.1 |