| Literature DB >> 31703697 |
Jonathan C L Rodrigues1,2,3, Matthew F R Jaring4, Melissa C Werndle4, Konstantina Mitrousi5, Stephen M Lyen4, Angus K Nightingale6, Mark C K Hamilton4, Stephanie L Curtis7, Nathan E Manghat4, Julian F R Paton5,6,8, Emma C Hart9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been estimated that 20-30% of repaired aortic coarctation (CoA) patients develop hypertension, with significant cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Vertebral artery hypoplasia (VAH) with an incomplete posterior circle of Willis (ipCoW; VAH + ipCoW) is associated with increased cerebrovascular resistance before the onset of increased sympathetic nerve activity in borderline hypertensive humans, suggesting brainstem hypoperfusion may evoke hypertension to maintain cerebral blood flow: the "selfish brain" hypothesis. We now assess the "selfish brain" in hypertension post-CoA repair.Entities:
Keywords: Circle of Willis; Coarctation; Hypertension; Vertebral artery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31703697 PMCID: PMC6839237 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-019-0578-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Flow chart demonstrating the study design. CoA = coarctation of the aorta, MRA = magnetic resonance angiography
Fig. 2Vertebral artery hypoplasia. Panels a to c show 3D MRA reconstructions of the Circle of Willis and vertebral arteries. a Normal symmetrical vertebral arteries (arrows). b Right vertebral artery hypoplasia (arrow). 4 mm aneurysm of the distal right middle cerebral artery (arrowhead). c Left vertebral artery hypoplasia (arrow). Note incidental hypoplasia of the pre-communicating left anterior cerebral artery
Fig. 3Variations of incomplete posterior Circle of Willis. Panels a to h show 3D MRA reconstructions of the Circle of Willis. PComm = posterior communicating artery; PCA = posterior cerebral artery. a Normal Circle of Willis. The PComms are indicated by arrows and precommunicating segment of the PCAs are marked by arrowheads. b Unilateral left PComm (arrow) and absent contralateral PComm (asterisk). c Bilateral absent PComms (asterisks). d Unilateral right foetal type PCA and severely hypoplastic ipsilateral precommunicating segment of the PCA (arrowhead). e Unilateral right foetal type PCA (arrow) and absent contralateral PComm (asterisk). f Unilateral left foetal type PCA (arrow), incomplete precommunicating segment of the left PCA (arrowhead) and absent right PComm (asterisk). g Bilateral foetal type PCAs with absent precommunicating segments of the posterior cerebral arteries (asterisks). h Bilateral foetal type PCAs (arrows) with absent precommunicating segment of right PCA (arrowhead)
Baseline demographics and cerebrovascular variant prevalence
| Healthy Controls | Coarctation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic data | |||
| Age (years) | 42 ± 14 | 34 ± 14 | = 0.002 |
| Male gender n [%] | 16 [48] | 77 [61] | = 0.24 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 24 ± 3 | 25 ± 5 | = 0.23 |
| Office SBP (mmHg) | 124 ± 10 | 138 ± 19 | < 0.0001 |
| Office DBP (mmHg) | 76 ± 8 | 76 ± 11 | =0.94 |
| Vertebral artery and Circle of Willis data | |||
| VAH n [%] | 8 [24] | 57 [45] | = 0.046 |
| ipCoW n [%] | 19 [58] | 79 [62] | = 0.69 |
| VAH + incomplete pCoW n [%] | 3 [9] | 46 [36] | = 0.003 |
BMI body mass index, DBP diastolic blood pressure, ipCoW incomplete Circle of Willis, CoW SBP systolic blood pressure, SBP systolic blood pressure, VAH vertebral artery hypoplasia
Subgroup analysis of repaired CoA subject with and without VAH + ipCoW
| Repaired coarctation patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| No VAH + ipCoW | VAH + ipCoW | ||
| Demographic data | |||
| Age (years) | 33 ± 14 | 35 ± 12 | = 0.32 |
| Male gender n [%] | 46 [57] | 31 [67] | = 0.26 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 25 ± 5 | 26 ± 5 | = 0.13 |
| Blood pressure data | |||
| Office SBP (mmHg) | 134 ± 18 | 145 ± 20 | < 0.003 |
| Office DBP (mmHg) | 75 ± 10 | 77 ± 11 | = 0.17 |
| Uncontrolled HTNa n [%] | 5 [6] | 8 [18] | = 0.064 |
| On anti-HTN Rx n [%] | 27 [33] | 25 [54] | = 0.025 |
| ACEi /ARB n [%] | 41 [50] | 29 [64] | = 0.31 |
| CCB n [%] | 16 [20] | 12 [26] | = 0.74 |
| Beta-blocker n [%] | 36 [44] | 19 [42] | = 0.99 |
| Other congenital heart defects | |||
| Bicuspid aortic valve n [%] | 66 [81] | 28 [61] | = 0.14 |
| Ventriculoseptal defect | 13 [16] | 4 [9] | = 0.30 |
| Coarctation repair datab | |||
| Age at repair (years) | 5 (0–39) | 7 (0–59) | = 0.41 |
| End to End repair n [%] | 29 [47] | 19 [51] | = 0.68 |
| Subclavian flap n [%] | 14 [23] | 6 [16] | = 0.61 |
| Patch repair n [%] | 8 [13] | 7 [19] | = 0.56 |
| Angioplastyc n [%] | 11 [18] | 5 [14] | = 0.78 |
| Recoarctation n [%] | 43 [52] | 19 [41] | = 0.35 |
ACEi angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, ARB angiotensin receptor blocker, CCB calcium channel blocker, HTN hypertension
a Uncontrolled hypertension definition: office BP > 140/90 mmHg despite at least 2 anti-hypertensive medications
b Repair data = median (range), total n = 99, no VAH + iCoW n = 62, VAH + iCoW n = 37
c Angioplasty is pooled balloon and stent angioplasty subgroups
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression for determinants of VAH + ipCoW in repaired CoA
| Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |||
| Age at time of repair (years) | 1.03 (0.99–1.07) | = 0.08 | 1.03 (0.99–1.07) | = 0.12 |
| Male gender | 2.15 (0.91–5.08) | = 0.08 | 2.46 (0.98–6.18) | = 0.06 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 1.06 (0.98–1.14) | = 0.15 | 1.06 (0.98–1.15) | = 0.15 |
| End to End repair | 1.11 (0.49–2.50) | = 0.80 | … | |
| Subclavian flap repair | 0.68 (0.24–1.95) | = 0.47 | … | |
| Patch repair | 1.60 (0.53–4.86) | = 0.40 | … | |
| Balloon / Stent angioplasty | 0.74 (0.24–2.32) | = 0.60 | … | |
| Recoarctation | 1.34 (0.66–2.70) | = 0.42 | … | |
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval
Fig. 4Examples of CoA repair. a Oblique sagittal maximum intensity projection reconstruction of MRA performed for a patient who underwent end-to-end anastomotic CoA repair. A mild fold is demonstrated at the CoA repair site at the aortic isthmus (arrow). b Oblique sagittal maximum intensity projection reconstruction CT angiogram for patient with subclavian flap CoA repair. There is absence of the proximal left subclavian artery with mild narrowing at the site of coarctation repair in the distal arch (arrow). Note normal variant conjoint origin of the right brachiocephalic and left common carotid artery (asterisk). c 3D reconstruction MRA in a patient who underwent patch repair of significant CoA. The white arrow indicates a pseudoaneurysm in the proximal descending aorta, which developed at the site of repair. d Fluoroscopic images of CoA stent procedure. Left panel shows CoA in the proximal descending aorta (black arrow). Right panel shows successful stent implantation with improved patency of the proximal descending aorta (white arrow)