Associations of essential metals with the risk of aortic arch calcification: a cross‐sectional study in a mid‐aged and older population of Shenzhen, China

Author:

Mo Mingxing1,Yin Li1,Wang Tian23,Lv Ziquan3,Guo Yadi1,Shen Jiangang45,Zhang Huanji1,Liu Ning3,Wang Qiuling3,Huang Suli23,Huang Hui1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology Joint Laboratory of Guangdong‐Hong Kong‐Macao Universities for Nutritional Metabolism and Precise Prevention and Control of Major Chronic Diseases the Eighth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat‐sen University Shenzhen China

2. School of Public Health Shenzhen University Medical School Shenzhen University Shenzhen Guangdong China

3. Department of Central Laboratory Shenzhen Center for Disease control and Prevention Shenzhen China

4. School of Chinese Medicine Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

5. State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

Abstract

AbstractVascular calcification is a strong predictor of cardiovascular events. Essential metals play critical roles in maintaining human health. However, the association of essential metal levels with risk of aortic arch calcification (AoAC) remains unclear. We measured the plasma concentrations of nine essential metals in a cross‐sectional population and evaluated their individual and combined effects on AoAC risk using multiple statistical methods. We also explored the mediating role of fasting glucose. In the logistic regression model, higher quartiles of magnesium and copper were associated with the decreased AoAC risk, while higher quartile of manganese was associated with higher AoAC risk. The least absolute shrinkage and selection operator penalized regression analysis identified magnesium, manganese, calcium, cobalt, and copper as key metals associated with AoAC risk. The weighted quantile sum regression suggested a combined effect of metal mixture. A linear and positive dose–response relationship was found between manganese and AoAC in males. Moreover, blood glucose might mediate a proportion of 9.38% of the association between manganese exposure and AoAC risk. In summary, five essential metal levels were associated with AoAC and showed combined effect. Fasting glucose might play a significant role in mediating manganese exposure‐associated AoAC risk.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Wiley

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