Association of Hypoadiponectinemia With Coronary Artery Disease in Men

Author:

Kumada Masahiro1,Kihara Shinji1,Sumitsuji Satoru1,Kawamoto Toshiharu1,Matsumoto Satoru1,Ouchi Noriyuki1,Arita Yukio1,Okamoto Yoshihisa1,Shimomura Iichiro1,Hiraoka Hisatoyo1,Nakamura Tadashi1,Funahashi Tohru1,Matsuzawa Yuji1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Internal Medicine and Molecular Science (M.K., S.K., N.O., Y.A., Y.O., I.S., H.H., T.N., T.F., Y.M.), Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University; the Department of Cardiology (S.S.), Rinku General Medical Center; the Department of Cardiology (T.K.), National Hospital Kure Medical Center; and the Department of Cardiology (S.M.), Toyonaka Municipal Hospital, Osaka, Japan.

Abstract

Background— Adiponectin is an adipocyte-derived plasma protein that accumulates in the injured artery and has potential antiatherogenic properties. This study was designed to determine whether a decreased plasma adiponectin level (hypoadiponectinemia) can be independently associated with the prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods and Results— The consecutive 225 male patients were enrolled from inpatients who underwent coronary angiography. Voluntary blood donors (n=225) matched for age served as controls. Plasma adiponectin levels in the CAD patients were significantly lower than those in the control subjects. Multiple logistic regression analysis including plasma adiponectin level, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking habits, and body mass index revealed that hypoadiponectinemia was significantly and independently correlated with CAD ( P <0.0088). The entire study population was categorized in quartiles based on the distribution of plasma adiponectin levels. The interquartile cutoff points were 4.0, 5.5, and 7.0 μg/mL. The multivariate-adjusted odds ratios for CAD in the first, second, and third quartiles were 2.051 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.288 to 4.951), 1.221 (95% CI, 0.684 to2.186), and 0.749 (95%CI, 0.392 to 1.418), respectively. Conclusions— Male patients with hypoadiponectinemia (<4.0 μg/mL) had a significant 2-fold increase in CAD prevalence, independent of well-known CAD risk factors.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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