Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine Medical University of South Carolina Charleston SC
2. Ralph H. Johnson Veterans Affairs Medical Center Charleston SC
3. Division of Epidemiology University of Utah School of Medicine Salt Lake City UT
4. Intermountain Health Corporation Salt Lake City UT
5. Department of Exercise Sciences Brigham Young University Provo UT
6. Rocky Mountain Associated Physicians Inc Salt Lake City UT
7. Division of Cardiology Augusta University Augusta GA
8. Department of Genetic Medicine Weill Cornell Medicine Doha Qatar
Abstract
Background
Progressive cardiac remodeling and worsening myocardial function over time have been proposed as potential mediators of heart failure in obesity.
Methods and Results
We serially assessed cardiac structure and function in 254 subjects participating in a longitudinal study of obesity. Demographic, clinical, laboratory, and echocardiographic features were determined at baseline and 2‐, 6‐, and 11‐year follow‐up. We measured body mass index (
BMI
) exposure as the area under the curve of the
BMI
at each of the 4 visits. At enrollment, mean age of the subjects was 47 years, 79% were women, mean
BMI
was 44 kg/m
2
, 26% had diabetes mellitus, 48% had hypertension, and 53% had hyperlipidemia. Between baseline and 11 years,
BMI
increased by 1.1 and 0.3 kg/m
2
in men and women, respectively. There were modest increases in left ventricular (
LV
) end‐diastolic volume,
LV
mass, and left atrial volume, and significant decreases in early/late mitral diastolic flow velocity ratio and E wave deceleration time. However, there were no significant changes in
LV
ejection fraction or ratio of early mitral diastolic flow velocity/early mitral annular velocity, whereas right ventricular fractional area change increased. Significant predictors of the change in
LV
mass were male sex, baseline
BMI
,
BMI
area under the curve, and change in
LV
stroke volume, but not smoking, hypertension, or diabetes mellitus.
Conclusions
In long‐standing, persistent severe obesity, there was evidence of cardiac remodeling over a period of 11 years, but no clear worsening of systolic or diastolic function. Measures of remodeling were most strongly related to
BMI
. The observed changes might predispose to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, but are not classic for an evolving dilated cardiomyopathy.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
16 articles.
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