Preclinical Systolic and Diastolic Dysfunctions in Metabolically Healthy and Unhealthy Obese Individuals

Author:

Wang Yi-Chih1,Liang Chang-seng1,Gopal Deepa M.1,Ayalon Nir1,Donohue Courtney1,Santhanakrishnan Rajalakshmi1,Sandhu Harpaul1,Perez Alejandro J.1,Downing Jill1,Gokce Noyan1,Colucci Wilson S.1,Ho Jennifer E.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Cardiovascular Division, Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan (Y.-C.W.); the Cardiovascular Medicine Section (C.-s.L., N.A., C.D., R.S., A.J.P., J.D., N.G., W.S.C., J.E.H.), Department of Medicine (H.S.), Boston University School of Medicine, MA; and the Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA (D.M.G.).

Abstract

Background— Despite the substantial overlap of obesity and metabolic disease, there is heterogeneity with respect to cardiovascular risk. We sought to investigate preclinical differences in systolic and diastolic function in obesity, and specifically compare obese individuals with and without metabolic syndrome (MS). Methods and Results— Obese individuals without cardiac disease with (OB/MS+, n=124) and without (OB/MS−, n=37) MS were compared with nonobese controls (n=29). Diastolic function was assessed by transmitral and tissue Doppler. Global longitudinal strain (LS) and time-based dyssynchrony were assessed by speckle tracking. Both OB/MS− and OB/MS+ groups had similar ejection fraction but worse systolic mechanics as assessed by LS and dyssynchrony when compared with nonobese controls. Specifically, OB/MS− had 2.5% lower LS (SE, 0.7%; P =0.001 in multivariable-adjusted analyses) and 10.8 ms greater dyssynchrony (SE, 3.3 ms; P =0.002), and OB/MS+ had 1.0% lower LS (SE, 0.3%; P <0.001) and 7.8 ms greater dyssynchrony (SE, 1.5 ms; P <0.001) when compared with controls. Obesity was associated with impaired diastolic function regardless of MS status, as evidenced by greater left atrial diameter and left ventricular mass although diastolic dysfunction was more pronounced in OB/MS+ than in OB/MS− individuals. Conclusions— Obesity is associated with subclinical differences in both systolic and diastolic function regardless of the presence or absence of MS although MS seems to be associated with worse diastolic dysfunction. When compared with controls, metabolically healthy obese had lower LS, greater dyssynchrony, and early diastolic dysfunction, supporting the notion that obesity per se may have adverse cardiovascular effects regardless of metabolic disease.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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