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Gender-specific differences in left ventricular remodelling in obesity: insights from cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging

Gender-specific differences in left ventricular remodelling in obesity: insights from cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
Gender-specific differences in left ventricular remodelling in obesity: insights from cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging
Aims
As obesity-related cardiovascular mortality, although elevated when compared with normal weight, is lower in females than in males at every body mass index (BMI) level, we aimed to investigate gender-specific differences in left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy in obesity, which themselves have been shown to have varying prognostic value.

Method and results
In total, 741 subjects (female, n = 399) without identifiable cardiovascular risk factors (BMI 15.7–59.2 kg/m2) underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (1.5 T) to determine LV mass, end-diastolic volume (EDV, mL), and LV mass/volume ratio (LVM/VR). Across both sexes, there was a strong positive correlation between BMI and LV mass (male r = 0.44, female r = 0.57, both P < 0.001), with males showing a greater LV hypertrophic response (male +2.3 vs. female +1.6 g per BMI point increase, P = 0.001). Concentric hypertrophy was present in both sexes and LVM/VR positively correlated to BMI (male r = 0.45, female r = 0.29, both P < 0.001) on linear regression analysis. However, the degree of concentric hypertrophy was greater in males (male +0.13 vs. female +0.06 LVM/VR increase per BMI point increase, P = 0.001). On the other hand, females showed a greater LV cavity dilatory response (female +1.1 vs. male +0.3 mL per BMI point increase, P < 0.001). Indeed, in contrast to females, where BMI and LV-EDV were positively correlated (r = 0.38, P < 0.001), BMI did not correlate with EDV in men (r = 0.03, P = 0.62).

Conclusion
In the absence of traditional cardiovascular risk factors, obese men show predominantly concentric hypertrophy, whereas obese women exhibit both eccentric and concentric hypertrophy. As concentric hypertrophy is more strongly related to cardiovascular mortality than eccentric hypertrophy, our observations may explain the observed gender difference in obesity-related mortality.
0195-668X
292–299
Rider, Oliver J.
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Lewandowski, Adam J.
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Nethononda, Richard
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Petersen, Steffen E.
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Francis, Jane M.
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Pitcher, Alex
da18fce5-35b3-4cd1-96b7-41158a0ee321
Holloway, Cameron J.
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Dass, Sairia
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Banerjee, Rajarshi
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Byrne, James
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Leeson, Paul
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Neubauer, Stefan
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Rider, Oliver J.
fbbf9870-f09e-4250-8aa3-4ff3eb30c30d
Lewandowski, Adam J.
fdf4b88f-39d5-4b04-a57d-69cbdb16bf26
Nethononda, Richard
44298602-b489-48b0-a071-611d5242f66f
Petersen, Steffen E.
04f2ce88-790d-48dc-baac-cbe0946dd928
Francis, Jane M.
5da92746-c7d0-4577-a20d-dfb1b192e255
Pitcher, Alex
da18fce5-35b3-4cd1-96b7-41158a0ee321
Holloway, Cameron J.
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Dass, Sairia
c48c8cfc-a2cd-41bb-8b0f-d25bff6b19b9
Banerjee, Rajarshi
a5c34b4e-b56b-44f9-b71e-41f5dcc6a238
Byrne, James
e3d5b8fe-1b69-441c-a173-e084fe5372a6
Leeson, Paul
b28a089e-afe8-4260-a59a-fa22751949b4
Neubauer, Stefan
c8a34156-a4ed-4dfe-97cb-4f47627d927d

Rider, Oliver J., Lewandowski, Adam J., Nethononda, Richard, Petersen, Steffen E., Francis, Jane M., Pitcher, Alex, Holloway, Cameron J., Dass, Sairia, Banerjee, Rajarshi, Byrne, James, Leeson, Paul and Neubauer, Stefan (2013) Gender-specific differences in left ventricular remodelling in obesity: insights from cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. European Heart Journal, 34 (4), 292–299. (doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehs341).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims
As obesity-related cardiovascular mortality, although elevated when compared with normal weight, is lower in females than in males at every body mass index (BMI) level, we aimed to investigate gender-specific differences in left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy in obesity, which themselves have been shown to have varying prognostic value.

Method and results
In total, 741 subjects (female, n = 399) without identifiable cardiovascular risk factors (BMI 15.7–59.2 kg/m2) underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (1.5 T) to determine LV mass, end-diastolic volume (EDV, mL), and LV mass/volume ratio (LVM/VR). Across both sexes, there was a strong positive correlation between BMI and LV mass (male r = 0.44, female r = 0.57, both P < 0.001), with males showing a greater LV hypertrophic response (male +2.3 vs. female +1.6 g per BMI point increase, P = 0.001). Concentric hypertrophy was present in both sexes and LVM/VR positively correlated to BMI (male r = 0.45, female r = 0.29, both P < 0.001) on linear regression analysis. However, the degree of concentric hypertrophy was greater in males (male +0.13 vs. female +0.06 LVM/VR increase per BMI point increase, P = 0.001). On the other hand, females showed a greater LV cavity dilatory response (female +1.1 vs. male +0.3 mL per BMI point increase, P < 0.001). Indeed, in contrast to females, where BMI and LV-EDV were positively correlated (r = 0.38, P < 0.001), BMI did not correlate with EDV in men (r = 0.03, P = 0.62).

Conclusion
In the absence of traditional cardiovascular risk factors, obese men show predominantly concentric hypertrophy, whereas obese women exhibit both eccentric and concentric hypertrophy. As concentric hypertrophy is more strongly related to cardiovascular mortality than eccentric hypertrophy, our observations may explain the observed gender difference in obesity-related mortality.

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Published date: 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477852
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477852
ISSN: 0195-668X
PURE UUID: b1bfa276-ba28-45e2-ae69-0b1a740c8761

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Date deposited: 15 Jun 2023 16:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:13

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Contributors

Author: Oliver J. Rider
Author: Adam J. Lewandowski
Author: Richard Nethononda
Author: Steffen E. Petersen
Author: Jane M. Francis
Author: Alex Pitcher
Author: Cameron J. Holloway
Author: Sairia Dass
Author: Rajarshi Banerjee
Author: James Byrne
Author: Paul Leeson
Author: Stefan Neubauer

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