Diagnostics (Feb 2021)

Epicardial Adiposity in Relation to Metabolic Abnormality, Circulating Adipocyte FABP, and Preserved Ejection Fraction Heart Failure

  • Jiun-Lu Lin,
  • Kuo-Tzu Sung,
  • Yau-Huei Lai,
  • Chih-Hsuan Yen,
  • Chun-Ho Yun,
  • Cheng-Huang Su,
  • Jen-Yuan Kuo,
  • Chia-Yuan Liu,
  • Chen-Yen Chien,
  • Ricardo C. Cury,
  • Hiram G. Bezerra,
  • Chung-Lieh Hung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11030397
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 397

Abstract

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Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) as a source of pro-inflammatory cytokines tightly linked to metabolic abnormalities. Data regarding the associations of EAT with adipocyte fatty acid-binding protein (A-FABP), a cytokine implicated in the cardiometabolic syndrome, might play an important part in mediating the association between EAT and cardiac structure/function in preserved ejection fraction heart failure (HFpEF). We conducted a prospective cohort study comprising 252 prospectively enrolled study participants classified as healthy (n = 40), high-risk (n = 161), or HFpEF (n = 51). EAT was assessed using echocardiography and compared between the three groups and related to A-FABP, cardiac structural/functional assessment utilizing myocardial deformations (strain/strain rates) and HF outcomes. EAT thickness was highest in participants with HFpEF (9.7 ± 1.7 mm) and those at high-risk (8.2 ± 1.5 mm) and lowest in healthy controls (6.4 ± 1.9 mm, p pinteraction for all > 0.1), and was associated with reduced LV global longitudinal strain (GLS) and LV mass-independent systolic/diastolic strain rates (SRs/SRe) (all p pinteraction > 0.1). Importantly, in the combined control cohort, A-FABP levels mediated the association between EAT and new onset HF. Excessive EAT is independently associated with the metabolic syndrome, renal insufficiency, and higher A-FABP levels. The association between EAT and new onset HF is mediated by A-FABP, suggesting a metabolic link between EAT and HF.

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