İstanbul Kuzey Klinikleri (Mar 2019)

Hair whitening and obesity are independently related to ascending aorta dilatation in young-middle aged men

  • Mustafa Cetin,
  • Emrah Bozbeyoglu,
  • Turan Erdogan,
  • Sinan Altan Kocaman,
  • Omer Satiroglu,
  • Murtaza Emre Durakoglugil

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14744/nci.2017.43433
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 33 – 39

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION[|]Hair whitening (HW) is strongly linked with aging. Ascending aortic dilation (AAD) and HW share common etiologic factors. We investigated the association of HW with ascending aortic diameters.[¤]METHODS[|]Our study included 93 male subjects aged below 50 years. All patients underwent echocardiography to measure ascending aortic diameter, in addition to routine biochemistry tests, physical examination, and thorough medical history. HW score (HWS) was defined according to the percentage of white hair (HWS 1: <25%; HWS 2: 25–50%; HWS 3: 50–75%; and HWS 4: 75–100).[¤]RESULTS[|]Patients with highest HWS were older and had a higher percentage of hypertension (HT) and family history of HW. Moreover, this subgroup had increased ascending aortic diameter, higher serum uric acid, and lower total bilirubin concentrations. Multivariate analyses including age, HT, height, waist circumference, c-reactive protein, and family history of HW identified body weight and HWS as the independent predictors of ascending aortic diameter.[¤]DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION[|]An independent association between the degree of HW and AAD exists in middle-aged men, which may depend on coexisting factors that enhance both pathologies rather than causality. We think that oxidative stress may be one of these stressors.[¤]

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