ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: The role of dietary fat quality in promotion of cardiovascular diseases is studies before. However, the results are inconsistent. Recently, cholesterol to saturated fatty acid index (CSI) is suggested as a novel indicator of the atherogenicity and thrombogenicity potential of a diet. However, due to limited number of studies, in the current cross-sectional study, we aimed to evaluate the role of CSI in metabolic and inflammatory response among obese individuals. METHODS: In the current cross-sectional study 488 obese individuals aged 18-50 years old were involved in volunteer based invitation from outpatient obesity clinics. Subjects underwent anthropometric assays including weight, height, waist circumference (WC) and body composition and their fasting blood sample were obtained for biochemical assessments including blood sugar, serum lipids, hs-CRP and IL-6 concentrations by commercial kits. Physical activity was also assessed by short form of international physical activity questionnaire (IPAQ). RESULTS: According to our results, being at the top tetile of CSI was associated with higher anthropometric indices including weight, height, WC, FFM, and basal metabolic rate (BMR) compared with those at the lowest tertile (P < 0.05). Similarly, those at the highest category of CSI had significantly higher levels of serum glucose and hs-CRP both in crude and adjusted models in ANCOVA and in multinomial logistic regression models (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: In the current study, for the first time, we identified the possible triggering role of dietary cholesterol to saturated fat index in increasing serum glucose and hs-CRP levels. due to cross-sectional design of the current study, causal inference is impossible. Further studies will help for better scientific justification.
Subject(s)
Cholesterol , Fatty Acids , Obesity , Humans , Male , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Obesity/blood , Obesity/complications , Obesity/metabolism , Adolescent , Young Adult , Fatty Acids/blood , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Cholesterol/blood , Inflammation/blood , Biomarkers/blood , Dietary Fats , C-Reactive Protein/analysis , C-Reactive Protein/metabolismABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Adding pulsation to the Fontan circulation might change the fate of patients palliated by this procedure. Our aim was to compare the pulsatility index (PI) of the pulmonary artery (PA) between the various modifications of Fontan palliation. METHODS: Doppler-derived PI was measured in PA branches of a cohort of 28 patients palliated by 6 modifications of Fontan procedure. A group of normal individuals was included for comparison. RESULTS: Atriopulmonary connection (APC) group had the highest PA branches PI and statistically was close to the PI of the normal individuals (right pulmonary artery [RPA] PI of 1.58 vs. 1.63; p = 0.99 and left pulmonary artery [LPA] PI of 1.54 vs. 1.68; p = 0.46, respectively). The lowest PA branches PI was seen in the group of extracardiac total cavopulmonary connection (RPA PI of 0.62 and LPA PI of 0.65). Other 4 modifications including the extracardiac conduit with oversewn pulmonary valve, extracardiac conduit with preserved adjusted antegrade flow, extracardiac conduit from inferior vena cava onto the rudimentary right ventricle and lateral tunnel had a mean "RPA and LPA" PI of "1.19 and 1.17", "1.16 and 1.11", "1.13 and 1.11", "0.82 and 0.84", respectively. The modified Dunnett's post hoc test has shown a significant statistical decline in PI of all modifications compared to the normal individuals except for the APC group. CONCLUSIONS: Fontan palliated patients in different groups of surgical modification showed a spectrum of Doppler-derived PI with the highest amounts belong to the groups of pulsatile Fontan.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Tricuspid annular plane (TAP) systolic excursion (TAPSE) is a reproducible M-mode parameter for the measurement of longitudinal shortening of the right ventricle (RV). To date, all attention has been focused on the systolic excursion of TAP and the diastolic excursion of the annular plane back to the base has been ignored. This study aims to compare the quantitative (excursion, slope, and duration) and qualitative (velocity, acceleration, and indentation) characteristics of TAP systolic and diastolic excursion, using color tissue Doppler imaging, in three groups of children with normal RV (NORV), volume overloaded RV (VORV), and pressure overloaded RV (PORV) and normal pulmonary arterial pressure. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A prospective case-control study was performed in three groups of children with normal heart, VORV and PORV. TAPSE and tricuspid annular plane diastolic excursion (TAPDE) were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed and compared between the three groups. Statistical analysis was performed using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows. RESULTS: TAPSE, TAPDE, TAPSE slope, TAPSE slope/TAPDE slope, TAPDE duration and TAPDE duration/RR interval were lower in PORV (TAPSE: PORV: 14.45 ± 4.30, NORV: 20.45 ± 5.46, P = .003, TAPDE:PORV: 14.39 ± 4.61, NORV: 20.28 ± 5.65, P = .004, TAPSE slope:PORV: 4.79 ± 1.40, NORV: 7.15 ± 1.98, P = .001, .001, TAPDE duration:PORV: 201.1 ± 87.9 ms, NORV: 292.1 ± 97.9, P = .006, TAPDE duration/RR interval: PORV: .37 ± .09, NORV: .48 ± .08, P = .0002). CONCLUSION: Pressure-overload on RV produced more impairment of TAPSE and TAPDE patterns than volume overload. Values of TAPSE and TAPDE in patients with VORV and PORV stay in two ends of the normal spectrum. The harmful impact of pre-tricuspid volume overload seems to be less than the post-tricuspid volume overload.