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P2.11 Assessing Ventricular-Vascular Interactions...
Journal article

P2.11 Assessing Ventricular-Vascular Interactions in Girls with Turner Syndrome: A Pilot Study

Abstract

ObjectivesWomen with Turner Syndrome (TS) have increased incidence of cardiovascular disease, thought to be related to a clustering of risk factors including insulin resistance, hypertension, obesity and dyslipidemia. The aim of this study was to non-invasively determine and compare ventricular and vascular function in girls with TS to healthy controls.Methods:Ventricular assessment included standard echocardiographic M-mode and 2-D volumetric techniques, plus Doppler tissue velocities. Vascular assessment included applanation tonometry, carotid ultrasound, echo-Doppler of the aorta and brachial artery reactivity. Between groups comparisons were performed using parametric methods with p-values > 0.05 considered significant.Results:Seventeen girls with TS without significant congenital heart disease and 17 healthy age-matched girls (8–18 years) were studied. Heights and weights were similar, but BMI increased in TS, suggesting increased weight-for-height, as expected. Resting heart rates and peripheral and derived central systolic and diastolic blood pressures were increased in TS. Carotid distensibility was decreased in TS, but derived augmentation index, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, aortic dimensions and echo-Doppler measures of aortic stiffness and vascular impedance, and flow-mediated dilation assessment of endothelial function, were all similar. Left ventricular systolic function by M-mode and two-dimensional volumetric assessment and myocardial performance index by Doppler were similar, but increased E/E’ ratios suggestive of increased ventricular filling pressures were found in TS.Conclusions:Elevated resting heart rates and blood pressures, decreased carotid distensibility and suggestion of increased ventricular filling pressures in girls with TS, may be playing a role in future increased risk of cardiovascular disease and warrant further investigation.

Authors

Bradley TJ; O’Gorman CS; Slorach C; Friedberg MK; Mertens L; Wells GD; Hamilton J

Journal

Artery Research, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 179–179

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2009

DOI

10.1016/j.artres.2009.10.027

ISSN

1872-9312

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