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About Diabetes
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Diabetics Have Increased
Heart Muscle Mass That Increases Risk These results emerged from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) when the investigators focused on heart mass - the weight of the heart muscle as measured by MRI, according to Alain Bertoni, M.D., M.P.H., at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. "People with diabetes are recognized as having an increased risk of heart failure," Bertoni said. "We sought to better understand why. We were especially interested in the role atherosclerosis may play." Researchers compared people with diabetes or impaired fasting glucose (which means their blood sugar levels were too high) with those who had normal blood sugar levels. The investigators particularly looked at the muscle mass of the left ventricle, the part of the heart that pumps the blood through the aorta and out into the circulatory system. They measured the left ventricle itself, not the blood in it. They also measured the volume of the ventricle when filled with blood just before it pumps the blood out. A lower volume indicates less blood is able to enter the ventricle, and suggests increased heart stiffness, said Bertoni. "Increased left ventricular muscle mass suggests the future possibility of developing heart failure," he said. "We also think that if you have a stiffer heart, that could be an early indication that you have a propensity for developing heart failure." MESA measured "subclinical" atherosclerosis - atherosclerosis that has yet to
produce symptoms - through CT scans measuring the amount of calcium in the
coronary arteries and ultrasound measuring the wall thickness of the carotid
artery in the neck. Both are indications of atherosclerosis. "We found evidence that in whites, African-Americans, and Hispanics with diabetes there was increased heart muscle mass over those without diabetes," he said. In whites, the increased left ventricular mass was completely explained by subclinical therosclerosis and high blood pressure, he said. With partial blockage of the coronary arteries, some areas of the heart muscle are getting less blood flow and are weakened, which means the rest of the heart muscle has to bulk up, he said. In African-Americans and Hispanics, the increased mass was not fully explained by these factors. Among Chinese participants no differences in mass were observed. In contrast, lower volumes, suggestive of increased stiffness, were seen in whites, blacks, and Chinese participants with diabetes, but not Hispanics. The MESA investigators intend to follow the participants at least until 2008, with some participants in a sub-study called MESA Air being followed at least until 2012. If the measurements do predict heart failure, "they would help us target preventive therapies," Bertoni said. "Further investigation will be required to determine whether there are
differences in the incidence of heart failure by ethnicity in this [group], and
if so, whether the observed differences at baseline will be predictive of the
future risk of heart failure." |