Association of cardiovascular disease risk factors with left ventricular mass, biventricular function, and the presence of silent myocardial infarction on cardiac MRI in an asymptomatic population

Abstract The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cardiac mass and function on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and to investigate possible risk factors for silent myocardial infarction (SMI) in an asymptomatic Asian population. We included 647 asymptomatic subjects (485 males, mean age 54.8 ± 6.7 years; 162 females, mean age 55.2 ± 7.6 years) who underwent 1.5-T cardiac MRI during a health checkup. The association between biventricular functional parameters as evaluated on MRI and CVD risk factors was examined using multivariable regression and analysis of variance. The left ventricular mass-to-volume ratios were positively related to body mass index (β = 0.153, p < 0.001), systolic (β = 0.165, p = 0.001) and diastolic (β = 0.147, p = 0.002) blood pressure, triglyceride levels (β = 0.197, p = 0.006), and C-reactive protein levels (β = 0.130, p < 0.001), and were negatively related to estimated glomerular filtration rates (β = −0.076, p = 0.025). No significant relationship was present between ventricular parameters and the presence of SMI after adjusting for confounders. The prevalence (6.9 %, 7/101) of SMI in diabetics was significantly greater than that in non-diabetics patients (0.9 %, 5/546; confidence interval 1.739–12.848; p < 0.001). Traditional CVD risk factors are associated with v...
Source: The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging - Category: Radiology Source Type: research