These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Significance of dyslipidaemia in patients with heart failure of unexplained aetiology.
    Author: Skwarek M, Bilińska ZT, Mazurkiewicz Ł, Grzybowski J, Kruk M, Kurjata P, Piotrowski W, Ruzyłło W.
    Journal: Kardiol Pol; 2008 May; 66(5):515-22, discussion 523-4. PubMed ID: 18537059.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Dyslipidaemia has been studied in the prognosis of heart failure (HF). Little is known about the role of dyslipidaemia in the aetiopathogenesis of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). AIM: To assess (1) serum lipid levels in DCM considering the severity of heart failure; (2) the association between DCM and lipid abnormalities; (3) prognostic significance of lipids in DCM. METHODS: The study group consisted of 100 patients with angiographically proven DCM [mean age 42 years, 80% males, 65% in NYHA class III-IV, mean left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) 32%], whose fasting serum lipids had been assessed during diagnosis between 1992 and 2001. Patients' lipid levels were compared with those observed in healthy controls (n=100), age-, gender-, and BMI-matched and related to findings reported in population samples from WHO Pol-MONICA studies from: 1993 (n=526), 1997/1998 (n=526) and 2001 (n=1364). Three (3%) patients received lipid-lowering drugs. Transplant-free survival was assessed in the study group. In the statistical analysis, nonparametric Wilcoxon test and uni- and multivariate logistic and Cox regression analyses were used. RESULTS: Serum total cholesterol (TC), LDL (LDL-C) and HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) tended to be lower (differences NS) in NYHA class III-IV patients vs. class I-II (TC: 196.9+/-45.5 vs. 207.9+/-47.1 mg/dl, LDL-C 126.2+/-37.5 vs. 128.5+/-42.7 mg/dl, HDL-C 44.2+/-11.3 vs. 44.7+/- +/-13.7 mg/dl, respectively), and triglycerides (TG) were lower in advanced HF vs. NYHA class I-II (135.9+/-51 vs. 170.3+/-63.4 mg/dl, p=0.004). In DCM patients HDL-C was lower than in controls (44.1+/-12.1 vs. 54.3+/-17.6 mg/dl, p <0.001), and TG level was higher (147.9+/-58.1 vs. 114.1+/-61.6 mg/dl, p <0.001). HDL-C and TG levels in controls were similar to those observed in population samples. Multivariate analysis with age, low HDL (defined as <40 mg/dl for males, and <50 mg/dl for females), and hyperTG (TG ł150 mg/dl) showed that both low HDL-C (OR=2.31; 95% CI 1.2-4.457, p=0.0122), and hyperTG (OR=1.978, 95% CI 1.029-3.799, p=0.0407) were independently associated with DCM. Low HDL-C level occurred more frequently in female DCM patients vs. in males (65 vs. 33.8%, p=0.022). There was a trend towards more frequent occurrence of hyperTG in male patients vs. females (42.5 vs. 20%, p=0.11). The mean follow-up time was 7.32+/-4.7 years. In Cox univariate analysis low TC tended to be a prognostic factor (p=0.067), but in Cox multivariate analysis only NYHA class (HR=1.7, 95% CI 1.136-2.541; p=0.01) and LVEF (HR=0.963, 95% CI 0.932-0.996; p=0.027) turned out to be independent predictors of poor outcome. CONCLUSION: Dyslipidaemia might play a role in the aetiopathogenesis of DCM. Low TC is not an independent prognostic factor in DCM.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]