학술논문

Abstract 13594: Adverse Right Ventricular Remodelling, Function and Stress Responses in Obesity: Implications for Severe Acute Respiratory Illness
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Circulation. Nov 17, 2020 142(Suppl_3 Suppl 3):A13594-A13594
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0009-7322
Abstract
Introduction: The mechanisms linking obesity to increased mortality in patients with coronavirus-disease 2019 (COVID-19) are unclear.Hypothesis: We hypothesised that obesity would be associated with adverse right ventricular (RV) remodelling and function which might be further exacerbated by COVID-19 associated increases in RV afterload/demand.Methods: We used echocardiography and computed tomography to establish links between RV dimensions and function and bodyweight in patients with severe COVID-19. In obese and non-obese participants without COVID-19, we used cardiovascular magnetic resonance to define the effects of obesity upon RV volumes, energetics, systolic function and stress reserve.Results: In patients with severe COVID-19, increasing bodyweight was associated with disproportionate RV dilatation (n=26, echocardiography, R=0.42, P=0.03, CT n=34, R=0.23, P=0.004) and impairment of RV systolic function (fractional area change (FAC) R=-0.45, P=0.04); obesity (BMI >30kg/m2) was associated with a 32% reduction in RV FAC (P=0.03). Similar associations were seen in a validation cohort (n=91, all P<0.05). In participants without COVID-19, class III obesity (n=54, BMI 47±4 kg/m) was associated with RV remodelling, impaired cardiac energetics (PCr/ATP ratio 23% lower, P<0.001) and reduction in RV systolic function at rest (by 3±1%, P=0.01), which was related to reduced energetics (R=0.3, P=0.04). Participants with class I-II obesity (BMI 35±5 kg/m, n=27) had impaired RV diastolic filling rate at rest (P<0.001) and blunted RV dobutamine stress systolic response (by 68%, P=0.03) and diastolic response (by 78%, P=0.008). Surgical weight loss in patients obesity (n=37, 34±15kg weight loss) was associated with improvement in RV volume (12±26 ml lower, P=0.006) and function (ejection fraction 2±5% higher, P=0.03).Conclusions: Increasing body weight is associated with both significant alterations in RV volumes, systolic function and stress responses which are mitigated with weight loss and also with disproportionate RV dilatation and dysfunction in severe COVID-19. RV dysfunction is a modifiable mechanism which might link obesity to adverse outcomes in patients with COVID-19 and other disorders stressing the right heart.