Left ventricular structure and function in relation to environmental exposure to lead and cadmium

Yang, WY; Zhang, ZY; Thijs, L; Cauwenberghs, N; Wei, FF; Jacobs, L; Luttun, A; Verhamme, P; Kuznetsova, T; Nawrot, TS; Staessen, JA

HERO ID

4651951

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

28151401

HERO ID 4651951
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Left ventricular structure and function in relation to environmental exposure to lead and cadmium
Authors Yang, WY; Zhang, ZY; Thijs, L; Cauwenberghs, N; Wei, FF; Jacobs, L; Luttun, A; Verhamme, P; Kuznetsova, T; Nawrot, TS; Staessen, JA
Journal Journal of the American Heart Association
Volume 6
Issue 2
Page Numbers e004692
Abstract <strong>BACKGROUND: </strong>Experimental studies have demonstrated that lead and cadmium have direct toxic effects on the myocardium, but the few human studies are limited by design, assessment of exposure, and use of heart failure as a late-stage endpoint.<br /><br /><strong>METHODS AND RESULTS: </strong>In a prospective population study, we studied the association of left ventricular (LV) function with blood lead (BPb) and 24-hour urinary cadmium (UCd). In 179 participants randomly recruited from a Flemish population (50.3% women; mean age 39.1 years), geometric mean BPb and UCd at enrollment (1985-2000) were 0.20 μmol/L and 6.1 nmol, respectively. We assessed systolic and diastolic LV function 11.9 years (median) later (2005-2010) by using Doppler imaging of the transmitral blood flow and the mitral annular movement and speckle tracking. In multivariable-adjusted linear regression, LV systolic function decreased with BPb. For a doubling of exposure, estimates were -0.392% for global longitudinal strain (P=0.034), -0.618% and -0.113 s-1 for regional longitudinal strain (P=0.028) and strain rate (P=0.008), and -0.056 s-1 for regional radial strain rate (P=0.050). Regional longitudinal strain rate (-0.066 s-1, P=0.009) and regional radial strain (-2.848%, P=0.015) also decreased with UCd. Models including both exposure indexes did not allow differentiating whether LV dysfunction was predominately related to BPb or UCd. Diastolic LV function was not associated with BPb or UCd (P≥0.159).<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>Although effect sizes were small, our results suggest that environmental exposure to lead, cadmium, or both might be a risk factor for systolic LV dysfunction, a condition often proceeding to heart failure.
Doi 10.1161/JAHA.116.004692
Pmid 28151401
Wosid WOS:000393594700008
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword cadmium; heart failure; lead; population science; systolic function