Relationship Between Obesity and Global Longitudinal Strain in the Pediatric Single Ventricle Fontan Population Across Ventricular Morphologies
obesity
03 medical and health sciences
single ventricle
0302 clinical medicine
RC666-701
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system
global longitudinal strain
Fontan
Original Research
DOI:
10.1161/jaha.122.028616
Publication Date:
2024-01-19T11:36:42Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Background
Obesity is associated with diminished myocardial function as measured by strain echocardiography in children and young adults with normal cardiac anatomy. Data are lacking about the effect of obesity on myocardial strain in patients with a single ventricle. In this study, the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and single ventricle myocardial strain in the Fontan population was assessed.
Methods and Results
Thirty‐eight abnormal BMI Fontan cases (21 overweight and 17 obese) and 30 normal BMI Fontan controls matched based on single ventricular morphology, age, and sex were included in the study. Ventricular morphology was categorized as single right ventricle, single left ventricle, or biventricular. Single ventricle global longitudinal peak systolic strain (GLS) and other echocardiographic measurements were performed and compared between groups, with a
P
≤0.05 defined as significant. The abnormal BMI group demonstrated diminished GLS (−15.7±3.6% versus −17.2±3.2%, [
P
=0.03]) and elevated systolic blood pressure (
P
=0.04) compared with the normal BMI group. On subgroup analysis of those with single right ventricle morphology, the abnormal BMI group demonstrated diminished GLS compared with controls. There was no significant difference in GLS between the abnormal BMI and control groups in the single left ventricle and biventricular subgroups. Analyzed by ventricular morphology, no other variables were statistically different in the abnormal BMI group including systolic blood pressure. Inter‐reader reproducibility for GLS and strain rate were excellent for both measures.
Conclusions
Obesity has an adverse relationship with myocardial strain in the young Fontan population, with the most maladaptive response seen in the single right ventricle.
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