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The prevalence of hepatic cirrhosis in Romania is very high, with a 10-year mortality of 34-66%. Upward trend of mortality is observed. It is known that cirrhosis is associated with cardiac abnormalities. These can induce several complications of cirrhosis, and increase postoperative mortality. Therefore, it is a major public health issue and research in this field should be a priority.
Few studies evaluated the cardiac function in cirrhotic patients, using only conventional echocardiography. However, this allows only the late diagnosis of cardiac dysfunction, which might be already irreversible. Consequently, description of new parameters, which could detect early dysfunction, becomes essential. There is no study designed to estimate intrinsic myocardial properties in cirrhosis. New methods (Tissue Doppler and Speckle-tracking echocardiography) could be essential to detect early cardiac dysfunction. The exact role of biological markers in the diagnosis of cardiac dysfunction remains to be clarified. Impaired cardiac function coupled with augmented vascular function could be the model for cirrhotic patients. This type of ventriculo-arterial interaction has never been described.
The main objectives of our project are:
Full description
Scientific context and motivation:
Cirrhosis is the end stage of chronic damage to the liver. The prevalence is estimated to be very high in Romania, more than 1000/100.000 inhabitants, with 10-year mortality of 34-66%. Upward trends of mortality are observed in a few countries, including Romania, which had extremely high mortality rates. The cost in terms of hospital costs and lost productivity is high. Therefore, hepatic cirrhosis represents a major public health in Romania.
It is known that hepatic cirrhosis is associated with cardiovascular abnormalities. These abnormalities have been suggested to induce/aggravate several complications of cirrhosis, and also to increase postoperative mortality after major surgery or liver transplantation. Few studies documented the existence of a hyperdynamic circulation, with increased cardiac output and reduced systemic vascular resistance. Despite this hyperkinetic circulation, some patients have abnormal ventricular function unmasked by physiologic/pharmacologic stress.
There are few studies of cardiac function in cirrhosis, although contractile function disorders found in nonalcoholic cirrhosis in animal models suggested that this is independent from alcohol intake. These issues are complicated by the fact that, alcohol use represents one of the commonest causes of both cirrhosis and cardiomyopathy. There are reasons to believe that cirrhosis per se may be associated with subtle contractile dysfunction. First, hyperkinetic circulatory changes may induce a high-output cardiac failure resembling a chronic volume overload of the heart. Second, cirrhosis is associated with high serum catecholamine levels, and long-term exposure to elevated catecholamines results in cardiomyopathy. Third, necropsy series of patients with alcoholic/nonalcoholic cirrhosis show similar cardiac pathologic findings: diffuse fibrosis, subendocardial edema, nuclear and cytoplasmic vacuolation.
Despite the increased cardiac output, ventricular inotropic and chronotropic responses to stimuli are blunted, a condition known as "cirrhotic cardiomyopathy". These include systolic and diastolic dysfunction, electrophysiological changes, and structural changes. There are no clear consensus definition for this condition. Cardiac function was evaluated by classic echocardiography, 2D and color/spectral Doppler: cardiac dimensions, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), systolic and diastolic timings. All of these changes are dependent on load conditions, and cirrhosis has major variability of preload conditions. However, these conventional measurements allow only the late diagnosis of cardiac dysfunction, which might be already irreversible.
Moreover, the cardiac dysfunction is very frequently subclinical and it can appear from early stages (even in chronic hepatitis). Consequently, early diagnosis of subclinical cardiac dysfunction are essential in the management of such patients. There is no study designed to estimate intrinsic myocardial properties in cirrhosis. Tissue Doppler Imaging (TDI) and speckle-tracking echocardiography (STE) could be very useful in this field, and this is the major point of the project.
In cirrhosis, different humoral substances enter directly in the systemic circulation. The following factors are involved as possible mediators for cardiac dysfunction and vascular changes: increased NO and CO production, endocannabinoids, TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6. Increased NO production is the major factor involved in the peripheral arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis.
In conclusion, impaired cardiac function coupled with augmented vascular function could be the model for cirrhotic patients. This type of ventriculo-arterial interaction has never been described. This could be the second important point of our research.
Unresolved questions: Consensus definition criteria, specific diagnostic tests, the exact prevalence of this syndrome, and appropriate management strategies are all unresolved questions. To date, there is no single diagnostic test that can identify cirrhotic patients with cardiac dysfunction. Level of natriuretic peptide (proBNP) is elevated due to increased cardiac release and not because of impaired hepatic extraction. Similarly, troponin I was reported to be elevated. The exact role of these markers in the diagnosis of cirrhotic cardiomyopathy, remains to be clarified. We intend to analyze all these markers, in order to describe the existence of pro-inflammatory status, impairment of oxidative stress and presence of myocardial fibrosis. The association between these markers and different parameters of cardiac dysfunction will also be described in our study, for the first time. The optimum management of cirrhotic cardiomyopathy has not been established since there are neither "gold standard" diagnostic criteria nor specific treatments at present. We consider that our research could make progress in this field.
Objectives.
The main objectives are to detect, by new echocardiographic methods, early cardiac dysfunction in cirrhotic patients, and to establish usefulness of different biomarkers in diagnosis of this condition. This information will be coupled with data regarding endothelial function, in order to describe new type of ventriculo-arterial interaction (intrinsic myocardial dysfunction - augmented vascular function).
Main objectives:
Methods. All patients and normal individuals will be assessed by:
General data: age, sex, IMC, blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac risk factors, clinical stage of cirrhosis, Child-Pugh score, date of diagnosis and complications, previous investigations.
Electrocardiogram (12 leads) and routine blood samples.
Specific biomarkers: proBNP, troponin, myocardial fibrosis (β cross laps and procollagen type-1 amino terminal), and markers of inflammation (PCR-hs, IL1, IL6, IL 10, TNFα); oxidative stress: carbonyl in plasmatic proteins, and the antioxidant capacity of plasma.
Comprehensive Echocardiography: VIVID 9 GE echo machine, with dedicated software ECHOPAC BT11:
Conventional echocardiography:
Measurement of endothelial function, parameters of arterial remodeling, and arterial stiffness at the level of the common carotid artery (vascular remodeling and arterial stiffness indices), and at the level of the brachial artery (endothelial function). Assessment will be done using an ALOKA α10 ultrasound machine, equipped with an "echo-tracking" system. Meanwhile, a dedicated new software (wave intensity analysis) will be used to assess ventriculo-arterial coupling. Another system (Complior) will be used in order to measure the pulse wave velocity between 2 arterial sites (carotid-femoral and carotid-radial), as a measure of arterial stiffness.
The relevance of the proposal:
Investigators known that hepatic cirrhosis represents a major public health in Romania. Because cardiac dysfunction induces/aggravates several complications of cirrhosis, it leads to a significant increase in morbidity, mortality, and economical costs. Thus, by creation of a gold standard protocol for detection of the early cardiac dysfunction, investigators will be able to identify cirrhotic patients at risk for developing heart failure.
Investigators believe that the early identification of cardiac dysfunction is a health problem of major interest. New imagistic and laboratory parameters might be essential to identify patients at risk and to find treatment strategies in these patients. This could generate new research projects in the treatment field, which is now an untouched field.
Our proposal will create knowledge in the medical field and generate important scientific results, nationally and internationally competitive. It could define mechanisms of cardiac dysfunction induced by cirrhosis, and describe new type of arterial-ventriculo interaction.
Moreover, it might be able to introduce into clinical practice a "gold standard" evaluation for patients at risk for developing cardiac dysfunction, consequently leading to an optimization of therapy. Therefore, the results of the project could be applicative also from social and economic purposes.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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