2006
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehl163
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Abnormal myocardial deformation properties in obese, non-hypertensive children: an ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, standard echocardiographic, and strain rate imaging study

Abstract: Our study demonstrated that obesity, in absence of hypertension, is associated with significant reduction in systolic myocardial deformation properties already in childhood involving both right and left ventricle. Obesity not only is a risk factor for later cardiovascular disease, but also is associated with contemporaneous and significant impairment of longitudinal myocardial deformation properties.

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Cited by 143 publications
(128 citation statements)
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“…These findings are in agreement with those of other authors studying obese subjects; 4,11,12,22,23 in particular, they are consistent with the results reported by Ballo et al 24 in obese hypertensive patients with normal left-ventricular ejection fraction. Moreover, our data add to the evidence reported by Mureddu et al 25 that obesity does not significantly increase the prolonged isovolumic relaxation found in non-obese hypertensive patients.…”
Section: Left-ventricular Diastolic Functionsupporting
confidence: 93%
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“…These findings are in agreement with those of other authors studying obese subjects; 4,11,12,22,23 in particular, they are consistent with the results reported by Ballo et al 24 in obese hypertensive patients with normal left-ventricular ejection fraction. Moreover, our data add to the evidence reported by Mureddu et al 25 that obesity does not significantly increase the prolonged isovolumic relaxation found in non-obese hypertensive patients.…”
Section: Left-ventricular Diastolic Functionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…This relationship was particularly highlighted by the evaluation of the early-diastolic mitral inflow/mitral annular velocity and the mitral annulus E m /A m ratios, in agreement with the findings of most other authors. 4,11,12,22,23 Notably, in our study, the variation was quite similar in terms of significance for both of these parameters. This finding, confirmed in two other studies, 4,12 may suggest that the mitral annulus E m /A m ratio, which is more feasible and practical to obtain in routine echocardiographic practice and is equal in sensitivity to the early-diastolic mitral inflow/mitral annular velocity ratio, could be helpful in evaluating diastolic function in these patients.…”
Section: Left-ventricular Diastolic Functionsupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…The sample size was calculated using the indexed LV mass from a previous study [23]. A sample of 45 patients in each group was calculated to provide a 90% power to detect a clinical effect (increase equal or greater than 30%) in LV mass, with a significance level (alpha) of 0.05 (two-tailed) [24].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%