Contrasting signals of cardiovascular health among natriuretic peptides in subjects without heart disease.
Timothy C R PrickettJanet K SpittlehouseAllison L MillerYusmiati LiauMartin Alexander KennedyVicky A CameronJohn F PearsonJoseph M BodenRichard W TroughtonEric A EspinerPublished in: Scientific reports (2019)
Natriuretic Peptides (NP) are important in maintaining normal cardiac and metabolic status and have been used to predict cardiovascular events. Whether plasma concentrations of NP products within the normal range reflect cardio-metabolic health is unknown. Plasma NTproANP, NTproBNP and NTproCNP and their bioactive counterparts were measured in a random sample of 348 community dwellers aged 49-51 yr without heart disease and associations sought with established vascular risk factors, echocardiographic indices and a genetic variant previously linked with BNP. Stratified by sex, each of ten vascular risk factors were positively associated with NTproCNP whereas associations with NTproBNP and NTproANP were all negative. In both sexes, higher plasma NTproCNP was associated with higher arterial elastance, lower LV stroke volume and lower LV end diastolic volume. Exactly opposite associations were found with plasma NTproBNP or NTproANP. Sex specific differences were identified: positive association of NTproBNP with LV end systolic volume and the negative association with LV elastance were found only in males. The genetic variant rs198358 was independently associated with NTproBNP but not with NTproANP. In conclusion, higher NTproCNP is likely to be an adaptive response to impaired LV relaxation whereas genetic factors likely contribute to higher NTproBNP and improved cardio-metabolic health at midlife.
Keyphrases
- risk factors
- cardiovascular events
- left ventricular
- healthcare
- mental health
- public health
- blood pressure
- pulmonary hypertension
- ejection fraction
- genome wide
- heart failure
- copy number
- cardiovascular disease
- health information
- atrial fibrillation
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- dna methylation
- human health
- climate change
- health promotion
- subarachnoid hemorrhage