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Comparison of Carotid Atherosclerosis between Patients at High Altitude and Sea Level: A Chinese Atherosclerosis Risk Evaluation Study. | LitMetric

Comparison of Carotid Atherosclerosis between Patients at High Altitude and Sea Level: A Chinese Atherosclerosis Risk Evaluation Study.

J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis

Center for Biomedical Imaging Research, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China; Department of Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle.

Published: February 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare carotid plaque characteristics in patients living at high altitude (Xining) versus those at sea level (Jinan) using magnetic resonance imaging.
  • Results indicated that high altitude patients had larger lumen areas, less plaque burden, and significantly lower calcification percentages compared to their sea-level counterparts.
  • These differences remained significant even after adjusting for clinical factors, suggesting that living at higher altitudes may affect the composition of carotid plaques.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the differences in characteristics of carotid plaques between patients Xining at high altitude and Jinan at sea level using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging.

Methods: Subjects were recruited from a cross-sectional, observational, multicenter imaging study of CARE-II study. Forty-nine (mean age 63.3 ± 12.0 years, 33 males) and 51 (mean age 64.5 ± 12.0 years, 34 males) patients were recruited from a site located in a high altitude region and a site located near sea level, respectively. All patients underwent multicontrast MR vessel wall imaging for carotid arteries on 3.0 T MR scanner. The carotid plaques features were compared between 2 patient groups.

Results: Compared with patients at sea level, those at high altitude had significantly greater lumen area (58.5 ± 17.8 mm versus 50.0 ± 19.6 mm, P = .008), smaller maximum normalized wall index (48.6% ± 14.2% versus 57.8% ± 16.3%, P = .002), and smaller percentage volume of calcium (0.9% versus 5.6%, P < .001) in the symptomatic carotid artery. After adjustment for clinical risk factors including age, sex, systolic blood pressure, LDL-C, and statin use, these differences in plaque morphology and composition remained statistically significant. After further adjustment for normalized wall index as a measure of plaque burden, percentage volume of calcification was still significantly smaller in patients at high altitude area than that in patients at sea level area (P = .047).

Conclusion: Symptomatic subjects from a high altitude area have lower plaque burden and less calcification in the carotid artery compared to those from an area near sea level.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2019.104448DOI Listing

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