AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined the link between skin microcirculatory function and cardiovascular risk factors in a group of 1557 randomly selected Swedish adults aged 50-64, as part of the SCAPIS project.
  • Microcirculatory reactivity was measured using a fiberoptic probe and an arterial occlusion-release protocol, revealing strong negative associations between peak oxygen saturation and various risk factors like blood pressure, BMI, and diabetes, along with some positive associations with cholesterol levels.
  • The results suggest that post-ischemic skin microvascular peak oxygen saturation is significantly connected to nearly all major cardiovascular risk factors, marking a novel finding in population-based research on middle-aged individuals.

Article Abstract

The objective of this study was to explore the associations between skin microcirculatory function and established cardiovascular risk factors in a large Swedish cohort. As part of the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS), microcirculatory data were acquired at Linköping University hospital, Linköping, Sweden during 2016-2017. The subjects, aged 50-64 years, were randomly selected from the national population register. Microcirculatory reactivity was assessed using a 5-min arterial occlusion-release protocol. Comprehensive skin microcirculatory data were continuously acquired by using a fiberoptic probe placed on the lower right arm. After exclusion of missing data (208), 1557 subjects were remaining. Among the parameters, skin microcirculatory peak oxygen saturation after occlusion release, had the strongest relationship to the cardiovascular risk factors. The linear associations between peak oxygen saturation and cardiovascular risk factors were analyzed adjusted for age and sex. We found a negative association with peak oxygen saturation (standardized regression coefficient) for blood pressure (systolic -0.05 (95% CI: -0.10;-0.003) and diastolic -0.05 (-0.10; -0.003)), BMI -0.18 (-0.23; -0.13), waist circumference (males -0.20 (-0.32; -0.16), females -0.18 (-0.25; -0.11)), prevalent diabetes -0.31 (-0.49; -0.12), hypertension -0.30 (-0.42; -0.18), dyslipidemia -0.24 (-0.40; -0.09), fasting glucose level -0.06 (-0.12; -0.01), HbA1c -0.07 (-0.12; -0.02), triglyceride level -0.09 (-0.14; -0.04), hsCRP -0.12 (-0.17; -0.07), and current smoker versus never smoked -0.50 (-0.67; -0.34). A positive association with peak oxygen saturation was found for cholesterol level 0.05 (0.005; 0.11) and HDL 0.11 (0.06; 0.17). This is the first study showing that post-ischemic skin microvascular peak oxygen saturation is associated with virtually all established cardiovascular risk factors in a population-based middle-aged cohort.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mvr.2021.104284DOI Listing

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