Abstract
Pregnant women with cardiovascular risk (CVR) factors are highly prone to develop cardiovascular disease later in life. Thus, recent guidelines suggest extending the follow-up period to 1 yr after delivery. We aimed to evaluate cardiovascular remodeling during pregnancy and determine which CVR factors and potential biomarkers predict postpartum cardiac and vascular reverse remodeling (RR). Our study included a prospective cohort of 76 healthy and 54 obese and/or hypertensive and/or with gestational diabetes pregnant women who underwent transthoracic echocardiography, pulse-wave velocity (PWV), and blood collection at the 1st trimester (1T) and 3rd trimester (3T) of pregnancy as well as at the 1st/6th/12th mo after delivery. Generalized linear mixed-effects models was used to evaluate the extent of RR and its potential predictors. Pregnant women develop cardiac hypertrophy, as confirmed by a significant increase in left ventricular mass (LVM). Moreover, ventricular filling pressure (E/e') and atrial volume increased significantly during gestation. Significant regression of left ventricular (LV) volume, LVM, and filling pressures was observed as soon as 1 mo postpartum. The LV global longitudinal strain worsened slightly and recovered at 6 mo postpartum. PWV decreased significantly from 1T to 3T and normalized at 1 mo postpartum. We found that arterial hypertension, smoking habits, and obesity were independent predictors of increased LVM during pregnancy and postpartum. High C-reactive protein (CRP) and low ST2/IL33-receptor levels are potential circulatory biomarkers of worse LVM regression. Arterial hypertension, age, and gestational diabetes positively correlated with PWV. Altogether, our findings pinpoint arterial hypertension as a critical risk factor for worse RR and CRP, and ST2/IL33 receptors as potential biomarkers of postpartum hypertrophy reversal.NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study describes the impact of cardiovascular risk factors (CVR) in pregnancy-induced remodeling and postpartum reverse remodeling (up to 1 yr) by applying advanced statistic methods (multivariate generalized linear mixed-effects models) to a prospective cohort of pregnant women. Aiming to extrapolate to pathological conditions, this invaluable "human model" allowed us to demonstrate that arterial hypertension is a critical CVR for worse RR and that ST2/IL33-receptors and CRP are potential biomarkers of postpartum hypertrophy reversal.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | H774-H789 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology |
Volume | 325 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 11 Sept 2023 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Oct 2023 |
Funding
This work was supported by Bolsa de Estudo João Porto da Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia, by RTP Maratona da Saúde 2017, and by national funds through FCT—Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology, under the scope of the Cardiovascular R&D Center – UnIC (UIDB/00051/2020 and UIDP/00051/2020). This work was also supported by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), through the North Regional Operational Program in the framework of the project HEALTH-UNORTE: setting up biobanks and regenerative medicine strategies to boost research in cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, neurological, oncological, immunological, and infectious diseases (reference NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000039). A. F. D. S. Ferreira, M. J. M. Azevedo, J. P. Morais, and M. I. N. Alves are supported by FCT—Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (SFRH/BD/138925/2018, SFRH/BD/144982/2019, UIBD1523062021, and 2022.11324.BD, respectively). F. J. S. Trindade is supported by a postdoctoral research grant by FCT through UnIC (UIDP/00051/2020).
Funders | Funder number |
---|---|
Bolsa de Estudo João Porto da Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia | |
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia | UIDP/00051/2020, UIDB/00051/2020 |
European Regional Development Fund | 2022.11324, NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000039, SFRH/BD/144982/2019, UIBD1523062021, SFRH/BD/138925/2018 |
University of Nicosia |
Keywords
- cardiovascular remodeling
- cardiovascular risk factors
- postpartum
- pregnancy
- reverse remodeling