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- Giovanni Petralli, Edoardo Biancalana, Mariarosaria Distaso, Giulia Piazza, Maria T Caputo, Alice Del Zoppo, Chiara Rovera, Francesco Raggi, Domenico Tricò, and Anna Solini.
- Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular and Critical Area Pathology, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
- Panminerva Med. 2024 Jun 1; 66 (2): 117123117-123.
BackgroundMenopausal transition is a crucial step in the women's cardiovascular health, and the risk stratification in apparently health post-menopausal females has been rarely assessed. Heart ultrasonography, unusually performed in such subjects, would be able to detect initial signs of organ damage. We described the cardiovascular risk profile of non-diabetic post-menopausal women, evaluating how easily computed, biochemistry-derived scores were related to ultrasonographic measures of target organ damage.MethodsWe analyzed the characteristics of a cohort of two-hundred and seventy-three women consecutively referring to a prevention program of Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana (years 2017-2022) who underwent clinical evaluation, complete routine biochemical analyses with proxies of insulin resistance, heart and carotid ultrasonography. The cohort was further divided into four groups according to presence of isolated hypercholesterolemia (HC, 37%), isolated hypertension (HT, 5%), both HC/HT (38%), or none of them.ResultsIn HC and HC/HT, LDL cholesterol was sharply above the recommended values (149 [134-171] mg/dL and 141 [123-159] mg/dL, respectively). E/e' ratio and left atrium size were augmented in HT women and further worsened in HT/HC, with an independent effect of hypertension (E/e' ß=0.055, P=0.013, left atrium volume ß=0.059, P=0.003). Presence of carotid plaques was independently linked to hypertension (ß=0.474, P=0.003). In HC and HC/HT, the Triglycerides-Glucose Index, a surrogate of insulin resistance, was higher than in the other classes (P=0.0013), and it was associated with E/A in HC and HT/HC, with a significative interaction (P=0.0004) with hypertension. Past hormone replacement therapy did not influence clinical, biochemical or echocardiographic parameters.ConclusionsPostmenopausal women display a high cardiovascular risk burden; a simple clinical and biochemistry screening would be advisable to identify and treat those more at risk. Cardiac ultrasonographic parameters were worse in hypertensive, hypercholesterolemic and insulin-resistant subjects, who may also deserve a deep and early instrumental characterization, especially when these conditions are associated.
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