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    Smoking cessation is associated with increased plasma adiponectin levels in men

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    SummaryObjectivesLow levels of adiponectin, an adipocytokine with anti-diabetic and anti-atherogenic properties, are associated with increased risk of future myocardial infarction in men. Previous studies have demonstrated that cigarette smoking is involved in the development of insulin resistance, and current smokers have been shown to have reduced plasma adiponectin levels. However, the influence of smoking cessation on adiponectin levels remains unknown. We sought to assess whether smoking cessation is associated with increased plasma adiponectin levels in men.MethodsThe study includes 72 men (47 non-smokers and 25 current smokers at baseline) with stable angina pectoris who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention and follow-up coronary angiography 6 months later. During the 6-month follow-up period, all 47 non-smokers remained non-smokers, while 15 men of the 25 baseline current smokers successfully quit smoking. We evaluated plasma adiponectin levels at coronary intervention and 6 months later.ResultsPlasma adiponectin levels at coronary intervention were comparable to those after 6 months in non-smokers (4.22 [3.15–6.43] vs. 4.58 [3.03–6.26]μg/mL, P=0.124) and in persistent smokers (4.77 [4.25–10.53] vs. 5.16 [4.11–8.10]μg/mL, P=0.721). Meanwhile, an increase in adiponectin level was observed in patients who quit smoking for 6 months (4.24 [3.30–5.70] vs. 5.50 [4.03–8.00]μg/mL, P=0.002). Univariate analysis revealed that the percent increase in adiponectin levels correlated positively with smoking cessation (P=0.003) and negatively with additional use of β-blockers (P=0.049). In addition, increases in adiponectin levels were closely associated with increase in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P=0.148), decrease in triglycerides (P=0.140), and additional use of renin–angiotensin system inhibitors (P=0.069). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that smoking cessation was an independent determinant of the increase in adiponectin (P=0.036).ConclusionsSmoking cessation is associated with increased plasma adiponectin levels in men with stable angina, suggesting that the significance of smoking cessation may be partly explained by the increase in adiponectin level

    Impact of renal insufficiency on long-term clinical outcome in patients with heart failure treated by cardiac resynchronization therapy

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    AbstractBackgroundRenal insufficiency is recognized as a predictor of mortality and adverse outcome in heart failure (HF) patients. However, the long-term clinical outcome of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in Japanese HF patients with renal insufficiency remains uncertain.MethodsWe evaluated 67 consecutive patients who underwent CRT at our hospital. The patients were divided into two groups according to a baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate (e-GFR) cut-off value of 50ml/min, which is defined as the time at which patients should be referred to a nephrologist, by the Japanese Society of Nephrology. Follow-up echocardiographic findings and renal function were examined at 3–6 months after CRT. Then, we compared long-term clinical outcomes between the two groups, and analyzed the effect of CRT on renal function, echocardiographic parameters and cardiac survival.ResultsDuring a mean follow-up period of 30.3 months, patients with advanced renal insufficiency (e-GFR<50ml/min) had significant higher all-cause mortality (log-rank p=0.033) and higher cardiac mortality combined with HF hospitalization (log-rank p=0.017) than patients with e-GFR≥50ml/min. Multivariate analysis revealed that advanced renal insufficiency was an independent predictor of cardiac mortality combined with HF hospitalization (odds ratio=3.01, p=0.008). Subgroup analysis in the baseline advanced renal insufficiency group revealed that patients with preserved renal function by CRT (<10% reduction in e-GFR) had a higher rate of decrease of left ventricular end-systolic diameter (−14.0% vs. −0.8%, p=0.023) and lower cardiac mortality combined with HF hospitalization (log-rank p=0.029) compared with patients with deterioration of renal function (≥10% reduction in e-GFR).ConclusionsThe present study suggests that advanced renal insufficiency is quite useful for the prediction of worsening clinical outcomes in HF patients treated by CRT. Preservation of renal function by CRT brings about better cardiac survival through prevention of adverse cardiac events, even in HF patients with advanced renal insufficiency

    Changes of Sympathetic Activity in Patient with Chronic Atrial Fibrillation and Severe Congestive Heart Failure Treated with Biventricular Pacing

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    The patient was a 64-year-old man with chronic atrial fibrillation with bradycardia. Left ventricular ejection fraction was 34%. He was treated with biventricular pacing. Heart failure improved from NYHA class III to II. Sympathetic nerve activity (SNA. was recorded during 6 minutes of biventricular (BV), right ventricular apical (RVA. and left ventricular (LV. pacing. SNA was significantly lower during biventricular pacing (49.5 ± 4.0/min. compared with RVA (58.8 ±6:9/min, p = 0.016. and LV (63.3 ± 4.3/min, p = 0.002. pacing. BV pacing improves hemodynamics and decreases SNA compared with RVA or LV pacing
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