Arterial media calcification in end-stage renal disease: impact on all-cause and cardiovascular mortality
Abstract
Cross-sectional and follow-up studies on end-stage renal disease patients showed that arterial calcifications are associated with cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and are an independent predictor of all-cause and CV mortality. However, these studies did not examine the impact on prognosis according to the type of calcification, i.e. intimal vs medial. Arterial media calcification (AMC), a non-occlusive condition, affects haemodynamics differently from arterial intima calcification (AIC), which occurs in atherosclerotic plaques. The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic value of AMC in relationship to all-cause or CV mortality for stable haemodialysis (HD) patients.
We included 202 such patients in the present study. At baseline, soft-tissue native radiograms of the pelvis and the thigh were analysed for the presence and type (AMC vs AIC) of arterial calcifications. All patients underwent B-mode ultrasonography of the common carotid artery to determine the presence of atherosclerotic calcified plaques, measurement of aortic pulse wave velocity and echocardiography.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Calcification
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine
- Kidney disease
- End stage renal disease
- Pulse wave velocity
- Hemodialysis
- Good health and well-being