The Association of Obesity and Cardiometabolic Traits With Incident HFpEF and HFrEF

This study evaluated the associations of obesity and cardiometabolic traits with incident heart failure with preserved versus reduced ejection fraction (HFpEF vs. HFrEF). Given known sex differences in HF subtype, we examined men and women separately. Recent studies suggest that obesity confers grea...

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Veröffentlicht in:JACC. Heart failure 2018-08, Vol.6 (8), p.701-709
Hauptverfasser: Savji, Nazir, Meijers, Wouter C., Bartz, Traci M., Bhambhani, Vijeta, Cushman, Mary, Nayor, Matthew, Kizer, Jorge R., Sarma, Amy, Blaha, Michael J., Gansevoort, Ron T., Gardin, Julius M., Hillege, Hans L., Ji, Fei, Kop, Willem J., Lau, Emily S., Lee, Douglas S., Sadreyev, Ruslan, van Gilst, Wiek H., Wang, Thomas J., Zanni, Markella V., Vasan, Ramachandran S., Allen, Norrina B., Psaty, Bruce M., van der Harst, Pim, Levy, Daniel, Larson, Martin, Shah, Sanjiv J., de Boer, Rudolf A., Gottdiener, John S., Ho, Jennifer E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study evaluated the associations of obesity and cardiometabolic traits with incident heart failure with preserved versus reduced ejection fraction (HFpEF vs. HFrEF). Given known sex differences in HF subtype, we examined men and women separately. Recent studies suggest that obesity confers greater risk of HFpEF versus HFrEF. Contributions of associated metabolic traits to HFpEF are less clear. We studied 22,681 participants from 4 community-based cohorts followed for incident HFpEF versus HFrEF (ejection fraction ≥50% vs. 
ISSN:2213-1779
2213-1787
2213-1787
DOI:10.1016/j.jchf.2018.05.018