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Aging
heart changes shape, shrinks and loses
pumping function too
Newswise — Researchers at Johns Hopkins have
evidence to explain why the supposedly
natural act of aging is by itself a very
potent risk factor for life-threatening
heart failure.
In a study at the American Heart
Association’s (AHA) annual Scientific
Sessions in Orlando, Fla., the Hopkins team
analyzed more than a half-dozen measurements
of heart structure and pumping function to
assess minute changes in the hearts of 5,004
men and women, age 45 to 84, of different
ethnic backgrounds and with no existing
symptoms of heart disease.
Researchers found that each year as people
age, the time it takes for their heart
muscles to squeeze and relax grows longer,
by 2 percent to 5 percent.
Test results were obtained from study
participants who had undergone high-tech
magnetic resonance imaging of the heart -
tagged MRI - which measures individual
muscle segment changes with each heartbeat.
The findings, researchers say, offer insight
into the root causes of heart failure. They
are especially valuable now as millions of
baby boomers in America move into their 60s,
a time when most signs and symptoms of heart
problems first appear.
Estimates show that more than 5 million
Americans have some from of congestive heart
failure, marked by symptoms such as
shortness of breath and fatigue.
“Our results demonstrate just how the heart
plays a losing game of catch-up as people
age,” says Susan Cheng, M.D., a former
medicine resident at Hopkins who led the
study. “It’s an amazing piece of the puzzle
of heart failure that finally singles out
the effects of age over better-known risk
factors such as high blood pressure in
otherwise healthy people and regardless of
race.”
“We already knew that the heart is
constantly trying to adapt to risk factors,
but now we know that this task gets more
difficult as the heart ages and loses a
little bit of its pumping capacity every
year,” says Cheng, now a cardiology fellow
in Boston.
She says the findings could lead to
diagnostic tests to identify those whose
hearts are aging faster than others,
enabling preventive drug therapy,
pacemakers, or lifestyle changes to slow or
even reverse the deleterious effects.
Hopkins cardiologist João Lima, M.D., the
senior study investigator, says effects of
aging have been hard to determine because of
inherent flaws in using standard criteria to
assess heart function. The current gold
standard, he says, is the heart’s ejection
fraction, a ratio of the amount of blood
pumped out with each heartbeat to the total
volume of blood available for pumping. An
ejection fraction of 50 percent to 65
percent is considered normal.
Study results showed that ejection fraction
actually rose by 0.01 percent with every
year. But Lima calls this figure misleading
because the total amount of blood available
for pumping, the bottom number in the ratio,
decreases as the size of the heart cavity
shrinks and heart walls thicken, falsely
boosting test results when heart function is
actually failing.
When researchers separated the numbers, the
actual amount of blood pumped out by the
heart fell by 8 milliliters per year, says
Lima, an associate professor at The Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine and
its Heart Institute.
The flaw in using ratios, he notes, also
helped to mask the gradual shrinkage of
heart muscle mass. Researchers found that
heart muscle mass declined by on average 0.3
grams per year. This occurred even though
heart wall thickness had expanded and
despite an increase in another standard
measure of heart function, the ratio of left
ventricular mass to blood volume, which went
up by 5 milligrams per milliliter each year.
Lima says it’s important not to be misled by
existing tests for heart function,
especially ejection fraction ratios, when
diagnosing patients. He points out that
almost half of the 550,000 Americans newly
diagnosed each year with heart failure -
mostly women over age 50 - have a
non-systolic form, in which the ejection
fraction appears the same, even though heart
function is declining. “Age could be the
deciding factor in determining who gets this
kind of heart failure,” he says.
“This study highlights how the aging heart’s
anatomy and function change hand in hand
over time, similar to arteries stiffening,
bones weakening from loss of calcium, and
kidney function declining,” says Lima.
“Physicians and patients need to recognize
it as a process that can be accelerated by
risk factors or possibly slowed down by
healthy lifestyle choices and sound medical
care.”
The next step, researchers say, is to look
for so-called biological markers, usually
blood proteins, which can track the effects
of the aging process on heart shape and
function and to measure these markers, so
that a test specific to aging of the
cardiovascular system can be developed.
Study participants from six centers across
North America were drawn from a larger pool
of 7,000 ethnically diverse adults,
including African Americans, Chinese
Americans, Caucasians and Hispanics - all
monitored to see who develops heart failure.
Started in 2000, the Multiethnic Study of
Atherosclerosis (MESA) is set to run for
another six years. It is the first
large-scale analysis of racial or ethnic
differences in heart function. So far, 79
study participants have developed congestive
heart failure.
Funding for this study comes from the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, a
member of the National Institutes of Health.
Besides Lima and Cheng, other Hopkins
investigators involved in this study were
Verônica Fernandes, M.D., Ph.D.; and David
Bluemke, M.D., Ph.D. In recognition of her
research, Cheng is among the finalists
nominated to receive the distinguished
Samuel L. Levine Award for young
investigators at the AHA conference.
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