4.6 Article

Sublingual functional capillary rarefaction in chronic heart failure

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eci.12869

Keywords

capillaries; glycocalyx; heart failure; microcirculation; perfused boundary region

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Funds [FWF SFB 54-P04]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background and objective: Microcirculatory changes contribute to clinical symptoms and disease progression in chronic heart failure (CHF). A depression of coronary flow reserve is associated with a lower myocardial capillary density in biopsies. We hypothesized that changes in cardiac microcirculation might also be reflected by a systemic reduction in capillaries and visualized by sublingual videomicroscopy. The aim was to study in vivo capillary density and glycocalyx dimensions in patients with CHF vs healthy controls. Methods: Fifty patients with ischaemic and nonischaemic CHF and standard treatment were compared to 35 healthy age-matched subjects in a prospective cross-sectional study. Sublingual microcirculation was visualized using a side-stream darkfield videomicroscope. Functional and perfused total capillary densities were compared between patients and controls. A reduced glycocalyx thickness was measured by an increased perfused boundary region (PBR). Results: Median functional and total perfused capillary densities were 30% and 45% lower in patients with CHF (both P < .001). Intake of oral vitamin K antagonists was associated with significantly lower capillary densities (P < .05), but not independent of NT-proBNP. Dimensions of the glycocalyx were marginally lower in CHF patients than in healthy controls (<7% difference). However, PBR correlated significantly with inflammation markers (fibrinogen: r = .58; C-reactive protein: r = .42), platelet counts (r = .36) and inversely with measures of liver/renal function such as bilirubin (r = -.38) or estimated glomerular filtration rate (r = -.34) in CHF patients. Conclusion: CHF patients have got a markedly lower functional and total perfused capillary density in sublingual microvasculature when compared to controls, indicating a systemic decrease in microcirculation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available