Background: Nephrolithiasis is frequently associated with cardiovascular diseases. These conditions present common risk factors: systemic inflammation that promotes oxidative stress leading to arterial wall stiffening may also play a role in plaque formation predisposing to nephrolithiasis.Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate arterial stiffness indices at baseline and after a 10-year follow-up, in patients with nephrolithiasis compared with patients without.Methods: A total of 82 patients (37 men; mean age 45 +/- 13 years) were enrolled at the Geriatrics and Nephrology Outpatient Clinic: 66 were diagnosed with nephrolithiasis, whereas the control group consisted of 16 individuals. At baseline and after 10 years, they underwent clinical evaluation and arterial stiffness measurement, such as carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (CF-PWV), by arterial applanation tonometry.Results: At baseline, when compared with the control group, patients with nephrolithiasis showed higher SBP and CF-PWV. After 10 years, patients with nephrolithiasis, but not those without, showed a significant raise in CF-PWV, even after adjustment for age and sex. In a stepwise regression model, with CF-PWV changes during the follow-up as the dependent variable, and age, sex, follow-up years, Delta mean arterial pressure, BMI, hypertension and nephrolithiasis as independent variables, nephrolithiasis was proved to be the only significant predictor of Delta CF-PWV, accounting for 6% of the variance.Conclusion: Our study shows higher baseline CF-PWV and greater increase in Delta CF-PWV within 10 years in individuals with nephrolithiasis than in those without, demonstrating an increased cardiovascular risk for nephrolithiasis patients.

Arterial stiffness and cardiovascular risk in patients with nephrolithiasis: a 10-year prospective study

Comellato, Gabriele;Caletti, Chiara;Giani, Anna;Macchi, Federica;Mazzali, Gloria;Faccioli, Silvia;Zoico, Elena;Andreola, Stefano;Gambaro, Giovanni;Zamboni, Mauro;Fantin, Francesco
2024-01-01

Abstract

Background: Nephrolithiasis is frequently associated with cardiovascular diseases. These conditions present common risk factors: systemic inflammation that promotes oxidative stress leading to arterial wall stiffening may also play a role in plaque formation predisposing to nephrolithiasis.Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate arterial stiffness indices at baseline and after a 10-year follow-up, in patients with nephrolithiasis compared with patients without.Methods: A total of 82 patients (37 men; mean age 45 +/- 13 years) were enrolled at the Geriatrics and Nephrology Outpatient Clinic: 66 were diagnosed with nephrolithiasis, whereas the control group consisted of 16 individuals. At baseline and after 10 years, they underwent clinical evaluation and arterial stiffness measurement, such as carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (CF-PWV), by arterial applanation tonometry.Results: At baseline, when compared with the control group, patients with nephrolithiasis showed higher SBP and CF-PWV. After 10 years, patients with nephrolithiasis, but not those without, showed a significant raise in CF-PWV, even after adjustment for age and sex. In a stepwise regression model, with CF-PWV changes during the follow-up as the dependent variable, and age, sex, follow-up years, Delta mean arterial pressure, BMI, hypertension and nephrolithiasis as independent variables, nephrolithiasis was proved to be the only significant predictor of Delta CF-PWV, accounting for 6% of the variance.Conclusion: Our study shows higher baseline CF-PWV and greater increase in Delta CF-PWV within 10 years in individuals with nephrolithiasis than in those without, demonstrating an increased cardiovascular risk for nephrolithiasis patients.
2024
arterial stiffness
cardiovascular risk
carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity
nephrolithiasis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143988
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