Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Does diabetes accelerate the progression of aortic stenosis through enhanced inflammatory response within aortic valves?

Inflammation 2012 June
Diabetes predisposes to aortic stenosis (AS). We aimed to investigate if diabetes affects the expression of selected coagulation proteins and inflammatory markers in AS valves. Twenty patients with severe AS and concomitant type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and 40 well-matched patients without DM scheduled for valve replacement were recruited. Valvular tissue factor (TF), TF pathway inhibitor (TFPI), prothrombin, C-reactive protein (CRP) expression were evaluated by immunostaining and TF, prothrombin, and CRP transcripts were analyzed by real-time PCR. DM patients had elevated plasma CRP (9.2 [0.74-51.9] mg/l vs. 4.7 [0.59-23.14] mg/l, p = 0.009) and TF (293.06 [192.32-386.12] pg/ml vs. 140 [104.17-177.76] pg/ml, p = 0.003) compared to non-DM patients. In DM group, TF-, TFPI-, and prothrombin expression within valves was not related to demographics, body mass index, and concomitant diseases, whereas increased expression related to DM was found for CRP on both protein (2.87 [0.5-9]% vs. 0.94 [0-4]%, p = 0.01) and transcript levels (1.3 ± 0.61 vs. 0.22 ± 0.43, p = 0.009). CRP-positive areas were positively correlated with mRNA TF (r = 0.84, p = 0.036). Diabetes mellitus is associated with enhanced inflammation within AS valves, measured by CRP expression, which may contribute to faster AS progression.

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