Myocardial injury in COVID-19 patients is associated with the thickness of epicardial adipose tissue
Citation
Özer, S., Bulut, E., Özyıldız, A. G., Peker, M., & Turan, O. E. (2021). Myocardial injury in COVID-19 patients is associated with the thickness of epicardial adipose tissue. Kardiologiia, 61(8), 48–53. https://doi.org/10.18087/cardio.2021.8.n1638Abstract
Aim High sensitive troponin (hs-TnI) levels may increase secondary to Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19), and this increase is associated with cardiovascular mortality in COVID-19 patients. Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is associated with myocardial injury directly as a reservoir tissue for coronavirus, and indirectly through mediators it secretes as an apocrine gland. We aimed to evaluate the relationship between myocardial injury secondary to COVID-19 infection and EAT thickness.
Material and methods Thoracic computed tomography (CT) was performed in 73 consecutive patients diagnosed with COVID-19. EAT thickness and volume were calculated by two radiologists blind to the study data. We formed two groups according to hs-TnI concentrations, patients with myocardial damage (hs-TnI >= 11.6 ng/l) and without myocardial damage (hs-TnI<11.6 ng/dl).
Results A total of 46 patients were women (63.0%). The mean age was 66.4 +/- 12.3 yrs in the myocardial injury group and 55.9 +/- 9.7 yrs in the group without myocardial injury (p<0.001). There were 20 hypertensive patients (68.9%) in the injury group, while there were 12 hypertensive patients (27.3%) in the group without injury (p=0.001). Glucose, C-reactive protein, D-dimer, white blood cell count, neutrophil, and neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio were higher in the injury group (p<0.05, for all variables). The mean EAT thickness was 5.6 +/- 1.6 mm in the injury group, whereas it was 4.8 +/- 1.8 mm in the group without injury (p=0.031). EAT thickness of 4.85 mm and above was associated with the myocardial injury with 65% sensitivity and 39% specificity (AUC=0.65, 95% CI: 0.52-078, p=0.031).
Conclusion In patients with COVID-19 infection, higher rates of myocardial injury were observed as the EAT thickness increased. Epicardial adipose tissue, contributes to cytokine-mediated myocardial injury either directly or indirectly by acting as a reservoir for coronavirus. Increased EAT thickness is associated with myocardial injury in COVID-19 patients.