@phdthesis{Lorbeer2012, author = {Roberto Lorbeer}, title = {Endocrine-metabolic markers and subclinical cardiovascular disorders}, journal = {Endokrin-metabolische Marker und subklinische kardiovaskul{\"a}re St{\"o}rungen}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:9-001235-2}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Background: Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death worldwide. Subclinical alterations of the cardiovascular system, such as increased exercise blood pressure or an endothelial dysfunction confer a higher risk of manifest cardiovascular diseases and incident events. Detecting associations between circulating markers of the endocrine-metabolic system and the subclinical cardiovascular phenotypes could be useful to better understand cardiovascular disease progression and to improve risk prediction for manifest cardiovascular diseases. Methods: The associations between (a) serum thyroid-stimulating hormone and increased exercise blood pressure, (b) serum hemoglobin A1c and endothelial dysfunction as well as (c) serum insulin-like growth factor I and endothelial dysfunction were studied using cross-sectional data from around 1400 subjects aged 25 to 85 years collected during the 5-year follow-up of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-1). Increased exercise blood pressure was defined as a value above the sex- and age-specific 80th percentile measured at the 100 W stage of a symptom-limited bicycle ergometry test. Endothelial dysfunction was defined as an impaired flow-mediated dilation measured as a continuous decrease or below the median of sex-specific distribution. Non-fasting blood samples were drawn from the cubital vein in the supine position. Results: The odds for increased systolic exercise blood pressure (odds ratio 1.24, 95\% confidence interval 0.88; 1.76) and diastolic exercise blood pressure (odds ratio 0.98, 95\% confidence interval 0.70; 1.39) as well as for exercise-induced increase of systolic and diastolic blood pressure were not significantly different between subjects with high and low serum thyroid-stimulating hormone levels within the reference range. In women without current use of antihypertensive medication, increasing serum hemoglobin A1c levels were associated with decreasing flow-mediated dilation levels ({\"s} = -1.17, 95\% confidence interval -2.03; -0.30). Such an association was not found in men. In men, logistic regression analysis revealed an odds ratio of 1.27 (95\% confidence interval 1.07; 1.51) for decreased flow-mediated dilation for each decrement of serum insulin-like growth factor I standard deviation. In women, no significant association between serum insulin-like growth factor I levels and flow-mediated dilation was observed (odds ratio 0.88, 95\% confidence interval 0.74; 1.05). Conclusions: Based on the presented results it is concluded that (a) serum thyroid-stimulating hormone levels are not associated with exercise blood pressure in the general population, (b) higher serum hemoglobin A1c levels in non-diabetic subjects are inversely associated with flow-mediated dilation in women without antihypertensive medication, but not in men, and (c) lower serum insulin-like growth factor I levels are associated with impaired endothelial function in men, but not in women. Therefore the metabolic marker hemoglobin A1c and the endocrine marker insulin-like growth factor I might be markers facilitating the identification of subjects at high risk of subclinical cardiovascular alterations.}, language = {en} }